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. Vincent Dispoto, a/k/a Vincent R. Dispoto, Jr. (A-103-05)
Argued October 11, 2006 Decided January 18, 2007
LAVECCHIA, J., writing for a unanimous Court.
Detective Sheridan of the New Jersey State Police Narcotics and Organized Crime Bureau
met with an informant who told him that defendant Vincent Dispoto was associated
with organized crime, was diverting money into offshore accounts, and was dealing narcotics.
The informant also said Dispoto, who was involved in a divorce proceeding, had
asked if the informant knew anybody who would kill Dispotos wife. After a
meeting with Dispoto six days later, the informant told Sheridan that Dispoto had
denied wanting to have his wife killed because he would be the primary
suspect.
On review of the information gathered, Sheridans supervisor concluded there was insufficient evidence
to pursue a murder-for-hire investigation against Dispoto. However, the supervisor did direct Sheridan
to notify Jacqueline Dispoto that they had received uncorroborated information that she was
in danger. After hearing the news, Jacqueline became very upset. Sheridan encouraged Jacqueline
to seek a temporary restraining order against Dispoto, which Municipal Court Judge Troxell
authorized. Later that evening, Sheridan telephoned Judge Troxell to request the domestic violence
search warrant. Sheridan informed Judge Troxell that he believed the informant to be
reliable, but did not tell the court that the state police had not
used this informant before. Sheridan also testified that Jacqueline believed the threat to
be credible because she previously had obtained two temporary restraining orders (both of
which had been withdrawn). Judge Troxell issued a domestic violence search warrant permitting
the search for weapons.
In the early evening of April 25, 2001, Dispoto was taken to the
police department to be served with the TRO and the search warrant for
weapons. After a little more than an hour, although not under arrest, Dispoto
was given his Miranda warnings, after which he signed the Miranda form. Dispoto
was then taken to his office and residence by the police, who executed
the search warrant. At the residence, police found Dispotos unregistered revolver and placed
Dispoto under arrest. The police continued the weapons search, and a locked safe
was found inside the garage. When asked what was in the safe, Dispoto
essentially responded that there were two pounds of marijuana. The police stopped the
search pending the application for a criminal search warrant. Dispoto was taken to
headquarters.
An application for a search warrant to search the garage for CDS and
drug paraphernalia was filed the following day. The affidavit in support of the
application did not disclose that Dispoto was not under arrest when he was
served with the TRO and weapons search warrant. The criminal search warrant issued
and the police opened the safe and seized the contraband contained inside. Dispoto
was indicted and charged with possession of a controlled dangerous substance with intent
to distribute while in possession of a weapon, possession of a controlled dangerous
substance with intent to distribute, and possession of a controlled dangerous substance.
Dispoto moved to dismiss the indictment and to suppress the contraband. He later
moved to suppress his post-arrest statements, asserting that law enforcement officials had obtained
those statements in violation of Miranda. The court granted Dispotos motion to suppress
the pistol. Later, the court suppressed Dispotos post-arrest statements and the marijuana and
the drug paraphernalia seized pursuant to the criminal search warrant. The court found
that Dispoto was not in police custody when the Miranda warnings first were
administered and, therefore, Dispoto was denied his Miranda protections when the warnings were
not re-administered at the time he was arrested for possessing a weapon without
a permit. The court suppressed the marijuana and the drug paraphernalia based on
the failure of the law enforcement officials application for the warrant to include
information about the timing of the Miranda warning and Dispotos arrest. The court
concluded that the search warrant process was so tainted that the fruits of
the search had to be suppressed.
The Appellate Division granted the States motion for leave to appeal and affirmed
the order. It held that the failure to re-administer Miranda warnings at the
time of arrest required suppression of Dispotos post-arrest incriminating statement, notwithstanding the pre-custodial
warning about an hour earlier. State v. Dispoto,
383 N.J. Super. 205 (App.
Div. 2006). The Supreme Court granted leave to appeal.
HELD: Because there was insufficient evidence to support the issuance of the underlying
domestic violence search warrant, the criminal search warrant was invalid as fruit of
the poisonous tree. While this holding renders moot the Appellate Divisions finding that
failure to re-administer Miranda warnings at the time of arrest required suppression of
Dispotos post-arrest incriminating statements, the Court adds in respect of the issue of
the Miranda warnings only that no bright line or per se rule governs
whether re-administration is required following a pre-custodial Miranda warning.
1. The remedial protections afforded under the New Jersey Prevention of Domestic Violence
Act (NJPDVA), N.J.S.A. 2C:2517 to -33, are intended for the benefit of victims
of domestic violence and are not meant to serve as a pretext for
obtaining information to advance a criminal investigation against an alleged abuser. To obtain
the protections afforded under the NJPDVA, a victim must demonstrate that the alleged
abuser committed an act of domestic violence. (pp. 13-17)
2. To sustain the validity of the domestic violence search warrant that issued
against Dispoto, there must have been probable cause to believe that Dispoto made
a threat against his wife. The informant relayed a contradictory expression of intent
by Dispoto. The informants statement fails to support a finding of probable cause
that a threat was made. (pp.17-18)
3. The information that was conveyed to Dispotos wife was incomplete, and as
a result was capable of misleading her and ultimately, through her and her
reaction to it, the magistrate. There is no such evidence here that any
threat was made under circumstances under which it carries the serious promise of
death. Permeating the series of events that transpired is the sense that the
domestic violence search warrant was being used by law enforcement representatives to uncover
evidence of criminal behavior unrelated to Dispotos alleged acts of domestic violence. The
invalid domestic violence search warrant with which Dispoto rightfully complied at the time
may not be used as a bootstrap mechanism to obtain evidence to sustain
issuance of a criminal search warrant. The evidence that was produced through Dispotos
compliance with the domestic violence search warrant consequently constituted fruits of the poisonous
tree and must be suppressed. (pp. 18-19)
4. The Court rejects the Appellate Divisions bright-line approach that failure to re-administer
Miranda warnings at the time of arrest required suppression of Dispotos post-arrest incriminating
statement, notwithstanding the pre-custodial warning about an hour earlier. The Court retains the
more measured and traditional totality-of-the-circumstances assessment. Thus, where pre-custodial warnings have been given
to a defendant as part of a continuing pattern of interactions between the
defendant and the police, and during that continuing sequence of events nothing of
an intervening nature occurs that would dilute the effectiveness of the warning, there
would appear to be no need to require another warning. Such determinations are
better suited to fact-based assessments rather than bright-line pronouncements. (pp. 19-21)
The judgment of the Appellate Division is AFFIRMED, as MODIFIED by this opinion.
JUSTICES LONG, ZAZZALI, ALBIN, WALLACE and RIVERA-SOTO join in JUSTICE LAVECCHI A s opinion.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
A-
103 September Term 2005
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
VINCENT DISPOTO, a/k/a VINCENT R. DISPOTO, JR.,
Defendant-Respondent.
Argued October 11, 2006 Decided January 18, 2007
On appeal from the Superior Court, Appellate Division, whose opinion is reported at
383 N.J. Super. 205 (2006).
Joseph P. Conner, Jr., Assistant Prosecutor, argued the cause for appellant (Michael M.
Rubbinaccio, Morris County Prosecutor, attorney).
Michael R. Ascher argued the cause for respondent (Einhorn, Harris, Ascher, Barbarito, Frost
& Ironson, attorneys).
Johanna Barba Jones, Deputy Attorney General, argued the cause for amicus curiae Attorney
General of New Jersey (Stuart J. Rabner, Attorney General, attorney).
Joshua C. Gillette argued the cause for amicus curiae Association of Criminal Defense
Lawyers of New Jersey (Kirkpatrick & Lockhart Nicholson Graham, attorneys; Mr. Gillette and
Mark S. Morgan, on the brief).
JUSTICE LaVECCHIA delivered the opinion of the Court.
The State appeals from the affirmance of an order granting defendant Vincent Dispotos
motion to suppress an incriminating statement and other evidence gathered while law enforcement
officials executed a domestic violence warrant to search for weapons. State v. Dispoto,
383 N.J. Super. 205 (App. Div.), leave to appeal granted,
186 N.J. 358
(2006). That statement and evidence had been used, in turn, to obtain a
criminal warrant to search defendants residence and office for narcotics. Defendant received Miranda
See footnote 1
warnings at the time that the officers served him with the domestic violence
search warrant at police headquarters. However, defendant was not re-Mirandized at the time
he was placed under arrest, approximately one hour later, when he turned over
an unlicensed gun to the police at his home. The Appellate Division held
that the failure to re-administer Miranda warnings at the time of arrest required
suppression of defendants post-arrest incriminating statement, notwithstanding the pre-custodial warning about an hour
earlier.
Two issues are advanced in this appeal. The issue that has drawn the
parties foremost attention is whether law enforcement officials must re-administer Miranda warnings to
a suspect at the time of arrest even though the individual recently received
such warnings during pre-custodial interactions with the officers. The second issue is whether
the criminal search warrant in this matter was invalid.
We are convinced that there was insufficient evidence to support the issuance of
the underlying domestic violence search warrant. Therefore, we hold that the criminal search
warrant was invalid as fruit of the poisonous tree. Because our holding in
regard to the domestic violence search warrant is dispositive of this matter, we
add in respect of the issue of the Miranda warnings only that no
bright line or per se rule governs whether re-administration is required following a
pre-custodial Miranda warning. Courts are to apply a totality of the circumstances analysis
when determining whether re-administration of Miranda warnings is necessary.
I.
A.
Turning to the circumstances that generated the issuance of the domestic violence search
warrant on April 25, 2001, we draw our facts from the record presented
during the three-day suppression hearing conducted by the trial court. During the hearing,
the court heard testimony about the facts and circumstances that had been presented
to the municipal court judge who issued the domestic violence temporary restraining order
and, later the same day, a domestic violence warrant to search for weapons.
On April 19, 2001, Detective Vincent Sheridan of the New Jersey State Police
Narcotics and Organized Crime Bureau met with an informant, who had been brought
to Sheridans attention by a representative of the Manhattan District Attorneys office. Sheridan
testified that he had been told that the informant possessed information about suspected
criminal activities by defendant; however, Sheridan was not told whether or how the
District Attorneys Office knew the informant to be reliable. Sheridan himself had not
worked with the informant before and otherwise knew nothing about the informant or
his reliability. The informant told Sheridan that defendant was associated with organized crime,
was diverting money into offshore accounts, and was dealing narcotics to supplement his
income. The informant also said that defendant, who was involved in a divorce
proceeding, had asked the informant whether he knew anybody who would kill his
(defendants) wife.
Sheridan did not have any information at the time to support the informants
various allegations. In respect of the alleged threat concerning defendants wife, Jacqueline, Sheridan
did not take any immediate steps to contact and inform her that she
might be in danger. Apart from running a computer criminal background check on
defendant, Sheridan testified that there was no attempt to corroborate, through independent investigation,
the information provided by the informant. Instead, Sheridan asked the informant to arrange
a meeting with defendant in which the informant could wear a recording device
to tape the conversation with defendant.
On April 25, 2001, six days after Sheridan first met with the informant,
the informant met with defendant as requested. The record reveals that the tape
in the recording device that the informant was wearing ran out before the
informant engaged defendant in any discussion about his previous alleged statement, namely, that
he wanted to have someone kill his wife. Later, when the informant was
being debriefed, he told Sheridan that defendant had denied wanting to have his
wife killed. Indeed, defendant had expressed a lack of concern about his estranged
wife and had stated that he would not attempt to have her killed
because if anything happened to his wife he would become the primary suspect.
On review of the information gathered through the informants meeting with defendant, Sheridans
supervising sergeant concluded that there was insufficient evidence to pursue a murder-for-hire investigation
against defendant.
See footnote 2
However, pursuant to advice provided by an attorney with the Office
of the Attorney General, Division of Criminal Justice, the sergeant directed Sheridan to
notify Jacqueline Dispoto that they had received uncorroborated information that she was in
danger.
That afternoon, on April 25, 2001, Sheridan and two other State Police detectives
drove to Jacquelines residence in Morris Plains, New Jersey. At the time, Jacqueline
had been separated, but not divorced, from defendant for two-and-a-half years. According to
Sheridan, he told Jacqueline that he had information that defendant was attempting to
hire someone to kill her. According to Jacqueline, who also testified at the
suppression hearing, Sheridan did not inform her that the information was uncorroborated. Nor
did he inform her about the exculpatory statements defendant had made to the
informant earlier that day.
After hearing that her husband intended to have her killed, Jacqueline Dispoto became
very upset. She told the detectives that she believed that defendant would attempt
to hire someone to kill her because she previously had obtained two temporary
restraining orders against defendant (both of which had been withdrawn). Sheridan encouraged Jacqueline
to accompany the State Police detectives to the Morris Plains Police Department to
seek a temporary restraining order against defendant, and she agreed. According to Jacquelines
testimony, however, she did not understand at the time why the detectives insisted
that she obtain a domestic violence restraining order against defendant, rather than arresting
defendant themselves if they believed that he was soliciting people to kill her.
After arriving at the Morris Plains police headquarters, Sheridan contacted Municipal Court Judge
Gary Troxell to obtain a temporary restraining order against defendant. Judge Troxell, who
also testified at the suppression hearing, stated that he found it odd that
a detective from the New Jersey State Police Narcotics and Organized Crime Bureau
was contacting him on a domestic violence complaint. After speaking with Detective Sheridan
and Jacqueline Dispoto over the telephone, Judge Troxell authorized a temporary restraining order
and inquired whether Sheridan was applying also for a domestic violence search warrant
for weapons. Sheridan informed the court that he needed to consult with the
Morris County Prosecutors Office.
Later that evening, Sheridan telephoned Judge Troxell to request the domestic violence search
warrant. Under oath, Sheridan testified that he had met with a confidential informant
on April 19, 2001, and that the informant told Sheridan that defendant kept
all his money in offshore accounts, was associated with organized crime, wanted to
have his wife killed to preserve his wealth, supplemented his income by selling
marijuana, and owned an unregistered weapon. Sheridan informed Judge Troxell that he believed
the informant to be reliable, but did not tell the court that the
State Police had not used this informant before. Sheridan also testified that the
detectives had contacted Jacqueline Dispoto about the circumstances regarding her safety, and he
told the court that Jacqueline believed the threat to be credible because of
two previous incidents of domestic violence. Accordingly, Sheridan requested issuance of a search
warrant to locate any weapons defendant might have. Judge Troxell issued a warrant
permitting a search of defendants residence and office for weapons.
B.
The events involving the execution of the domestic violence search warrant, which give
rise to the
Miranda issue in this case, were succinctly recounted by the
Appellate Division.
In the early evening of April 25, 2001, at approximately 8:20 p.m., defendant
was taken to the Morris Plains Police Department to be served with the
TRO and search warrant for weapons. Shortly after 9:30 p.m., although not under
arrest, defendant was given his
Miranda warnings, after which he signed the
Miranda
form. Defendant was then taken to his office accompanied by police who executed
the search warrant. The police found marijuana in an employees desk located in
a cubicle. After finding the marijuana, the police secured the area pending application
for a criminal search warrant. Defendant was still not placed under arrest.
At approximately 10:40 p.m., the police drove defendant to his residence. After entering
his home with the officers, defendant took them upstairs and surrendered his Colt
.38 revolver. After advising the police that he won the revolver in a
poker game, the defendant was arrested for improper acquisition of a handgun. The
police continued the weapons search, checked the pool cabana and then the garage.
According to one of the officers, when they arrived at the garage, defendant
went from a George Hamilton tan to a Bella [sic] Lugosi gray. After
some initial resistance, defendant provided the police with the code and they opened
the garage door via an electronic key pad. A locked safe was found
inside the garage. The police claimed that they could smell a strong odor
of marijuana coming from the safe. As they entered the garage, the police
asked defendant what was in the safe. Defendant essentially responded that there were
two pounds of marijuana. The police then stopped the search and secured the
scene pending the application for a search warrant. Defendant was handcuffed and taken
to headquarters.
An application for a search warrant to search the garage for CDS and
drug paraphernalia was filed the following day with the Presiding Judge of the
Criminal Division (Presiding Judge). In an affidavit in support of the application, Sheridan
provided the background information. The information provided was essentially the same as set
forth above. It, however, left out factual information as to when defendant was
arrested. It explained what was provided by the informant and defendants wife respecting
defendants drug activity and stated that defendant was read rights as per Miranda
while he was at police headquarters. It did not disclose that defendant was
not under arrest when he was served with the TRO and weapons search
warrant. The criminal search warrant issued and the police opened the safe and
seized the contraband contained inside.
[
Dispoto,
supra, 383
N.J. Super. at 211-12 (footnotes omitted).]
C.
On October 10, 2001, a grand jury issued a three-count indictment against defendant.
Count One of the indictment charged defendant with second-degree possession of a controlled
dangerous substance with intent to distribute,
N.J.S.A. 2C:35-5a, while in possession of a
weapon,
N.J.S.A. 2C:39-4.1. Count Two of the indictment charged defendant with third-degree possession
of a controlled dangerous substance with intent to distribute,
N.J.S.A. 2C:35-5a(1). Count Three
charged defendant with fourth-degree possession of a controlled dangerous substance,
N.J.S.A. 2C:35-10a(3).
Defendant moved to dismiss the indictment and to suppress the .38 caliber pistol,
the marijuana, and the drug paraphernalia. He contended that probable cause did not
exist to justify either the initial domestic violence search warrant or the subsequent
criminal search warrant.
Following a three-day hearing, the trial court granted defendants motion to suppress the
pistol. Citing
State v. Perkins,
358 N.J. Super. 151 (App. Div. 2003), the
court held that the gun was inadmissible because weapons obtained pursuant to a
domestic violence search warrant generally may not be admitted in a subsequent criminal
proceeding. However, defendants motion to suppress the marijuana and the drug paraphernalia was
denied.
Defendant thereafter moved to suppress his post-arrest statements, asserting that the law enforcement
officials had obtained those statements in violation of
Miranda. On May 24, 2005,
after eleven days of hearing, the court suppressed defendants post-arrest statements and, reversing
its previous determination, suppressed the marijuana and the drug paraphernalia seized pursuant to
the criminal search warrant.
In respect of the post-arrest statements, the court found that defendant was not
in police custody when the
Miranda warnings first were administered and, therefore, defendant
was denied his
Miranda protections when the warnings were not re-administered at the
time he was arrested for possessing a weapon without a permit. In respect
of the courts prior order denying defendants motion to suppress the marijuana and
the drug paraphernalia, the court reversed its earlier determination based on the failure
of the law enforcement officials application for the warrant to include information about
the timing of the
Miranda warning and defendants arrest. The court reasoned that
that information would have affected the issuing courts determination whether to grant the
criminal search warrant. Further, the court commented on the improbability of the law
enforcement officials ability to have smelled the odor of marijuana coming from inside
a safe in defendants garage, stating that it was more likely that the
officials simply detected the musty odor of the plant fertilizer, soil, and garden
materials that were inside the garage. Thus, the court concluded that the search
warrant process was so tainted by the improper inclusion of incriminating statements and
the mistaken mention of a marijuana odor that the fruits of the search
had to be suppressed.
The Appellate Division granted the States motion for leave to appeal and affirmed
the order.
Dispoto,
supra, 383
N.J. Super. at 209. The panel agreed that
defendants post-arrest statements should be suppressed because
Miranda warnings were not re-administered to
defendant when he was placed under arrest. Commenting on the effectiveness of pre-custodial
Miranda warnings, the panel noted that [w]arnings previously given under circumstances that did
not amount to either custodial interrogation or formal arrest did not vitiate the
need to give the warnings again when required.
Id. at 214-15. The panel
also upheld the suppression of the marijuana and drug paraphernalia as fruits of
the poisonous tree. The panel concluded that there was sufficient credible evidence for
the judge to disregard the officers claims that they smelled marijuana and find
that the only probable cause relied upon by the police in obtaining the
search warrant, which resulted in the seizure of the contraband, was defendants suppressed
admission.
Id. at 218.
II.
The New Jersey Prevention of Domestic Violence Act (NJPDVA),
N.J.S.A. 2C:25-17 to -33,
gives relief to individuals who have been abused by their spouses, cohabitants, and
family members.
N.J.S.A. 2C:25-18; 2C:25-19 (listing fourteen offenses, any one of which, if
violated, constitutes an act of domestic violence). To achieve its goals, the NJPDVA
authorizes courts to issue restraining orders to assure the safety of domestic violence
victims.
State v. Cassidy,
179 N.J. 150, 157 (2004).
The NJPDVA permits a victim of domestic violence to file a complaint against
an abuser and to seek emergency ex parte relief.
See N.J.S.A. 2C:25-28a, -28f;
Cesare v. Cesare,
154 N.J. 394, 400 (1998). The victim can request a
temporary restraining order, which a court may issue against the abuser when necessary
to protect the life, health or well-being of a victim.
N.J.S.A. 2C:25-28f. In
addition, the NJPDVA permits the issuance of a civil warrant to search for
weapons that the abuser could use to cause further and potentially fatal harm
to the victim.
See N.J.S.A. 2C:25-28j;
Cassidy,
supra, 179
N.J. at 163 (The
Act recognizes that, in certain circumstances, removal of weapons will be necessary to
protect a victim.). Thus, a court may order the search for and seizure
of any [firearm or other weapon enumerated in subsection r of
N.J.S.A. 2C:39-1]
at any location where the judge has reasonable cause to believe the weapon
is located.
N.J.S.A. 2C:25-28j.
Moreover, the NJPDVA authorizes expeditious and efficient implementation of its goal to protect
domestic abuse victims. When a court determines that exigent circumstances exist sufficient to
excuse the failure of the [victim] to appear personally and that sufficient grounds
for granting the application have been shown, the victim may apply telephonically for
the temporary restraining order and accompanying search warrant.
Cassidy,
supra, 179
N.J. at
158 (quoting
N.J.S.A. 2C:25-28h). That said, the remedial protections afforded under NJPDVA are
intended for the benefit of victims of domestic violence and are not meant
to serve as a pretext for obtaining information to advance a criminal investigation
against an alleged abuser.
The temporary restraining orders purpose is to provide the domestic violence victim with
a buffer zone of safety and shield the victim from the risk of
contact with an abuser.
See State v. Reyes,
172 N.J. 154, 169 (2002).
Similarly, the purpose of a domestic violence search warrant is to protect a
victim of domestic violence from further violence, not to discover evidence of criminality.
Perkins,
supra, 358
N.J. Super. at 161. Accordingly, before a domestic violence temporary
restraining order and accompanying search warrant can be issued, the court must find
probable cause to believe that an offense of domestic violence has occurred.
See
Cassidy,
supra, 179
N.J. at 164. If the record of an ex parte
proceeding does not disclose a proper basis for a finding of exigency for
the telephonic application, probable cause to believe that the offense of domestic violence
has occurred, and a reason to permit a search for weapons in a
location removed from the place where the domestic violence allegedly occurred, the search
warrant is invalid.
Ibid.
See footnote 3
In the absence of an exception to the warrant
requirement, evidence seized pursuant to a defectively authorized search warrant is inadmissible in
a subsequent criminal prosecution.
Id. at 159.
Thus, to obtain the protections afforded under the NJPDVA, a victim must demonstrate
that the alleged abuser committed an act of domestic violence. The NJPDVA incorporates
a variety of criminal statutes to determine what constitutes domestic violence.
Cesare,
supra,
154
N.J. at 401. For present purposes,
See footnote 4
it is sufficient to note that
the NJPDVA specifically defines domestic violence as
the occurrence of one or more of the following acts inflicted upon a
person protected under this act by an adult or an emancipated minor:
. . .
(3) Terroristic threats N.J.S. 2C:12-3.
[
N.J.S.A. 2C:25-19a.]
An individual commits the third-degree crime of terroristic threats if he or she
threatens to kill another with the purpose to put [the other] in imminent
fear of death under circumstances reasonably causing the victim to believe the immediacy
of the threat and the likelihood that it will be carried out. N.J.S.A.
2C:12-3b. In the domestic violence context, an act of terroristic threats requires that
(1) the abuser threatened the victim; (2) the abuser intended to threaten the
victim; and (3) a reasonable person would have believed the threat. Cesare, supra,
154 N.J. at 402. The abuser, however, does not have to communicate the
threat directly to the victim for the threat to be actionable. Id. at
403. Rather, it is sufficient that the threat be made under circumstances under
which it carries the serious promise of death. Ibid. (quoting State v. Nolan,
205 N.J. Super. 1, 4 (App. Div. 1985)). Proof of the alleged terroristic
threat is measured by an objective standard. Id. at 402.
III.
To sustain the validity of the domestic violence search warrant that issued against
defendant, probable cause must have existed to believe that defendant committed the offense
of terroristic threats. Specifically, there must have been probable cause to believe that
defendant made a threat against his wife. The sole support for that element
of the offense was provided by the assertion (later contradicted) of a confidential
informant of unknown reliability and whose source of knowledge was never placed before
the magistrate who issued the warrant. Moreover, when asked to provide support for
the earlier allegation, the informant could not produce a taped statement by defendant
substantiating his alleged earlier interest in finding someone to kill his wife, nor
did the informant relate any similar statement made by the defendant during that
assignation. Instead, the informant relayed a contradictory expression of intent by defendant. The
informants statement fails to provide evidence to support a finding of probable cause
that a threat was made.
The State urges that we view the alleged 2001 threat as freshening up
two earlier threats that defendant allegedly made against his wife in 1998 and
2000. The informants statement is too flimsy to be used for such a
purpose. No renewed threat was uttered by defendant to his wife. She sought
the 2001 temporary restraining order in reaction to the information that the State
Police officers relayed to her. The information that was conveyed was incomplete, however,
and as a result was capable of misleading her and ultimately, through her
and her reaction to it, the magistrate.
Plainly, the information as it was relayed to Jacqueline Dispoto provoked a strong
reaction in her. The personal reaction of the alleged victim, however, is not
the measure of proof of a terroristic threat.
See Cesare,
supra, 154
N.J.
at 403. The crime of terroristic threats requires that the threat be made
under circumstances under which it carries the serious promise of death.
Nolan,
supra,
205
N.J. Super. at 4. There is no such evidence here. Moreover, permeating
the series of events that transpired is the sense that the domestic violence
search warrant was being used by law enforcement representatives to uncover evidence of
criminal behavior unrelated to defendants alleged acts of domestic violence.
Thus, although there is in this record no apparent harm that was visited
on defendant as a result of the immediate protective temporary restraining order thrown
around Jacqueline, the invalid domestic violence search warrant with which defendant rightfully complied
at the time
See footnote 5
may not be used as a bootstrap mechanism to obtain
evidence to sustain issuance of a criminal search warrant. The evidence that was
produced through defendants compliance with the domestic violence search warrant consequently constituted fruits
of the poisonous tree and must be suppressed.
See Wong Sun v. United
States,
371 U.S. 471, 484-85,
83 S. Ct. 407, 416,
9 L. Ed. 2d 441, 453-54 (1963).
IV.
Although we affirm, for different reasons, the judgment of the Appellate Division that
affirmed the trial courts order of suppression, we add the following in respect
of the panels decision. When addressing the effectiveness of the pre-custodial
Miranda warnings
in this case, the Appellate Division commented that [w]arnings previously given under circumstances
that did not amount to either custodial interrogation or formal arrest did not
vitiate the need to give the warnings again when required.
Dispoto,
supra, 383
N.J. Super. at 214-15. The Appellate Divisions statement can be read to suggest
that pre-custodial
Miranda warnings are
per se ineffective and must be re-administered at
the time of arrest under all circumstances in order to obtain a valid
waiver of rights. Our invalidation of the domestic violence search warrant issued here
renders moot the Appellate Divisions holding about the validity of defendants waiver of
rights. That said, we note that the Appellate Divisions standard has never been
applied heretofore in this State. We reject that bright-line approach and retain instead
the more measured and traditional standard that allows for a totality-of-the-circumstances assessment.
Several of our sister states have addressed whether pre-custodial
Miranda waivers are
per
se ineffective and all but one have eschewed a bright-line approach.
See, e.g.,
Upton v. State,
36 S.W.3d 740, 743-44 (Ark. 2001) (conducting fact-sensitive analysis to
determine sufficiency of pre-custodial warnings);
State v. Burge,
487 A.2d 532, 543 (Conn.
1985) (same);
Commonwealth v. Colby,
663 N.E.2d 808, 810 (Mass. 1996) (same);
State
v. Monroe,
711 A.2d 878, 886-87 (N.H. 1998) (same),
cert. denied,
527 U.S. 1073,
119 S. Ct. 807,
142 L. Ed.2d 667 (1999);
State v.
Rupe,
683 P.2d 571, 581 n.4 (Wash. 1984) (same).
But see State v.
Bradshaw,
457 S.E.2d 456, 467 (W. Va.) (holding that pre-custodial
Miranda warnings are
per se ineffective),
cert. denied,
516 U.S. 872,
116 S. Ct. 196,
133 L. Ed.2d 191 (1995). A totality-of-the-circumstances approach is preferable in that it
encourages warnings when police question a suspect and allows law enforcement officials to
pursue their investigations, subject to later review by a neutral court. Thus when,
as here, pre-custodial warnings have been given to a defendant as part of
a continuing pattern of interactions between the defendant and the police, and during
that continuing sequence of events nothing of an intervening nature occurs that would
dilute the effectiveness of the warning that had been given, then there would
appear to be no need to require that another warning be given. Such
determinations are better suited to fact-based assessments rather than being made subject to
bright-line pronouncements.
V.
The judgment of the Appellate Division is affirmed as modified by this opinion.
JUSTICES LONG, ZAZZALI, ALBIN, WALLACE, and RIVERA-SOTO join in JUSTICE LaVECCHIAs opinion.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
NO. A-103 SEPTEMBER TERM 2005
ON APPEAL FROM Appellate Division, Superior Court
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
VINCENT DISPOTO, a/k/a
VINCENT R. DISPOTO, JR.,
Defendant-Respondent.
DECIDED January 18, 2007
Justice Long PRESIDING
OPINION BY Justice LaVecchia
CONCURRING OPINION BY
DISSENTING OPINION BY
CHECKLIST
AFFIRM AS MODIFIED
JUSTICE LONG
X
JUSTICE LaVECCHIA
X
JUSTICE ZAZZALI
X
JUSTICE ALBIN
X
JUSTICE WALLACE
X
JUSTICE RIVERA-SOTO
X
TOTALS
6
Footnote: 1
Miranda v. Arizona,
384 U.S. 436,
86 S. Ct. 1602,
16 L.
Ed.2d 694 (1966).
Footnote: 2
Throughout the initial suppression hearing, the prosecutor referred to the State Police
Narcotics and Organized Crime Bureaus interest in defendant as a murder-for-hire investigation. The
evidence in the record supports a broader intention, however, in respect of the
criminal investigation against defendant. On cross-examination during the Miranda hearing, Sheridans supervising sergeant
conceded a law enforcement investigatory interest in information that defendant was engaged in
illicit activities involving organized crime, misappropriation of funds, and narcotics distribution.
Footnote: 3
In State v. Johnson,
352 N.J. Super. 15, 19-20, 39 (App. Div.
2002), the Appellate Division stated that a domestic violence search warrant can issue
pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2C:25-28j based on a finding of reasonable cause to believe
that the abuser has committed an act of domestic violence. To the extent
that Johnsons domestic violence search warrant standard is inconsistent with the Courts decision
in Cassidy, supra, 179 N.J. at 164, Johnson is disapproved.
Footnote: 4
The application for the domestic violence search warrant in this matter was
premised on the allegation that defendant committed the domestic violence act of making
terroristic threats.
Footnote: 5
See Cassidy, supra, 179 N.J. at 165 (encouraging immediate and prompt compliance
with domestic violence warrant, although reserving opportunity to challenge warrants validity).