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. Steven J. Carty (A-28-00)
Argued October 9, 2001 -- Decided March 4, 2002
COLEMAN, J., writing for a majority of the Court.
This consensual search and seizure case presents the novel question whether a request to search a motor
vehicle, following a valid stop by police, requires reasonable and articulable suspicion that a search would reveal
evidence of criminal wrongdoing.
Carty was a passenger in a motor vehicle that was operated by his brother, Leroy Coley, on March 27,
1997. The vehicle was stopped by State Trooper Walter Layton on the New Jersey Turnpike for traveling 74 to 75
miles per hour when the posted speed limit was 55 miles per hour. After Coley signed a form consenting to a search
of the vehicle, the trooper conducted a pat down search of Coley and Carty. The frisk of Carty uncovered cocaine.
Carty was arrested immediately and later indicted on charges of second-degree possession of cocaine with intent to
distribute and third-degree possession.
Prior to trial, Carty moved to suppress the use of the cocaine in the impending trial. The testimony at the
suppression hearing revealed that Coley was unable to produce his driver's license or vehicle registration. Coley
and Carty advised the trooper that the vehicle had been rented. There was conflicting evidence whether the rental
papers were in the vehicle, but the trial court found they were not. A computer search disclosed that Coley had a
valid driver's license and that the vehicle was not stolen. The evidence, however, is also conflicting about when the
trooper first became aware of those facts, and the trial court did not specifically determine when the trooper
received that information from the dispatcher. The trial court found that because there was no proof of ownership
or the rental status of the vehicle, the trooper had the right to search the car to look for those credentials and to see if
there was any evidence the car was stolen.
After Coley signed the consent form, the trooper asked him if he could pat him down for the trooper's
safety. Coley agreed, and the pat-down revealed no incriminating evidence. The trooper then went back to the
vehicle and asked Carty to step out so he could search the vehicle. Carty was also asked whether the trooper could
pat him down for safety reasons, and Carty agreed. As noted previously, the frisk of Carty uncovered cocaine.
The trial court found that the search was conducted pursuant to the driver's voluntary and knowing
consent. It also found that the pat-down reasonably was justified as the least intrusive method of securing the
trooper's safety while conducting the consent search of the vehicle. The trial court, therefore, denied Carty's
suppression motion. Thereafter, a jury found Carty guilty as charged in the indictment, and he was sentenced to a
custodial term of six years.
Carty appealed the denial of his motion to suppress the cocaine, arguing that the pat-down was illegal. In a
published opinion, the Appellate Division reversed the conviction. State v. Carty,
332 N.J. Super. 200 (App. Div.
2000). The Appellate Division observed that the trooper should have waited, before doing anything further, for
confirmation from headquarters that he was dealing with a licensed driver who did not have his credentials with
him. It noted that had the trooper done so, he could have issued the appropriate summons and let Coley and Carty
go on their way and be done with the matter.
This Court granted the State's petition for certification.
HELD: Consent searches during a lawful stop of a motor vehicle are not valid unless there is reasonable and
articulable suspicion to believe that the motorist or passenger has engaged in, or is about to engage in, criminal
activity.
1. Although the search-and-seizure provision of the New Jersey Constitution, Article I, paragraph 7, is similar to
the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution, consent searches under the New Jersey Constitution are
afforded a higher level of scrutiny. Nearly three decades ago, in State v. Johnson,
68 N.J. 349 (1975), this Court
declined to adopt the federal standard of voluntary consent. Because Johnson involved the search of a residence,
this is the first time this Court has addressed what the standard should be for an officer seeking consent to search
incident to a lawful stop of a motor vehicle for violation of traffic laws. A lawful stop must be based on reasonable
and articulable suspicion that an offense, including a minor traffic offense, has been or is being committed. Because
the motorist cannot leave the area before the search is completed, roadside consent searches are akin to an
investigatory stop that involves detention. Such a stop traditionally has required reasonable and articulable
suspicion. (P. 6-11)
2. When a motorist is pulled over, the officer's decision to ask for consent to search is a purely discretionary one.
A standardless request to search a lawfully stopped automobile invites intrusions upon constitutionally guaranteed
rights based on nothing more substantial than an inarticulate hunch. In the context of motor vehicle stops, where an
individual is at the side of the road and confronted by a uniformed officer seeking to search the vehicle, most would
feel compelled to consent. Recent reports indicate that ninety-five percent of detained motorists granted a law
enforcement officer's request for consent to search. Yet, the vast majority of those searches yield no evidence of
wrongdoing. What can be synthesized from a review of scholarly articles, cases from around the country, and the
empirical data referred to in this opinion, is that despite use of the voluntary and knowing standard adopted in
Johnson, consent searches following valid motor vehicle stops are either not voluntary because people feel
compelled to consent for various reasons, or are not reasonable because of the detention associated with obtaining
and executing the consent search. (Pp. 11-20)
3. Given the widespread abuse of our existing law that allows law enforcement officers to obtain consent searches
of every motor vehicle stopped for even the most minor traffic violation, the Court must decide what objective
standard should be imposed to restore some semblance of reasonableness to the type of consent searches involved in
the present case. The Court is expanding the Johnson two-part constitutional standard and holding that unless there
is a reasonable and articulable basis beyond the initial valid motor vehicle stop to continue the detention after
completion of the valid traffic stop, any further detention to effectuate a consent search is unconstitutional.
Applying that constitutional requirement to this case, Trooper Layton lacked reasonable and articulable suspicion
that a search would reveal any evidence of criminal wrongdoing. There was nothing more than Coley's and Carty's
nervousness to raise the trooper's suspicions. The trooper's lack of information regarding the status of the driver's
license and registration of the car was, at most, due to the trooper's own failure to be informed because the
information was easily at his disposal. (Pp. 20-28)
4. Because the Court is affirming the judgment of the Appellate Division, this decision should be applied
retroactively to all stops made after the date of that court's decision - June 23, 2000. To avoid confusion, the Court
emphasizes that this decision does not affect the principles enunciated in various state and federal cases that allow
roadblocks, checkpoints and the like based on a concern for the public safety. The special governmental concerns
regarding public safety or national security merit full public cooperation with a constitutionally permissible
roadblock or checkpoint. (Pp. 28-34)
The judgment of the Appellate Division is AFFIRMED.
JUSTICE STEIN has filed a separate, concurring opinion, expressing his view that the Court's decision
should be based on a judicially imposed rule of law rather than mandated by the State Constitution.
CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ and JUSTICES LONG and ZAZZALI join in JUSTICE COLEMAN's
opinion. JUSTICE STEIN has filed a separate concurring opinion. JUSTICES VERNIERO and
LaVECCHIA did not participate.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
A-
28 September Term 2000
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
STEVEN J. CARTY,
Defendant-Respondent.
Argued October 9, 2001 -- Decided March 4, 2002
On certification to the Superior Court,
Appellate Division, whose opinion is
reported at
332 N.J. Super. 200 (2000).
Linda A. Shashoua, Assistant Prosecutor,
argued the cause for appellant (Lee A.
Solomon, Camden County Prosecutor,
attorney).
Edward J. Crisonino argued the cause for
respondent.
Deborah C. Bartolomey, Deputy Attorney
General, argued the cause for amicus curiae
Attorney General of New Jersey (John J.
Farmer, Jr., Attorney General, attorney).
Stephen W. Kirsch, Assistant Deputy Public
Defender, argued the cause for amicus curiae
Office of the Public Defender (Peter A.
Garcia, Acting Public Defender, attorney).
John P. McDonald argued the cause for amicus
curiae Association of Criminal Defense
Lawyers of New Jersey (McDonald, Rogers &
Rizzolo, attorneys).
Kevin McNulty argued the cause for amicus
curiae American Civil Liberties Union of New
Jersey (Gibbons, Del Deo, Dolan, Griffinger
& Vecchione, attorneys; Lawrence S.
Lustberg, of counsel).
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
COLEMAN, J.
This consensual search and seizure case presents the novel
question whether a request to search a motor vehicle, following a
valid stop by the police, requires reasonable and articulable
suspicion that a search would reveal evidence of criminal
wrongdoing. The Appellate Division held that a request for
consent absent reasonable and articulable suspicion violated the
New Jersey Constitution and reversed the trial court's denial of
defendant's motion to suppress.
We hold that, in order for a consent to search a motor
vehicle and its occupants to be valid, law enforcement personnel
must have a reasonable and articulable suspicion of criminal
wrongdoing prior to seeking consent to search a lawfully stopped
motor vehicle. The reasonable and articulable suspicion standard
is derived from the New Jersey Constitution and serves the
prophylactic purpose of preventing the police from turning
routine traffic stops into a fishing expedition for criminal
activity unrelated to the lawful stop. Because that standard was
not satisfied in this case, the evidence seized must be
suppressed.
I.
Defendant was a passenger in a motor vehicle that was
operated by his brother, Leroy Coley, on March 27, 1997. The
vehicle was stopped by State Trooper Walter Layton for traveling
74 to 75 miles per hour when the posted speed limit on the New
Jersey Turnpike at that time was 55 miles per hour. After Coley
signed a form consenting to a search of the vehicle, the trooper
conducted a pat down of Coley and defendant for the trooper's
safety. The frisk of defendant uncovered cocaine. He was
arrested immediately and later indicted for third-degree unlawful
possession of cocaine, in violation of
N.J.S.A. 2C:35-10a(1), and
second-degree possession of cocaine with intent to distribute, in
violation of
N.J.S.A. 2C:35-5a(1) and -5b(2).
Prior to trial on the indictment, defendant filed a motion
pursuant to
Rule 3:5-7 to suppress the use of the cocaine in the
impending trial. During the suppression hearing, some of the
evidence presented by the State conflicted with some evidence
presented by defendant. The stop of the vehicle occurred at
approximately 5:00 p.m. After stopping the vehicle, Trooper
Layton asked Coley to produce his driver's license and the car's
registration. He had neither in his possession. Although the
vehicle had been rented, there is conflicting evidence whether
the rental papers were in the vehicle. The trial court found
they were not. Both driver and passenger, however, told the
trooper that the vehicle had been rented by their father.
A computer search disclosed that Coley had a valid driver's
license and that the vehicle was not stolen. The evidence,
however, is also conflicting about when the trooper first became
aware of those facts. The trial court did not specifically
determine when the trooper first received that information from
the dispatcher. That court found that because there was no
proof of ownership of the car or proof of rental status of the
vehicle, [the trooper] had the right to search the car to look
for those credentials and to see if there was any evidence that
the car was stolen.
Although the trial court found that the trooper was
justified in searching for Coley's driver's license and the car's
registration, it did not explain the trooper's reasons for
requesting consent to search the vehicle, the scope of which was
not limited to a search for those credentials. After Coley
signed the consent, the trooper asked whether he could pat him
down for the trooper's safety prior to searching the vehicle.
Coley agreed, but the pat-down revealed no incriminating
evidence. The trooper then went back to the vehicle and asked
defendant to step out so that he could search the vehicle.
Defendant also was asked whether the trooper could pat him down
for safety reasons because the trooper's back would be to them
while searching the vehicle. Defendant also agreed to the pat
down. As noted previously, the frisk of defendant uncovered
cocaine.
The trial court found that the search was conducted pursuant
to the driver's consent and satisfied the standard of voluntary
and knowing consent articulated in
State v. Johnson,
68 N.J. 349
(1975). The trial court also found that the pat-down reasonably
was justified as the least intrusive method of securing Trooper
Layton's safety while conducting the consent search of the
vehicle. The trial court, therefore, denied the suppression
motion. Thereafter, a jury found defendant guilty of second-
degree possession of cocaine with intent to distribute and third-
degree possession of the cocaine. The court sentenced defendant
to a custodial term of six years.
Defendant appealed the denial of his motion to suppress the
cocaine, arguing that the pat-down was illegal. In reversing
that order, the Appellate Division in a published opinion
observed:
[T]he driver had not offered false
information regarding his identity. He
simply did not have his credentials with him.
The trooper certainly had the right to detain
him until he was satisfied that he was in
fact dealing with a licensed driver in a car
that was not stolen. There appears to be no
reason at all for the trooper not to have
waited, before doing anything further, for
confirmation from headquarters of those
facts, particularly after they were confirmed
by the passenger. Had he done so, there
would have been no reason for him not merely
to issue the appropriate summonses, let the
driver and his passenger go on their way, and
be done with the matter. Rather than doing
that, however, the trooper, without
articulable suspicion that anything else
might have been amiss, chose to ask the
driver to sign a consent to search form.
[State v. Carty,
332 N.J. Super. 200, 205
(App. Div. 2000).]
We granted the State's petition for certification,
165 N.J. 605
(2000), and now affirm.
II.
The State, through the Camden County Prosecutor, argues that
the Appellate Division erred by creating a
per se rule that a
request for consent to search that is unsupported by reasonable
suspicion is unconstitutional, and asserts that the ruling is
contrary to a long and unbroken line of cases upholding consent
as an exception to the warrant requirement of the federal and
state constitutions. The State also argues that it was improper
to abandon the totality of the circumstances standard in favor of
a single factor _ that the search took place during a routine
traffic stop.
The Attorney General, as
amicus curiae, agrees with the
prosecutor and argues further that the requirement of reasonable
and articulable suspicion as a prerequisite to seeking consent to
search will weaken law enforcement efforts without enhancing
protection of constitutional rights. The Attorney General
maintains that the Appellate Division erred by focusing on the
trooper's suspicion rather than on the traditional question of
the voluntariness of the consent. Finally, the Attorney General
argues that a violation of internal police guidelines is not an
adequate reason to enact a new rule of law.
The Public Defender, as
amicus curiae, makes two arguments:
First, that the Court should hold that Article I, paragraph 7 of
the state constitution requires police to have reasonable
suspicion that a consent search will yield evidence of illegal
activity prior to requesting such consent, and second, that both
the federal and state constitutions prohibit the police from
asking questions during a
Terry stop that do not relate either to
the reason for the stop or to another offense about which the
officer has obtained reasonable suspicion during the stop.
The Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (ACDL), as
amicus curiae, argues that the standard adopted by the Appellate
Division is mandated by Article I, paragraph 7 of the New Jersey
Constitution.
The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), as
amicus curiae,
agrees with the ACDL that our state constitution mandates an
affirmance of the Appellate Division.
III.
We begin our analysis by focusing on the law controlling
consent searches. The starting point is Article I, paragraph 7
of the New Jersey Constitution.
Although our search-and-seizure
provision is similar to the Fourth Amendment of the United States
Constitution, consent searches under the New Jersey Constitution
are afforded a higher level of scrutiny. Nearly three decades
ago, this Court in
State v. Johnson,
supra, declined to adopt the
federal standard of voluntary consent articulated in
Schneckloth
v. Bustamonte,
412 U.S. 218, 248-49,
93 S. Ct. 2041, 2059,
36 L.
Ed.2d 854 (1973). Instead, we held that under Article I,
paragraph 7 of the New Jersey Constitution any consent given by
an individual to a police officer to conduct a warrantless search
must be given knowingly and voluntarily.
Johnson,
supra, 68
N.J.
at 354. The burden is on the State to show that the individual
giving consent knew that he or she had a choice in the matter.
Ibid.
In response to
Johnson, the New Jersey State Police
developed a Consent to Search form. That form authorizes a
trooper to conduct a complete search of a motor vehicle or
other premises as described by the officer on the face of the
form. The form also states:
I further authorize the above member of the
New Jersey State Police to remove and search
any letters, documents, papers, materials, or
other property which is considered pertinent
to the investigation, provided that I am
subsequently given a receipt for anything
which is removed.
I have knowingly and voluntarily given my
consent to the search described above.
I have been advised by [the investigating
officer] and fully understand that I have the
right to refuse giving my consent to search.
I have been further advised that I may
withdraw my consent at any time during the
search.
The form is filled out by the officer to include, among other
things, the officer's name and a description of the vehicle to be
searched. It then is presented to the consentee for his or her
signature.
Because Johnson involved the search of a residence, this is
the first time that this Court has addressed what the standard
should be for an officer seeking consent to search incident to a
lawful stop of a motor vehicle for violation of traffic laws. A
lawful stop of an automobile must be based on reasonable and
articulable suspicion that an offense, including a minor traffic
offense, has been or is being committed. Delaware v. Prouse,
440 U.S. 648, 663,
99 S. Ct. 1391, 1401,
59 L. Ed.2d 660, 673
(1979); State v. Locurto,
157 N.J. 463, 470 (1999). Once a
lawful stop is made, the subsequent reasonable detention of the
occupants of the motor vehicle constitutes a seizure. Whren v.
United States,
517 U.S. 806, 809-10,
116 S. Ct. 1769, 1772,
135 L. Ed.2d 89, 95 (1996); State v. Dickey,
152 N.J. 468, 475
(1998). Such reasonable seizures, however, are permissible.
Although stopping a car and detaining its
occupants constitute a seizure within the
meaning of the Fourth Amendment, the
governmental interest in investigating an
officer's reasonable suspicion, based on
specific and articulable facts, may outweigh
the Fourth Amendment interest of the driver
and passengers in remaining secure from the
intrusion.
[United States v. Hensley,
469 U.S. 221, 226,
105 S. Ct. 675, 679,
83 L. Ed.2d 604
(1985)(emphasis added)(citing Prouse, supra,
440 U.S. at 653-55, 99 S. Ct. at 1395-97,
59 L. Ed 2d at ___).]
The fact that the motorist already has been detained at the
point when an officer asks for consent to search is not
dispositive of whether a suspicionless search should be allowed
to continue. Because the motorist cannot leave the area before
the search is completed, unless it is terminated earlier, the
detention associated with roadside searches is unlike a mere
field interrogation where an officer may question an individual
without grounds for suspicion. State v. Maryland,
167 N.J. 471, 483 (2001) (quoting State v. Sheffield,
62 N.J. 441, 447,
cert. denied,
414 U.S. 876,
94 S. Ct. 83,
38 L. Ed.2d 121
(1973)). Roadside consent searches are instead more akin to an
investigatory so that does involve a detention. Such a stop
traditionally has required reasonable and articulable suspicion.
Id. at 487.
A.
First, we must grapple with the problems caused by
standardless requests for consent searches of motor vehicles
lawfully stopped for minor traffic offenses in the wake of
Johnson. Commentators have observed that it is virtually
impossible to drive and not unwittingly commit some infraction of
our motor vehicle code.
See David A. Harris,
Car Wars: The
Fourth Amendment's Death on the Highway,
66
Geo. Wash. L. Rev.
556, 567_68 (1998) (describing how officers need simply follow
motor vehicle for short periods of time in order to detect an
infraction). As a result, substantial number of drivers who
travel the roads of this state are at risk of being pulled over
and asked by law enforcement officials for consent to search
their vehicles. Treating all citizens like criminals in order
to catch the malefactors among us represents an unwise policy
choice, an outlook favoring crime prevention over all of our
other values.
Id. at 558.
Moreover, once a motorist is pulled over, the officer's
decision to ask for consent to search is a purely discretionary
one. As Professor LaFave has noted, 'a police procedure is less
threatening to Fourth Amendment values when the discretionary
authority of the police (and thus the risk of arbitrary action)
is kept at an absolute minimum.' Ian D. Midgley, Comment,
Just
One Question Before We Get To Ohio v. Robinette: "Are You
Carrying Any Contraband . . . Weapons, Drugs, Constitutional
Protections . . . Anything Like That?", 48
Case W. Res. L. Rev.
173 (1997) (quoting 4 Wayne R. LaFave,
Search and Seizure §
10.8(d) at 696 (3d ed. 1996)). Even after the request is made
the officer may continue to exercise his or her discretion. For
instance, if a motorist refuses to allow the officer to search
the vehicle, the officer may choose to issue a ticket instead of
releasing the driver with just a warning. Another motorist
stopped for the same traffic violation, however, may sacrifice
his or her right to privacy and consent to a search in order to
escape with only a warning. Midgley,
supra, at
.
A standardless request to search a lawfully stopped
automobile has been problematic for a long time. To insist
neither on an appropriate factual basis for suspicion directed at
a particular automobile, nor on some other substantial and
objective standard or rule to govern the exercise of discretion,
would invite intrusions upon constitutionally guaranteed rights
based on nothing more substantial than inarticulate hunches.
Terry v. Ohio,
392 U.S. 1, 22,
88 S. Ct. 1868, 1880,
20 L. Ed.2d 889 (1968). Consistent with concerns over standardless requests
for consent searches, not surprisingly, [s]ituations involving a
request for consent to search following an initial lawful
detention have posed difficult analytical questions for courts
and have been the subject of extensive commentary.
Commonwealth
v. Strickler,
757 A.2d 884, 890-91 (Pa. 2000) (citations omitted)
(finding no coercion under totality of circumstances that would
invalidate continued detention by requesting consent to search).
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court in
Strickler followed the
reasoning of the United States Supreme Court in
Ohio v.
Robinette,
519 U.S. 33, 39-40,
117 S. Ct. 417, 421,
136 L. Ed.2d 347 (1996). In
Robinette, the Court rejected the notion that
consent is
per se invalid unless the officer follows the first-
tell-then-ask rule that requires the officer to inform the
detained motorist that he is "legally free to go" before
requesting consent to search.
Ibid. Instead the Court
reiterated the totality of the circumstances standard for all
issues of consent.
Ibid.
Several courts since have distinguished the Supreme Court's
reasoning in
Robinette, and have held that continuing a
Terry
stop beyond that which is necessary to resolve the initial stop
violates the Fourth Amendment unless there is an additional
articulable and reasonable basis to continue the detention. In
fact, on remand from the Supreme Court, the Ohio Supreme Court
decided that the consent to search in
Robinettte still was
involuntary and the fruit of an illegal detention under the state
constitution because there was no basis to continue the detention
after the officer issued a warning for the initial speeding
violation.
State v. Robinette,
685 N.E.2d 762, 767, 770-72 (Ohio
1997). Similarly, in
United States v. Jones,
234 F.3d 234, 241
(5th Cir. 2000), the court held that although the initial stop of
the defendants' vehicle for speeding was valid, the continued
detention, after completing the computer check on drivers'
licenses and rental papers revealed clean records, was
unreasonable and violated the Fourth Amendment. Consequently,
the drugs found during the search were suppressed because the
subsequent consent to search did not dissipate the Fourth
Amendment violation.
Id. at 244;
accord United States v.
Valadez,
267 F.3d 395, 398-99 (5th Cir. 2001) (finding continued
detention of defendant illegal once officer confirmed that
defendant had not committed traffic violation and no reasonable
suspicion of any other wrongdoing existed);
United States v.
Dortch,
199 F.3d 193, 198 (5th Cir. 1999) (finding continued
detention invalid "after the officer had informed [defendant]
that the computer check was completed but nonetheless detained
defendant's car until dog team arrived);
see also United States
v. Miller,
146 F.3d 274, 280 (5th Cir. 1998) (stating purpose of
invalid traffic stop was to seek consent of driver to search for
drugs and thus consent was tainted);
United States v. Beck,
140 F.3d 1129, 1135-36 (8th Cir. 1998) (finding seizure had occurred
after completion of valid traffic stop when officer told
defendant that he was free to go, but that he would be detained
until canine unit arrived unless he consented to search of car);
United States v. Caicedo,
85 F.3d 1184, 1190 (6th Cir. 1996)
(stating consent was fruit of illegal stop where there was only
"a very brief lapse of time" between suspicionless pat-down
search and request to search defendant's backpack "during which
nothing of significance occurred");
People v. Brownlee,
713 N.E.2d 556, 565-66 (Ill. 1999) (noting officers' actions after
traffic stop was concluded constituted show of authority such
that reasonable person would conclude he or she was not free to
leave);
Ferris v. State,
735 A.2d 491, 503 & n.6 (Md. 1999)
(finding illegal continued detention after officer returned
license and registration with citation for speeding but then
asked driver "if he would mind" stepping to the back of the
vehicle to answer questions).
The standard of reasonable and articulable suspicion has
been applied to consent searches by at least one other state. In
State v. Quino,
840 P.2d 358, 364-65 (Haw. 1992),
cert. denied,
507 U.S. 1031,
113 S. Ct. 1849,
123 L. Ed.2d 472 (1993), the
Hawaii Supreme Court invalidated airport encounters in which law
enforcement officers approached airline passengers and requested
consent to search their luggage or person without articulable
suspicion of wrongdoing.
Id. at 363-64. The court found: We
cannot allow the police to randomly 'encounter' individuals
without any objective basis for suspecting them of misconduct and
then place them in a coercive environment in order to develop a
reasonable suspicion to justify their detention.
Id. at 365.
The court therefore invalidated the search as an unconstitutional
seizure.
Id. at 364-65.
Unlike many other courts around the country, this Court has
not previously grappled with the problems caused by standardless
requests for consent to search a lawfully stopped motor vehicle.
But one of our observations in
Johnson is reflective of the
problem. There, we observed that [m]any persons, perhaps most,
would view the request of a police officer to make a search as
having the force of law.
Johnson,
supra, 68
N.J. at 354. In
the context of motor vehicle stops, where the individual is at
the side of the road and confronted by a uniformed officer
seeking to search his or her vehicle, it is not a stretch of the
imagination to assume that the individual feels compelled to
consent.
Cf. Wesley MacNeil Oliver,
With an Evil Eye and an
Unequal Hand: Pretextual Stops and Doctrinal Remedies to Racial
Profiling,
74
Tul. L. Rev. 1409, 1465 (2000) (stating that
[p]sychological studies further confirm that . . . there is an
almost reflexive impulse to obey an authority figure.);
see also
Adrian J. Barrio, Note,
Rethinking Schneckloth v. Bustamonte:
Incorporating Obedience Theory into the Supreme Court's
Conception of Voluntary Consent, 1
997
U. Ill. L. Rev. 215, 233-40
(discussing psychological studies regarding authority figures).
Indeed, data from the New Jersey State Police Independent
Monitors' most recent reports indicate that thirty-four out of
thirty-six people agreed to consent searches at the request of
officers over an approximately nine month period.
Monitor's
Second Report: Long-term Compliance Audit, at 8 (Jan. 10, 2001),
Monitors' Third Report: Long-Term Compliance Audit, at 8 (Apr.
2001), and
Monitors' Fourth Report: Long-Term Compliance Audit,
at 8 (July 17, 2001),
available at
http://www.state.nj.us/lp
s/
decreehome.htm. That figure indicates that nearly ninety-five
percent of detained motorists granted a law enforcement officer's
request for consent to search. What is more compelling is that
those motorists granted consent after officers used tactics such
as the following:
Extended detention and questioning regarding
issues not related to the reason for the
stop, such as How much money do you have in
your pocket? and Why are you riding around
on the New Jersey Turnpike? . . .;
The use of intimidating statements to obtain
consent to search (such as . . . the drug
dog's on the way, and . . . once the drug
dog gets here, everybody gets arrested, . .
. .); and
The use of hypothetical consent requests, a
violation of both policy and the decree, such
as if I asked for consent to search your
car, would you sign it?
[
Monitors' Fourth Report: Long-term
Compliance Audit,
supra, at 11-12.]
Yet, despite the frequency with which consent to search is
given,
the vast majority of motorists subjected to consent
searches following traffic stops are not charged with any
violation. The Attorney General's
Interim Report of the State
Police Review Team Regarding Allegations of Racial Profiling, at
28 (April 20, 1999),
available at http://www.state.nj.us/lps/
decreehome.htm, indicates that four out of every five persons who
submit to consent searches are innocent of any wrongdoing. With
only a twenty-percent rate of crime detection among randomly
targeted motorists, the effectiveness of roadside consents as a
law enforcement technique is undermined and clearly does not
outweigh the citizen's state constitutional interest in remaining
secure from intrusion.
The cumulative effect has been that we no longer have
confidence that a consent to search under
Johnson truly can be
voluntary or otherwise reasonable without modifying the
Johnson
standard. 'Consent' that is the product of official
intimidation or harassment is not consent at all. Citizens do
not forfeit their constitutional rights when they are coerced to
comply with a request that they would prefer to refuse.
Florida
v. Bostick,
501 U.S. 429, 438,
111 S. Ct. 2382, 2388,
115 L. Ed.2d 389,
(1991). What can be synthesized from a review of
scholarly articles, cases from around the country, and the
empirical data referred to in this opinion, is that despite use
of the first-tell-then-ask rule or the voluntary and knowing
standard adopted in
Johnson, consent searches following valid
motor vehicle stops are either not voluntary because people feel
compelled to consent for various reasons, or are not reasonable
because of the detention associated with obtaining and executing
the consent search. Stated differently, hindsight has taught us
that the
Johnson standard has not been effective in protecting
our citizens' interest against unreasonable intrusions when it
comes to suspicionless consent searches following valid motor
vehicle stops. We therefore must consider an appropriate
modification of the
Johnson standard.
B.
Given the widespread abuse of our existing law that allows
law enforcement officers to obtain consent searches of every
motor vehicle stopped for even the most minor traffic violation,
we must decide what objective standard should be imposed to
restore some semblance of reasonableness to the type of consent
searches involved in the present case. The Appellate Division
held that in the absence of an articulable suspicion, the
request to search to which the driver assented offended the State
Constitution.
Carty,
supra, 332
N.J. Super. at 202. The court
reasoned:
Requests to consent to an automobile search
are obviously, as a matter of common
experience, likely to be complied with.
Consequently, baseless requests almost
inevitably result in a search. It is our
view that travelers on our State highways
should not be subject to the harassment,
embarrassment[,] and inconvenience of an
automobile search following a routine traffic
stop unless the officer has at least an
articulable suspicion that the search will
yield evidence of illegal activity.
[
Id. at 207.]
The court then found that, because the trooper almost immediately
could have ascertained that the driver had a valid license and
that the car had not been stolen, the trooper had no reasonable
and articulable suspicion that the motor vehicle contained any
evidence of any illegal wrongdoing.
Id. at 206.
The State urges this Court to find that a standard of
reasonable and articulable suspicion is unnecessary with regard
to consent searches. The State contends that it already carries
the heavy burden of proving that consent is knowing and
voluntary and that, once that burden is met, this Court should
invalidate a consent search only if the request to consent was
made on the basis of race or ethnicity.
State v. Maryland,
supra, 167
N.J. at 484 (prohibiting race-based field inquiries).
We agree with the Appellate Division that consent searches
following a lawful stop of a motor vehicle should not be deemed
valid under
Johnson unless there is reasonable and articulable
suspicion to believe that an errant motorist or passenger has
engaged in, or is about to engage in, criminal activity. In
other words, we are expanding the
Johnson two-part constitutional
standard and holding that unless there is a reasonable and
articulable basis beyond the initial valid motor vehicle stop to
continue the detention after completion of the valid traffic
stop, any further detention to effectuate a consent search is
unconstitutional. A suspicionless consent search shall be deemed
unconstitutional whether it preceded or followed completion of
the lawful traffic stop. The requirement of reasonable and
articulable suspicion is derived from our State Constitution and
serves to validate the continued detention associated with the
search. It also serves the prophylactic purpose of preventing
the police from turning a routine traffic stop into a fishing
expedition for criminal activity unrelated to the stop. Indeed,
our holding is consistent with both the State Police Standard
Operating Procedures and the Consent Decree that was entered into
by the State Police on December 29, 1999.
Carty,
supra, 332
N.J.
Super. at 206.
When the foregoing constitutional requirement is applied to
this case, we agree with the Appellate Division that Trooper
Layton lacked reasonable and articulable suspicion that a search
would reveal any evidence of criminal wrongdoing.
Id. at 202,
205. At the suppression hearing, the trooper testified that he
requested to search the vehicle merely because the driver and
defendant appeared to be nervous and because he believed that
defendant's and the driver's stories conflicted. However, as the
trial court noted, their stories did not conflict _ defendant
merely gave a more detailed explanation of where they had been
than the explanation given by the driver.
Moreover, under the New Jersey Constitution, the appearance
of nervousness is not sufficient grounds for the reasonable and
articulable suspicion necessary to extend the scope of a
detention beyond the reason for the original stop. Nervousness
and furtive gestures may, in conjunction with other objective
facts, justify a
Terry search, but ordinarily '[m]ere furtive
gestures of an occupant of an automobile do not give rise to an
articulable suspicion suggesting criminal activity.'
State v.
Lund,
119 N.J. 35, 47 (1990) (alteration in original) (quoting
State v. Schlosser,
774 P.2d 1132, 1137 (Utah 1989)). Because
defendant's and the driver's stories did not conflict, there was
nothing more than nervousness to raise the trooper's suspicions.
Although the trooper claimed that he did not have information
regarding the status of the driver's license and the registration
of the car, at most that lack of information was due to his
failure to be informed immediately because the information was
easily at his disposal. We conclude, therefore, that the record
does not support a finding that the trooper had a reasonable and
articulable suspicion to request the driver's consent to search
the vehicle. Because the
Terry frisk of defendant was incident
to Coley's consent to search the vehicle, all the evidence seized
shall be suppressed.
The concurring member's sole disagreement is that the Court
should not constitutionalize the requirement that, for a consent
search to be valid, the police must have a reasonable and
articulable suspicion that a criminal offense is being or has
been committed prior to requesting consent to search. The
objections of the concurrence are twofold. First, it suggests
that the Court is invoking the New Jersey Constitution lightly.
Post at
(slip op. at 4). Second, the concurrence worries
that, as a necessary corollary to constitutionalizing the
standard, the fruit of the constitutional violation doctrine
will limit the state's use in criminal prosecutions of voluntary
confessions, as well as other evidence of criminal conduct, that
may directly result from a consent search conducted without the
requisite level of reasonable and articulable suspicion.
Post
at
(slip op. at 5-9).
The Court has not acted lightly in grounding the reasonable
and articulable suspicion standard in our State Constitution.
The Court used our State Constitution in
Johnson when it
determined the current requirements for a valid consent search.
To now say that the requirements that the consent be knowing and
voluntary are of constitutional dimensions, but a reasonable and
articulable suspicion prior to requesting the consent is not,
would represent a major retrenchment by this Court.
With regard to the latter objection, the concurrence relies
on the prophylactic procedural rule articulated in
Miranda v.
Arizona,
384 U.S. 436,
86 S. Ct. 1602,
16 L. Ed.2d 694 (1966).
That rule was adopted to protect the Fifth Amendment requirement
that no person can be compelled in any criminal case to be a
witness against himself or herself.
Miranda held that in order
for a defendant to waive the privilege of self-incrimination, the
government has the burden of demonstrating that any waiver was
made voluntarily, knowingly, and intelligently.
Miranda,
supra, 384
U.S. at 444, 86
S. Ct. at 1612, 16
L. Ed.
2d at 707.
To ensure that any waiver of the Fifth Amendment privilege is
voluntarily, knowingly, and intelligently given, the Court
established prophylactic-procedural requirements that
Miranda
warnings be administered before conducting custodial
interrogations, and failure to give those warnings creates an
irrebuttable presumption of compulsion as to use of unwarned
statements in the State's case-in-chief.
Id. at 479, 86
S. Ct.
at 1630,
16 L. Ed 2d at
. Consequently, the
Miranda rule was
established to address concerns raised under the Fifth Amendment
and the concurrence cites only Fifth Amendment federal cases that
have applied that rule. Indeed, this Court has rejected use of
Miranda as merely a prophylactic rule even in the context of the
Fifth Amendment and our common-law privilege against self-
incrimination.
State v. Hartley,
103 N.J. 252, 271-78 (1986).
Consent searches raise issues concerning one of the well-
established exceptions to the Fourth Amendment warrant
requirement. Although the exclusionary rule applies to both
Fourth Amendment,
State v. Novembrino,
105 N.J. 95, 132-44
(1987), and Fifth Amendment violations because its purpose is to
deter police misconduct and to preserve the integrity of the
courts,
State v. Johnson,
118 N.J. 639, 651 (1990),
unreasonable searches under the Fourth Amendment are different
from unwarned interrogation under the Fifth Amendment.
Dickerson v. United States,
530 U.S. 428, 441,
120 S. Ct. 2326,
2335,
147 L. Ed.2d 405,
(2000). Because they are
sufficiently different to warrant a separate treatment, Yale
Kamisar,
Miranda Thirty-Five Years Later: A Close Look at the
Majority and Dissenting Opinions in Dickerson,
33
Ariz. St. L.J.
387, 411 n.147 (2001), the Burger and Rehnquist Courts have
refused to extend
Miranda's prophylactic rule to Fourth Amendment
jurisprudence. Carol S. Steiker,
Counter-Revolution In
Constitutional Criminal Procedure? Two Audiences, Two Answers,
94
Mich. L. Rev. 2466, 2493 (1996).
The reasonable and articulable suspicion standard is a well-
established constitutional requirement under the Fourth Amendment
and the comparable provision of the New Jersey Constitution to
determine the reasonableness of police conduct. For example,
Prouse uses it to determine when a motor vehicle may be stopped;
Terry uses it to determine when a pat-down or frisk may be
conducted and when an investigatory stop is proper. Because the
constitutional, reasonable and articulable suspicion standard is
required to stop a motor vehicle and to conduct a pat-down of its
occupants, it would be incongruous to hold that the standard
suddenly becomes prophylactic and lacks constitutional force when
it is used to determine the reasonableness of the police in
asking the driver or owner of the stopped motor vehicle to
consent to a search of that vehicle. Rather than confusing the
police with the concurrence's approach, we have made the standard
readily applicable by the police in the context of the law
enforcement activities in which they are necessarily engaged by
retaining the constitutionalization of the standard throughout
the encounter.
New York v. Belton,
453 U.S. 454, 458,
101 S. Ct. 2860, 2863,
69 L. Ed.2d 768,
(1981).
Finally, the concurrence correctly states that
constitutionalization of the reasonable and articulable suspicion
standard will permit invocation of the fruit of the poisonous
tree doctrine. The State, however, will be permitted to
demonstrate whether the taint of some illegal consent searches
has been attenuated.
Brown v. Illinois,
422 U.S. 590, 602-03,
95 S. Ct. 2254, 2261,
45 L. Ed.2d 416 (1975);
State v. Barry,
86 N.J. 80, 87,
cert. denied,
454 U.S. 1017,
102 S. Ct. 553,
70 L.
Ed.2d 415 (1981).
IV.
Finally, we must decide whether the new rule of law we
announce today should have any retroactive application. We
believe that because we are affirming the judgment of the
Appellate Division, our decision should be applied retroactively
to all stops made after June 23, 2000, the date on which the
Appellate Division rendered its decision. We emphasize that our
decision is intended to establish the minimum threshold
requirement for determining when consent searches of a validly
stopped motor vehicle and its occupants are constitutionally
permitted under
Johnson. Consequently, our decision rests
exclusively on bona fide separate, adequate, and independent
[state] grounds.
Michigan v. Long,
463 U.S. 1032, 1041,
103 S.
Ct. 3469, 3476,
77 L. Ed.2d 1201, 1214 (1983). To the extent
that we rely on federal precedents in reaching our state-law
decision, we do so only for the purpose of guidance, recognizing
that those precedents may not compel the result that we reach
today.
State v. Hartley,
supra, 103
N.J. at 286.
V.
To avoid confusion in attempts to overextend our holding in
this case in light of the September 11, 2001 attack on the World
Trade Center and the Pentagon, we wish to make clear the
limitations of this opinion. This decision does not affect the
principles enunciated in various state and federal cases that
allow roadblocks, checkpoints and the like based on a concern for
the public safety. As does the United States Supreme Court, we
view checkpoint stops in a different light because the subjective
intrusion__the generating of concern or even fright on the part
of lawful travelers__is appreciably less in the case of a
checkpoint stop.
United States v. Martinez-Fuerte,
428 U.S. 543, 558,
96 S. Ct. 3074, 3083,
49 L. Ed.2d 1116 (1976).
Additionally,
[f]or Fourth Amendment purposes, we also see
insufficient resemblance between sporadic and
random stops of individual vehicles making
their way through city traffic and those
stops occasioned by roadblocks where all
vehicles are brought to a halt or to a near
halt, and all are subjected to a show of the
police power of the community. At traffic
checkpoints the motorist can see that other
vehicles are being stopped, he can see
visible signs of the officers' authority, and
he is much less likely to be frightened or
annoyed by the intrusion.
[Delaware v. Prouse,
440 U.S. 648, 657,
99 S.
Ct. 1391, 1398,
59 L. Ed.2d 660 (1979)
(quoting United States v. Ortiz,
422 U.S. 891, 894-95,
95 S. Ct. 2585, 2587,
45 L. Ed.2d 623 (1975).]
Moreover, the special governmental concerns regarding public
safety or national security merit full public cooperation with a
constitutionally permissible roadblock or checkpoint.
Under the search and seizure provision of the New Jersey
Constitution, Article I, paragraph 7, roadblocks established on a
purely discretionary basis are invalid. State v. Kirk,
202 N.J.
Super. 28, 38-44 (App. Div. 1985). In order to pass muster under
our state constitution, a roadblock or checkpoint must be
established for a specific need and to achieve a particular
purpose at a specific place. Id. at 37.
If the road block was established by a
command or supervisory authority and was
carefully targeted to a designated area at a
specified time and place based on data
justifying the site selection for reasons of
public safety and reasonably efficacious or
productive law enforcement goals, the road
block will likely pass constitutional muster.
Other factors which enhanced judicial
approval were (1) adequate warnings to avoid
frightening the traveling public, (2) advance
general publicity designed to deter drunken
drivers from getting in cars in the first
place, and (3) officially specified neutral
and courteous procedures for the intercepting
officers to follow when stopping drivers.
[Id. at 40-41.]
Accord State v. Flowers,
328 N.J. Super. 205, 207, 218 (App. Div.
2000) (upholding roadblock designed to detect stolen cars in area
with high rate of auto theft by stopping every vehicle); State v.
Kadelak,
280 N.J. Super. 349, 377 (App. Div.), certif. denied,
141 N.J. 98 (1995) (upholding roadblock designed to detect
vehicle safety violations by stopping every fifth vehicle and
vehicles with obvious safety violations); State v. Barcia,
235 N.J. Super. 311, 316, 318-19 (App. Div. 1989) (invalidating
roadblock designed to intercept inter-state drug trafficking as
arbitrary and excessive where roadblock caused over one million
vehicles to come to complete stop and wait in line for up to four
hours). It follows that roadblock or checkpoint stops cannot be
designed simply to check for criminal violations, Kirk, supra,
202 N.J. Super. at 55, and that any car detained for further
investigation must be detained on the basis of a reasonable and
particularized suspicion that the motorist or vehicle is
associated with criminal wrongdoing. State v. Reynolds,
319 N.J.
Super. 426, 434 (App. Div. 1998) (finding officer at roadblock
had both articulable suspicion of intoxication and probable
cause that justified sending defendant to secondary area for
further sobriety analysis). In general, roadblocks may be
justified based on reasons of public safety and reasonably
efficacious or productive law enforcement goals. State v.
Mazurek,
237 N.J. Super. 231, 235 (App. Div. 1989), certif.
denied,
121 N.J. 623 (1990) (internal quotations omitted). The
balance to be struck is whether the checkpoint advance[s] the
public interest to a much greater degree than could be achieved
through traditional less intrusive police procedures. Id. at
239.
Likewise, federal courts, in analyzing checkpoints, have
adopted a balancing test that involves the gravity of the safety
interest, the effectiveness of the checkpoint, and the intrusion
on the individual's privacy. Michigan Dep't of State Police v.
Sitz,
496 U.S. 444, 448-49,
110 S. Ct. 2481, 2484,
110 L. Ed.2d 412 (1990). Although the United States Supreme Court has
approved sobriety checkpoints because of the magnitude of the
drunken driving problem [and] the States' interest in eradicating
it, id. at 451, 110 S. Ct. at 2485, the Court also has stated:
We address only the initial stop of each
motorist passing through a checkpoint and the
associated preliminary questioning and
observation by checkpoint officers.
Detention of particular motorists for more
extensive field sobriety testing may require
satisfaction of an individualized suspicion
standard.
[Id. at 450-51, 110 S. Ct. at 2485.]
Accord Martinez-Fuerte, supra, 428 U.S. at 567, 96 S. Ct. at 3087
(approving highway checkpoints for detecting illegal aliens but
stating that '[A]ny further detention . . . must be based on
consent or probable cause.' United States v. Brignoni-Ponce, [
422 U.S. 873, 882,
95 S. Ct. 2574, 2580,
45 L. Ed.2d 607 (1975)].).
Where there is no individualized suspicion, as in the case of
airport security, federal courts apply the balancing test. See,
e.g., United States v. Herzbrun,
723 F.2d 773, 775 (11th Cir.
1984) (upholding airport searches [d]ue to the intense danger of
air piracy); United States v. Edwards,
498 F.2d 496, 500 (2d
Cir. 1974) (upholding airport searches of carry-on baggage with
magnetometers to prevent airplane hijacking and/or bombing where
device searched all carry-on baggage).
The need to protect public safety today is perhaps even more
readily apparent than it was when those cases were decided.
Therefore, the holding in the present case is limited in that it
pertains to consent searches pursuant to a stop for a traffic
infraction. In times of national crisis the jurisprudence of the
United States Supreme Court and the federal circuit courts have
carved out exceptions to the normal search and seizure
protections afforded to Americans. We do not disturb that
jurisprudence with our decision today, which rests exclusively on
independent state grounds.
VI.
The judgment of the Appellate Division reversing the Law
Division's denial of the motion to suppress is affirmed. The
matter is remanded to the Law Division to vacate the judgment of
conviction.
CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ and JUSTICES LONG and ZAZZALI join in
JUSTICE COLEMAN's opinion. JUSTICE STEIN filed a separate
concurring opinion. JUSTICES VERNIERO and LaVECCHIA did not
participate.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
A-
28 September Term 2000
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
STEVEN J. CARTY,
Defendant-Respondent.
STEIN, J., concurring
The Court today holds that a consent to search a motor
vehicle and its occupants is invalid unless the police officer,
following a valid stop of the vehicle, possesses a reasonable and
articulable suspicion that a search would reveal evidence of a
crime. The Court's holding applies only to consent searches of
vehicles stopped for traffic-type violations, and is based on
evidence in the record that the use by police officers of consent
searches in those circumstances has been abused. The Court's
holding is consistent with the current State Police Standard
Operating Procedures and the December 29, 1999 Consent Decree
entered into by the State Police with the United States
Department of Justice. The Court's decision is one of great
significance to all those who operate motor vehicles on our
State's roadways. With but one reservation, I enthusiastically
join the Court's disposition.
I
My reservation about the Court's decision is based on its
holding that our State Constitution is the source of the
requirement that a police officer who requests a motorist to
consent to a search of his vehicle after a lawful traffic stop
must have in advance a reasonable and articulable suspicion that
the search will reveal evidence of criminal activity. Ante at
___ (slip op. at 22). I would impose precisely the same condition
as does the Court, but would not rely on the State Constitution
as its source. Rather, based on the virtually uncontradicted
evidence that some police officers in New Jersey frequently have
abused the power to request consents to search motor vehicles
after routine traffic stops _ and that motorists routinely accede
to those requests _ I would hold that the requirement of
reasonable and articulable suspicion that a search will reveal
evidence of a crime is simply a prophylactic rule of law adopted
by this Court for the purpose of preventing abuses of the power
of law enforcement officers to request motorists to consent to
searches of their motor vehicles.
Two reasons counsel against constitutionalizing the Court's
holding. The first is that the court's analysis encourages
fragmentation of the protections afforded by the State
Constitution. As noted, the Court's holding establishes a
constitutional standard that applies only to requests for
consents to search motor vehicles after a traffic stop, ante at
___ (slip op. at 2), but does not apply to the wide variety of
other settings in which consent searches may be sought by police
officers. Thus the Court's newly established constitutional
principle has no application to consent searches in airports, bus
terminals, train stations, college dormitories, private homes, or
business premises.
Our State constitution has been described as the State's
organic law and as a document that embodies the will of the
people, as the final law[.] Gangemi v. Berry,
25 N.J. 1, 12-13
(1957). Its fundamental role is to function as the core of the
legal principles that guide the operation of State government.
In Vreeland v. Byrne,
72 N.J. 292, 310 (1977), the Court
explained:
The cornerstone of our state government
is our state Constitution. All state
governmental action whether it be executive,
legislative or judicial must conform to this
organic law. Even though governmental action
is generally clothed with a presumption of
legality, the judiciary, which is the final
arbiter of what the Constitution means, must
strike down governmental action which offends
a constitutional provision.
Because the Constitution serves as the State's organic law,
we ordinarily do not invoke its protections lightly, to apply
only to some but not all aspects of the challenged activity. See
State v. Novembrino,
105 N.J. 95, 158 (1987) (rejecting good-
faith exception to exclusionary rule adopted by United States
Supreme Court and holding inadmissible under New Jersey
Constitution evidence seized pursuant to warrant issued without
probable cause where well-trained officer relied in good faith on
warrant in gathering evidence); State v. Hunt,
91 N.J. 338, 346-
48 (1982) (holding invalid under New Jersey Constitution
warrantless search and seizure of toll billing records); State v.
Alston,
88 N.J. 211, 226 (1981) (holding under New Jersey
Constitution that defendants, driver, and passengers in
automobile owned by another had automatic standing to challenge
admissibility of weapons found by police in warrantless search of
vehicle, and holding that automatic standing rule under State
Constitution applies to any persons charged with offense in which
possession of seized evidence at time of contested search is
essential element of guilt); State v. Johnson,
68 N.J. 349, 353-
54 (1975) (holding that under Art. 1, par. 7 of New Jersey
Constitution the validity of all consents to search must be
measured in terms of waiver[,] requiring the State to bear
burden of showing that the consent was voluntary, an essential
element of which is knowledge of the right to refuse