SYLLABUS
(This syllabus is not part of the opinion of the Court. It has
been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for the convenience of the
reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Supreme Court. Please
note that, in the interests of brevity, portions of any opinion may not
have been summarized).
State v. Raul Rodriguez (A-19-01)
Argued February 26, 2002 -- Decided May 15, 2002
VERNIERO, J., writing for a unanimous Court.
The issue in this appeal is whether the police subjected defendant to an
investigative detention prior to their search of his person and, if so, whether
they had a sufficient basis to justify that conduct.
On July 14, 1998, New Jersey Transit Police Officers Eugene Oberfrank and Kevin
Amberg were patrolling the bus terminal in Atlantic City. Oberfrank received an anonymous
telephone call informing him that two men would be traveling through Atlantic City
via bus following a trip to Philadelphia to purchase narcotics. The informant described
the physical appearance of the two men and their clothes. The informant did
not indicate which bus nor what time they would be arriving, only that
the two men had left Ocean City at a specified time and that
they would be returning that same day. At about 4:45 p.m., the officers
spotted two men fitting the informants description. Other than matching the description, the
officers observed nothing unusual about them.
Oberfrank and Amberg, dressed in full uniform, with weapons, handcuffs, mace and radios,
asked the two men if they would agree to speak with them and
go with them to the patrol office. The men consented. The officers asked
no questions until they had the two men in the office, which had
self-locking doors, in separate rooms. The two men were asked if they had
anything on them that they shouldnt have and they replied no. Subsequently, Amberg
asked the two men if they would consent to a search of their
person and, after summarizing the contents of a consent-to-search form, he had them
sign the forms. Defendant signed form at 4:55 p.m. The officers proceeded to
search the men and a blue bag defendant was carrying. The officers found
that defendant was carrying packets of heroin on himself and in the blue
bag, a hypodermic syringe, and $630 in cash. Defendant was arrested at approximately
5:10 p.m. and advised of his Miranda rights. The two men were indicted
for possession of a controlled dangerous substance, possession of a controlled dangerous substance
with intent to distribute, and possession of a controlled dangerous substance with intent
to distribute within a thousand feet of a school.
At trial, defendant moved to suppress the evidence. The trial court denied that
motion. Defendant pled guilty to possession of a controlled dangerous substance with intent
to distribute within a thousand feet of a school. He was sentenced to
an extended term of six years with three years of parole ineligibility. In
a reported decision, the Appellate Division affirmed, finding that the officers had engaged
in a field inquiry requiring no suspicion of criminal activity. The court also
held, alternatively, that even if the inquiry had escalated to an investigative stop,
the officers had sufficient information to justify it, and that defendant had voluntarily
waived his right to withhold consent.
HELD: Defendant was the subject of an investigative detention and the totality of
the circumstances did not
justify it.
1. Not all police-citizen encounters constitute searches and seizures for purposes of the
warrant requirement. A field inquiry is a limited form of police inquiry and
is not considered a seizure unless a reasonably objective person feels that his
or her right to move has been restricted. (Pp. 8-9)
2. An investigative stop is more intrusive than a field inquiry and is
justified when there is reasonable suspicion of criminal activity, based on specific and
articulable facts. An anonymous tip, standing alone, is rarely sufficient to establish a
reasonable articulable suspicion of criminal activity. Police must verify that an anonymous tip
is reliable by some independent corroborative effort. The analysis in any given case
turns ultimately on the totality of the circumstances. (Pp. 9-11)
3. Defendant was questioned in a manner that presupposed criminal activity, as evidenced
by his being isolated from his traveling partner and questioned in a closed-door,
police-dominated atmosphere. Moreover, there was no justification for moving the defendant from the
street to the patrol office. Under the totality of the circumstances, defendant could
not have believed that he was free to leave; the police encounter had
escalated and moved beyond a field inquiry. (Pp. 12-14)
4 The only information provided by the informant and corroborated by the officers
was the description of defendant and his companion and their location at the
bus terminal. Without more, corroboration of these benign elements is not sufficient to
justify the detention under Terry and our analogous case law. (Pp. 14-18)
5. In view of our conclusion that the officers lacked a sufficient basis
to detain defendant, we need not evaluate whether his consent to the search
was voluntary. The illegal detention voids the consent. As a result, the fruits
of the warrantless search must be suppressed. (Pp. 18-19)
The judgment of the Appellate Division is REVERSED and the matter is REMANDED
to the Law Division for further proceedings consistent with this opinion .
CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ and JUSTICES STEIN, COLEMAN, LONG, LaVECCHIA, and ZAZZALI, join in
JUSTICE VERNIEROs opinion.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
A-
19 September Term 2001
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
RAUL RODRIGUEZ,
Defendant-Appellant.
Argued February 26, 2002 Decided May 15, 2002
On certification to the Superior Court, Appellate Division, whose opinion is reported at
336 N.J. Super. 550 (2001).
Mary Virginia Barta, Assistant Deputy Public Defender, argued the cause for appellant (Peter
A. Garcia, Acting Public Defender, attorney).
Jack R. Martin, Assistant Prosecutor, argued the cause for respondent (Jeffrey S. Blitz,
Atlantic County Prosecutor, attorney).
Michael J. Williams, Deputy Attorney General, argued the cause for amicus curiae, Attorney
General of New Jersey (Peter C. Harvey, Acting Attorney General, attorney).
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
VERNIERO, J.
This case implicates defendants right to be free of unreasonable searches and seizures
under the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution and under the analogous
provision of our State Constitution. We must determine whether the police subjected defendant
to an investigative detention prior to their search of his person and, if
so, whether they had a sufficient basis to justify that conduct. The lower
courts found no constitutional violation. We hold that defendant was the subject of
an investigative detention and, further, that the totality of circumstances did not justify
it.
I.
These are the relevant facts, derived largely from a suppression hearing conducted by
the trial court. On July 14, 1998, New Jersey Transit Police Officer Eugene
Oberfrank and a fellow officer, Sergeant Kevin Amberg, were patrolling the bus terminal
in Atlantic City. At about 2:15 p.m., Officer Oberfrank received a telephone call
from an unknown male. The caller informed the officer that two men had
left Ocean City to go to Philadelphia to purchase narcotics and that they
would be returning that same day via Atlantic City.
The caller described one man as a thin, Hispanic male, about five feet,
ten inches tall, wearing white shorts, a white tee shirt, and gold-rimmed glasses.
The caller described the second man as a white, heavyset male, six feet
tall, with a receding hairline and mustache, wearing a black tank top and
dark shorts.
The anonymous caller also said that the men were traveling by bus. Although
he did not provide a time that the two men would pass through
Atlantic City, the informant did indicate the time that they had left Ocean
City. Based on that information, Officer Oberfrank estimated that the men would arrive
in Atlantic City sometime between 3:30 and 5:00 oclock that afternoon. The officer
testified that the informant didnt want to tell me his name.
After receiving the call, Officer Oberfrank related the information to his supervisor, Sergeant
Amberg. Starting at about 3:30 p.m., the officers began surveillance of all buses
arriving in Atlantic City from Philadelphia. At about 4:45 p.m., Officer Oberfrank saw
two men, who fit the description furnished by the informant, exit a bus.
As the two men walked by the officers, Officer Oberfrank pointed them out
to the sergeant. The two men from the bus proceeded to a public
telephone.
According to the officers, one of the men, later identified as defendant, appeared
to be Hispanic and wearing a white tee shirt, white shorts, and gold-rimmed
glasses. They stated that defendant was carrying a blue bag with Gap printed
on it. The officers indicated that the other man, later identified as Joseph
Forte, appeared to be a white, heavyset male, wearing a black tank top
and dark shorts, and appeared to have a receding hairline and mustache. The
officers stated that they noticed nothing unusual about either mans demeanor.
Officer Oberfrank testified that as one of the men began making a call,
the officers asked both men if they would agree to speak with them.
The men answered yes, and they agreed also to accompany the officers back
to the terminals patrol office. Sergeant Amberg did not recall precisely what his
fellow officer had stated, because up until that point, basically, [Officer Oberfrank] was
doing all the talking. The sergeant stated that we asked [both men] if
they would come to the office. We did not tell them that they
had to come to the office.
Dressed in police uniforms, both officers carried weapons, handcuffs, mace, and radios at
the time of the encounter. The officers asked no questions of defendant and
Forte as they walked to the patrol office, approximately thirty feet from the
public telephone. The record reveals that the outer door to the patrol office
at the Atlantic City bus terminal locks automatically once a person is inside,
and can be opened only with a swipe card or a key.
Once inside the patrol office the police separated the two men, placing defendant
in the main processing room and positioning Forte in an adjoining room. The
door between the two rooms was left ajar. Officer Oberfrank stated that one
of the reasons for that separation was to prevent either man from hearing
what the other was saying. Officer Oberfrank bounced back and forth, but stayed
generally with Forte, whereas Sergeant Amberg stayed with defendant. The officers asked defendant
and Forte if they had anything on them they shouldnt have, and both
replied, no. The police also asked them for identification, and eventually learned their
names.
Sergeant Amberg stated that he asked defendant and Forte independently if they would
consent to a search of their persons. He informed them that they had
a right to refuse consent, and he gave them each a consent form
to sign. Officer Oberfrank testified that the sergeant read the consent to search
form to defendant. The sergeant testified that he did not read the form
word for word, but rather summarized it. Officer Oberfrank indicated that this was
his first experience with a situation involving a consent to search.
Officer Oberfrank also testified that, in addition to serving as an officer for
New Jersey Transit, he had been trained to recognize symptoms of drug withdrawal
as an emergency medical technician. The officer stated that defendant did not exhibit
any symptoms of drug withdrawal and that defendant never complained of being ill
or under the influence of drugs.
Defendant signed the consent to search form at 4:55 p.m., approximately ten minutes
after the police saw him exit the bus. Significantly, Sergeant Amberg stated that
he posed no questions to defendant or Forte from the time that he
had approached them at the public telephone to the time that he had
asked defendant to sign the form at the patrol office. The sergeant further
indicated that he had not received any additional information to corroborate the original
tip.
After defendant signed the form, the officers searched his person and bag. The
police found one blue packet of what proved to be heroin in defendants
left sock, one packet of heroin in the coin pocket of his shorts,
fifty-nine packets of heroin in the Gap bag (along with two empty packets),
a hypodermic syringe, and over $630 in cash. They arrested defendant at approximately
5:10 p.m. and informed him of his constitutional rights as required by
Miranda
v. Arizona,
384 U.S. 436,
86 S. Ct. 1602,
16 L. Ed.2d 694 (1966). The arrest occurred approximately twenty-five minutes after defendant had left the
bus.
The police also searched Forte, who had been asked to sign a consent
to search form, but they found no contraband as a result of that
search. Nonetheless, the police arrested Forte as well after consulting with the Atlantic
County Prosecutors Office.
Defendant and Forte were indicted for possession of a controlled dangerous substance, in
violation of
N.J.S.A. 2C:35-10a(1) (count one); possession of a controlled dangerous substance with
intent to distribute, in violation of
N.J.S.A. 2C:35-5a(1), 5b(3) (count two); and possession
of a controlled dangerous substance with intent to distribute within 1000 feet of
a school, in violation of
N.J.S.A. 2C:35-7 (count three).
Defendant moved before the trial court to suppress the fruits of the search.
The trial court denied that motion. Defendant then pled guilty to count three
of the indictment. In the course of entering into the plea arrangement, defendant
exonerated Forte, causing all charges against Forte to be dismissed. The trial court
sentenced defendant to an extended term of six years with three years of
parole ineligibility.
In a reported decision, the Appellate Division affirmed.
State v. Rodriguez,
336 N.J.
Super. 550, 555 (2001). The panel determined that the officers had engaged in
nothing more than a field inquiry, which requires no suspicion of criminal activity
to justify.
Id. at 560. In the alternative, the court concluded that if
the inquiry had escalated into an investigative stop, the anonymous informant had provided
enough information to the police to sustain defendants detention under the applicable case
law.
Id. at 564. As for the search itself, the court agreed with
the State that defendant was aware of his right to withhold consent, and
that defendant had waived that right knowingly.
Id. at 561-62. The court, therefore,
affirmed the trial courts denial of defendants suppression motion.
Id. at 566.
We granted defendants petition for certification,
170 N.J. 84 (2001), and granted
amicus
curiae status to the Attorney General. We now reverse.
II.
The starting point of our analysis is the Fourth Amendment of the United
States Constitution and its analogue, Article I, paragraph 7 of the New Jersey
Constitution. See
U.S. Const. amend. IV;
N.J. Const. art. I, ¶ 7. Those similarly
worded provisions protect citizens against unreasonable police searches and seizures by requiring warrants
issued upon probable cause unless [the search] falls within one of the few
well-delinated exceptions to the warrant requirement.
State v. Maryland,
167 N.J. 471, 482
(2001) (alteration in original) (citations omitted).
A.
Not all police-citizen encounters constitute searches or seizures for purposes of the warrant
requirement.
Id. at 483. One such encounter, a field inquiry, is a limited
form of police investigation that, except for impermissible reasons such as race, may
be conducted without grounds for suspicion.
Ibid. (citation and quotation omitted). In general
terms, a police officer properly initiates a field inquiry by approaching an individual
on the street, or in another public place, and by asking him if
he is willing to answer some questions[.]
State v. Davis,
104 N.J. 490,
497 (1986) (citations omitted).
A field inquiry is not considered a seizure in the constitutional sense so
long as the officer does not deny the individual the right to move.
State v. Sheffield,
62 N.J. 441, 447 (1973). The officers demeanor is relevant
to the analysis.
Davis,
supra, 104
N.J. at 497. For example, an officer
would not be deemed to have seized another if his questions were put
in a conversational manner, if he did not make demands or issue orders,
and if his questions were not overbearing or harassing in nature.
Id. at
497 n.6 (citing Lafave, 3
Search and Seizure, § 9.2 at 53-54 (1978)). Neither
the officers subjective intent,
Maryland,
supra, 167
N.J. at 483, nor the subjective
belief of the citizen,
State v. Tucker,
136 N.J. 158, 165-66 (1994), determines
whether a seizure has occurred. An encounter becomes more than a mere field
inquiry when an objectively reasonable person feels that his or her right to
move has been restricted.
Davis,
supra, 104
N.J. at 498.
B.
An investigatory stop (sometimes called a
Terry stop or investigative detention) is considered
more intrusive than a field inquiry and, therefore, a different analysis applies when
evaluating that form of police conduct.
Maryland,
supra, 167
N.J. at 486. An
officer does not need a warrant to make such a stop if it
is based on specific and articulable facts which, taken together with rational inferences
from those facts, give rise to a reasonable suspicion of criminal activity.
Terry
v. Ohio,
392 U.S. 1, 21,
88 S. Ct. 1868, 1880,
20 L.
Ed.2d 889, 906 (1968). The [r]easonable suspicion necessary to justify an investigatory
stop is a lower standard than the probable cause necessary to sustain an
arrest.
State v. Stovall,
170 N.J. 346, 356 (2002).
In determining the lawfulness of an investigative stop, we have explained:
An investigatory stop is valid only if the officer has a particularized suspicion
based upon an objective observation that the person stopped has been or is
about to engage in criminal wrongdoing. The articulable reasons or particularized suspicion of
criminal activity must be based upon the law enforcement officers assessment of the
totality of circumstances with which he is faced. Such observations are those that,
in view of [the] officers experience and knowledge, taken together with rational inferences
drawn from those facts, reasonabl[y] warrant the limited intrusion upon the individuals freedom.
[
Davis,
supra, 104
N.J. at 504.]
An anonymous tip, standing alone, is rarely sufficient to establish a reasonable articulable
suspicion of criminal activity. Alabama v. White,
496 U.S. 325, 329,
110 S.
Ct. 2412, 2415,
110 L. Ed.2d 301, 308 (1990). The United States
Supreme Court has warned that the veracity of persons supplying anonymous tips is
by hypothesis largely unknown, and unknowable. Ibid. (quoting Illinois v. Gates,
462 U.S. 213, 237,
103 S. Ct. 2317, 2332,
76 L. Ed.2d 527, 548
(1983)). That Court also has instructed that an informants veracity, reliability, and basis
of knowledge are relevant in determining the value of his report. Id. at
328, 110 S. Ct. at 2415, 110 L. Ed.
2d at 308 (citation
and quotation marks omitted). To justify action based on an anonymous tip, the
police in the typical case must verify that the tip is reliable by
some independent corroborative effort. Id. at 329-30, 110 S. Ct. at 2415-16, 110
L. Ed.
2d at 309.
Generally, if a tip has a relatively low degree of reliability, more information
will be required to establish the requisite quantum of suspicion than would be
required if the tip were more reliable. Id. at 330, 110 S. Ct.
at 2416, 110 L. Ed.
2d at 309. Stated differently, courts have found
no constitutional violation when there has been independent corroboration by the police of
significant aspects of the informers predictions[.] Id. at 332, 110 S. Ct. at
2417, 110 L. Ed.
2d at 310. The analysis in any given case
turns ultimately on the totality of the circumstances. Id. at 330, 110 S.
Ct. at 2416, 110 L. Ed.
2d at 309.
III.
A.
In applying the above tenets, our first task is to determine whether the
police inquiry of defendant escalated into an investigative detention. As noted, that question
turns on the tenor of the officers actions and whether an objectively reasonable
person in defendants position would have felt free to exit the encounter.
We agree with defendant that he was the subject of an investigative detention
based on the following facts. Once inside the patrol office, the police separated
defendant from Forte, and after that separation, an officer questioned defendant in a
manner that presupposed criminal activity. For the bulk of the encounter, defendant was
isolated from his traveling partner and was asked questions in a closed-door, police-dominated
atmosphere. We conclude that an objectively reasonable person in defendants position would not
have felt free to leave the patrol office under those circumstances.
Urging a contrary conclusion, the State argues that it was safer for the
officers and less embarrassing to defendant to question him in the patrol office.
Moreover, the State emphasizes that the police informed defendant that he was free
to leave and was under no obligation to speak with them. Succinctly stated,
the State contends that no reasonable person under those circumstances would have considered
the encounter to be an investigative detention within the constitutional meaning of those
terms.
We disagree. The record contains no basis to conclude that a concern for
officer safety justified the movement of defendant from the street to the patrol
office. That the police may have intended to spare defendant the embarrassment of
being questioned on the street, although laudable, is equally unavailing. We have recognized
previously that an officers subjective good faith cannot justify an infringement of a
citizens constitutionally guaranteed rights.
State v. Arthur,
149 N.J. 1, 8 (1997).
We also have recognized that, as a practical matter, citizens almost never feel
free to end an encounter initiated by the police.
State v. Valentin,
105 N.J. 14, 19 (1987). That reality is buttressed when the encounter itself takes
place in a closed-door patrol office. We remain unconvinced that defendant, under all
of the attendant circumstances, reasonably believed he could walk away without answering any
of [the officers] questions.
Maryland,
supra, 167
N.J. at 483.
Finally, the tenor of the police questions, namely, whether defendant and Forte had
anything on them that they shouldnt have, contributes to our finding that defendants
encounter with the police had moved beyond a mere field inquiry. Although other
courts have found similar questions by the police, standing alone, to be dispositive,
we need not make that finding here in view of the other facts
noted above. See
State ex rel. J.G.,
320 N.J. Super. 21, 30-31 (App.
Div. 1999) (concluding that asking defendant whether there was anything on him that
[he] shouldnt have, moved encounter from field inquiry to investigative detention);
cf. State
v. Contreras,
326 N.J. Super. 528, 534, 540 (App. Div. 1999) (concluding that
asking defendant if he had anything of that type [drugs or weapons] on
his person turned field inquiry into
Terry stop).
B.
Having concluded that the field inquiry of defendant escalated into an investigative
detention, we next consider whether the police had a reasonable articulable suspicion of
criminal wrongdoing to justify that action. Because the police asked no questions of
defendant before taking him to the patrol office and observed nothing unusual about
him, the information obtained from the anonymous informant constitutes the only possible basis
on which to justify the stop. In that respect, our analysis is informed
by the Supreme Courts recent decision in
Florida v. J.L.,
529 U.S. 266,
120 S. Ct. 1375,
146 L. Ed.2d 254 (2000).
In
J.L., an anonymous caller reported to the police that a young black
male was standing at a particular bus stop, wearing a plaid shirt, and
carrying a gun.
Id. at 268, 120
S. Ct. at 1377, 146
L.
Ed.
2d at 258-59. The police did not record the call and knew
nothing about the informant. The police responded to the scene and observed three
black males just hanging out at the bus stop. One of the males,
the defendant, was wearing a plaid shirt.
Ibid. The officers observed no unusual
movements or threatening conduct on anyones part. Nonetheless, based on the tipsters information,
one of the officers approached the defendant, frisked him, and seized a gun
from his pocket.
Ibid. A second officer frisked the other two men, against
whom no allegations had been made, and found nothing.
Ibid.
The Court held that the information furnished by the informant was insufficient to
justify the frisk of the defendant under the
Terry standard. Writing for a
unanimous Court, Justice Ginsburg explained:
The anonymous call concerning [the defendant] provided no predictive information and therefore left
the police without means to test the informants knowledge or credibility. That the
allegation about the gun turned out to be correct does not suggest that
the officers, prior to the frisks, had a reasonable basis for suspecting [the
defendant] of engaging in unlawful conduct: The reasonableness of official suspicion must be
measured by what the officers knew before they conducted their search. All the
police had to go on in this case was the bare report of
an unknown, unaccountable informant who neither explained how he knew about the gun
nor supplied any basis for believing he had inside information about [the defendant].
[Id. at 271, 120 S. Ct. at 1379,
146 L. Ed 2d at
260-61.]
In addressing the governments contention that the tip was reliable because it accurately
described the defendants physical attributes, Justice Ginsburg stated:
An accurate description of a subjects readily observable location and appearance is of
course reliable in this limited sense: It will help the police correctly identify
the person whom the tipster means to accuse. Such a tip, however, does
not show that the tipster has knowledge of concealed criminal activity. The reasonable
suspicion here at issue requires that a tip be reliable in its assertion
of illegality, not just in its tendency to identify a determinate person.
[Id. at 272, 120 S. Ct. at 1379,
146 L. Ed 2d at
261.]
We conclude similarly in this case. The informant accurately described the appearance of
defendant and Forte, and correctly predicted their location at the bus terminal. We
cannot reasonably conclude, based on those benign elements of the informants tip, that
the tip itself was reliable in its assertion of illegality[.] Ibid. In respect
of that aspect of the tip most critical to the analysis, namely, that
defendant would be engaged in drug trafficking, the informant provided no explanation of
how or why he arrived at that conclusion. In fact, the only portion
of the tip corroborated by the officers pertained to the innocent details of
defendants appearance at the bus terminal. Without more, the tip is insufficient to
justify the detention under Terry and our analogous case law.
In arguing for a contrary disposition, the Attorney General, as amicus, cites this
Courts recent decision in Stovall, supra,
170 N.J. 346. In Stovall, a detective
in New Jersey received a tip from a fellow law enforcement officer in
California based on information that the fellow officer had obtained from an airline
employee at Los Angeles International Airport. Id. at 351-52. The employee believed that
two women had checked into the airport using questionable identification. Id. at 352.
The travelers also had purchased bulk tickets from a travel agency that purportedly
had sold tickets to other drug traffickers. Id. at 352-53. Based on that
information, the California officer suspected that the two individuals were engaged in drug
trafficking, and he relayed that belief, in addition to the relevant flight information,
to his fellow officer in New Jersey. Id. at 352. The tip contained
a detailed description of the two women and their luggage. Ibid.
In Newark, the detective and his partner who had received the tip noticed
the two women as they arrived from the identified flight. Ibid. One of
the officers believed that the defendants identification was questionable because it consisted of
an expired card listing an address on Main Street in Los Angeles. Id.
at 353. Defendant also appeared visibly nervous as she spoke to the officers
prior to their search of her luggage. Id. at 354. Emphasizing those facts,
in addition to the extensive experience and expertise of the officers, the Court
sustained the detention of the defendant under the Terry standard. Id. at 370-71.
In contrast, the officers in this case testified that defendant did not exhibit
any unusual demeanor. Another difference is that the officers involved in Stovall had
extensive experience in drug enforcement, whereas Officer Oberfrank testified that this was the
first time that he had experienced a situation involving a consent to search.
Most importantly, the officer in Stovall asked questions of the suspect to corroborate
some of the information provided in the tip, and the tip itself was
not anonymous. In this case, the informant never revealed his identity or the
basis of his knowledge, and the officers did not corroborate the information other
than to observe defendants appearance at the bus terminal. Stovall clearly is inapposite.
C.
In view of our conclusion that the officers lacked a sufficient basis to
detain defendant, we need not evaluate whether his consent to the search was
voluntary. The illegal detention voids the consent. Wong Sun v. United States,
371 U.S. 471, 485,
83 S. Ct. 407, 416,
9 L. Ed.2d 441,
453-54 (1963); State v. Costa,
327 N.J. Super. 22, 32 (App. Div. 1999).
Accordingly, no further analysis is required.
IV.
In sum, because the field inquiry of defendant escalated into an investigative detention,
the police were required to form a reasonable articulable suspicion of criminal activity
to justify the stop. The suspicion here was based solely on information furnished
by an anonymous informant who provided no explanation or basis of knowledge for
that information. The police officers observation of defendants innocent arrival at the bus
terminal was insufficient to verify the reliability of the tip. Without greater justification,
the stop cannot be sustained under
Terry or under our analogous State jurisprudence.
Lastly, the stops illegality voids defendants subsequent consent to search and, as a
result, the fruits of the warrantless search must be suppressed.
V.
The judgment of the Appellate Division is reversed, and the matter is remanded
to the Law Division for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ and JUSTICES STEIN, COLEMAN, LONG, LaVECCHIA, and ZAZZALI join in
JUSTICE VERNIEROs opinion.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
NO. A-19 SEPTEMBER TERM 2001
ON CERTIFICATION TO Appellate Division, Superior Court
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
RAUL RODRIGUEZ,
Defendant-Appellant.
DECIDED May 15, 2002
Chief Justice Poritz PRESIDING
OPINION BY Justice Verniero
CONCURRING OPINION BY
DISSENTING OPINION BY
CHECKLIST
REVERSE
CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ
X
JUSTICE STEIN
X
JUSTICE COLEMAN
X
JUSTICE LONG
X
JUSTICE VERNIERO
X
JUSTICE LaVECCHIA
X
JUSTICE ZAZZALI
X
TOTALS
7