HOWELL ASSOCIATES, LLC VS. ZONING BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT OF Â THE TOWNSHIP OF HOWELL(L-1368-14, MONMOUTH COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2017 )


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  •                         NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court."
    Although it is posted on the internet, this opinion is binding only on the
    parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R.1:36-3.
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-1510-14T4
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    EMIL B. FENNELL,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ___________________________________
    Submitted September 13, 2016 – Decided            March 9, 2017
    Before Judges Ostrer and Vernoia.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New
    Jersey,   Law   Division,  Mercer County,
    Accusation No. 14-08-0381.
    Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney
    for appellant (Amira R. Scurato, Assistant
    Deputy Public Defender, of counsel and on the
    brief).
    Christopher S. Porrino, Attorney General,
    attorney for respondent (Garima Joshi, Deputy
    Attorney General, of counsel and on the
    brief).
    PER CURIAM
    Defendant Emil B. Fennell contends the trial court should
    have   granted    his       Miranda1   motion     to    suppress     two   custodial
    statements he made to Trenton police.                 After the court denied his
    motion,   defendant         pleaded    guilty    to     first-degree       aggravated
    manslaughter, N.J.S.A. 2C:11-4a(1), of Shawn Marinnie.                      The State
    dismissed the indicted charges of first-degree murder, N.J.S.A.
    2C:11-3(a)(2),        and    related    weapons       offenses,      and   the    court
    sentenced defendant, consistent with the plea agreement, to a
    twenty-year term, subject to the No Early Release Act, N.J.S.A.
    2C:43-7.2.     Defendant also challenges his sentence as excessive.
    We affirm.
    I.
    On December 15, 2011, Marinnie was shot in the head while
    standing on the 800 block of Stuyvesant Avenue in Trenton.                        Based
    on the subsequent investigation, police charged defendant with the
    crime and took him into custody on June 11, 2012.                     Mercer County
    Prosecutor's     Office      Detective    Gary    Wasko,      and    Trenton     Police
    Detective Brian Egan and Sergeant Christopher Doyle interviewed
    defendant the day of his arrest and the next day.
    Egan   began    the    first    interview       by   giving    defendant     the
    complaint.     Egan told defendant that his bail was $800,000, and
    1
    Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
    , 
    86 S. Ct. 1602
    , 
    16 L. Ed. 2d 694
     (1966).
    2                            A-1510-14T4
    began to read the Miranda rights form, asking defendant to read
    back each paragraph after Egan recited it.   When Egan reached the
    paragraph about the right to counsel, defendant invoked his right
    in the following exchange2:
    DETECTIVE EGAN:   Okay.    You can sign
    here. Now, Emil, the second part of this form
    is called the Waiver of Rights, and the same
    thing, I'll read it to you and then you can
    read it.
    I have read the statement of my rights
    and I understand what my rights are.      I'm
    willing to make a statement and answer
    questions.   I do not want a lawyer at this
    time. I understand and know what I am doing.
    No promises or threats have been made to me
    and no pressure or coercion of any kind has
    been used against me.        That one word,
    coercion, means that we're not forcing you []
    to do anything. We're not trying to trick you
    into talking to us.     Could you read this
    paragraph aloud?
    MR. FENNELL:   I've read this statement
    of my rights and I understand what my rights
    are.   I am willing to make a statement and
    answer questions. I do not want a lawyer at
    this time, which I kind of do.
    [(Emphasis added).]
    2
    There are discrepancies in the transcript of the June 11, 2012
    interrogation. The record contains a transcript prepared for the
    prosecution by a court reporter, prior to the October 3, 2013
    motion hearing. There is also a transcript prepared by a court
    reporter during the hearing, when the interrogation video was
    played.   Except as noted, we follow the transcript as prepared
    during the hearing.
    3                            A-1510-14T4
    Egan then confirmed that defendant was invoking his right to
    counsel, and terminated the interrogation:
    DETECTIVE EGAN: Do you -- you mentioned
    that you kind of want an attorney.    Do you
    want to speak to an attorney first?
    MR. FENNELL:   Yeah.
    DETECTIVE EGAN:    Okay.
    MR. FENNELL: You already said that I got
    (indiscernible) --
    DETECTIVE EGAN:    All right.   That's no
    problem at all.     What we'll do is, we'll
    terminate this interview here. I'll take your
    personal property, whatever you have, and put
    you in a cell and you can go from there. Okay.
    Defendant responded by questioning the detectives about what
    would happen to him next.
    MR. FENNELL:   So how long --
    DETECTIVE EGAN:        I   can't   answer   any
    questions, Emil.
    MR. FENNELL:   Okay.
    DETECTIVE EGAN:    No. How long what?
    MR. FENNELL:      Would I be just waiting
    around?
    DETECTIVE EGAN: Well you're going to be
    put in a cell and, you know, whatever.
    DETECTIVE WASKO:    (Indiscernible).
    MR. FENNELL:   Until I make bail or not?
    DETECTIVE WASKO: Yeah. I mean if you
    post bail today, you got $800,000 –
    4                                    A-1510-14T4
    Defendant then inquired about whether he could sign the
    Miranda form and waive his right to counsel and to remain silent.
    MR. FENNELL: (Indiscernible).
    If I would sign that and talk to you all
    about (indiscernible) that stuff anyway.
    DETECTIVE WASKO: Well then we would have
    had an interview and --
    MR. FENNELL:    All right, well, if the
    government is going to interview me I want to
    know what's going on like, I'm lost right now.
    And if I sign I will not be able to still talk
    to a lawyer or I won't be able to stop then?
    Because the first one I signed said I can
    (indiscernible),   and   then   stop   certain
    questions, but the second one --
    DETECTIVE WASKO: Here's what it boils
    down to, Emil. I mean, you've been charged
    with murder.
    MR. FENNELL:       Yeah, but I --
    DETECTIVE WASKO: Hold on.           You've been
    charged with murder, okay.
    MR. FENNELL:       Okay.
    DETECTIVE WASKO:   And you decided that
    you want an attorney before you talk to us
    about the murder charge, you know, so
    basically that's where we stand right now. So
    the complaints are already there. It's -- the
    Superior Court already signed it.
    MR. FENNELL: All right. Well let's --
    I'll talk to you all then, because I really
    want to know what's going on.   Let me sign
    that, that second one.
    5                                  A-1510-14T4
    DETECTIVE WASKO:       You don't want to talk
    to an attorney first?
    MR. FENNELL:   There's no need to.    I
    didn't do anything. I'm not hiding anything,
    anything, so I can talk to you all right?
    Detective Wasko then left the room for about ten minutes.          In
    the meantime, Egan talked to defendant about what he studied at
    school and his tattoos.   When Wasko returned, they re-administered
    the Miranda warnings and confirmed that defendant wanted to waive
    his rights.
    UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: Emil, is it true
    that when we went over the forms the first
    time and you requested a lawyer and then after
    going over those forms the first time you then
    changed your mind and told us you did not want
    a lawyer, is that true?
    MR. FENNELL:       Yeah.
    UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER:    Okay.   So it's
    true that you wanted to speak to us about this
    and that's why we just redid the forms?
    MR. FENNELL:       Yeah.
    UNIDENTIFIED   SPEAKER:       That   was   your
    decision.
    MR. FENNELL:       My decision.
    UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER:       Okay, sir.
    DETECTIVE EGAN:   So, do you still want
    to talk to us about what you're under arrest
    for without a lawyer, right now?
    MR. FENNELL:       Go over the charges again.
    6                                  A-1510-14T4
    DETECTIVE EGAN:      Without a lawyer, right
    now?
    MR. FENNELL:       Okay.
    In the questioning that followed, defendant claimed he was
    home the day of the homicide, but became aware of it.           He stated
    he knew of the victim, but denied interacting with him.         Egan left
    the room, and Wasko answered defendant's questions about bail, his
    first appearance in court, and the appointment of counsel.
    Then followed an exchange that defendant asserts amounted to
    an invocation of the right to remain silent:
    DETECTIVE WASKO:  So they'll come talk
    to you at the Workhouse, and we'll go from
    there. That's what's going to happen.
    MR. FENNELL:   That's crazy. I'm being
    charged with murder and I didn't do it.   I
    hope you all have got enough evidence to
    charge me with this, though.
    DETECTIVE WASKO: Well, obviously we do,
    because we already have the complaint signed.
    You already got your paper.
    MR. FENNELL:       All right.
    DETECTIVE WASKO: I mean, is there -- is
    there -- would you like to talk about it some
    more, or are you done talking, or would you
    like to explain to us your whereabouts[3], or
    --
    3
    When reviewing the interrogation video, we clearly discern that
    Wasko asked defendant if he wanted to "explain your whereabouts,"
    although the transcript recorded it as "indiscernible."
    7                                 A-1510-14T4
    MR. FENNELL:     There's nothing else to,
    well, there's nothing else to talk about
    because[4] I didn't do anything, so -- you know,
    I just want one favor. Can I, like, since I'm
    being -- since I'm . . . here[,] can I [ ] go
    in[to] that phone and get my mother-in-law's
    number?
    DETECTIVE WASKO:  Yeah.   We'll be able
    to do that. We'll be able to do that for you.
    MR. FENNELL: All right.     Can you all do
    me one more favor?
    DETECTIVE WASKO:   What's that?
    MR. FENNELL:   A Black and Mild [cigar].
    DETECTIVE WASKO: They might be able to
    do that for you. I don't know if we have any.
    We'll have to look.
    [(Emphasis added).]
    Egan returned to the interrogation room, and Wasko summarized
    what    he   had   told   defendant   regarding   counsel,    discovery,
    defendant's request to access his phone, and his request for a
    Black and Mild.       Wasko then asked defendant if his summary was
    accurate, and defendant said it was, without claiming that he had
    invoked his right to silence.
    Defendant received the cigar he requested and the officers
    continued to question him.        He described Marinnie's own criminal
    4
    This statement did not appear in either transcript of the June
    11, 2012 interrogation; however, at the motion to suppress, both
    parties stipulated that defendant stated, "There's nothing else
    to, well, there's nothing else to talk about because I didn't do
    anything."
    8                            A-1510-14T4
    activity and claimed Marinnie had killed and robbed multiple
    victims.   Defendant then admitted that Marinnie had robbed him at
    gunpoint, after which he heard that Marinnie was going to rob him
    again and kill him.       Defendant explained he killed Marinnie to
    prevent him from doing so.
    The next day, a Trenton police sergeant contacted Egan to
    inform him that defendant wanted to speak to him again.                Egan
    administered   a    new   set   of    Miranda   warnings,   and   obtained
    defendant's signed waiver of his rights.        Defendant then confirmed
    that after he returned from court, he had asked a guard to convey
    his request to speak to Egan.        Egan asked, "[W]hat is it that you
    want to tell us?"    Defendant answered, "Yesterday I withheld just
    a little bit from you all."         Defendant referred to a man known as
    "Loco Pete."   In the first interview, defendant said he had heard
    of "Loco Pete," and he "probably chilled around him, but [he]
    wasn't my boy or nothing like that."            However, in the second
    interview, defendant disclosed that Loco Pete gave him the gun
    used to kill Marinnie, and directed him where to leave the gun
    when he was done using it, so Loco Pete could retrieve it.
    Defendant admitted that he lied to the officers the previous day
    about how he obtained the gun.
    Judge Thomas W. Sumners, Jr., denied defendant's motion in a
    thorough fifteen-page opinion.         He concluded that after defendant
    9                                  A-1510-14T4
    initially invoked his right to an attorney, he chose to waive that
    right. Judge Sumners rejected defendant's argument that the police
    failed to honor his initial assertion of rights.          The officers had
    concluded interrogation, and then engaged in a non-interrogative
    exchange that defendant initiated about what would happen next.
    The court rejected defendant's argument that the officers' answers
    regarding bail and incarceration were coercive.            The court noted
    that defendant then expressed a desire to waive his rights, after
    which the officers readministered Miranda warnings and affirmed
    that defendant wished to answer questions.
    The court also rejected defendant's argument that the police
    refused to honor defendant's assertion of his right to remain
    silent when he stated, "there's nothing else to talk about because
    I didn't do anything . . . ."          The court recognized that, taken
    in isolation, the statement could be so interpreted.           But, viewed
    in context, it amounted to another denial of guilt, and not a
    request to stop the interrogation.         The court found that "as the
    entirety   of   the   videotape    makes   clear,   the   request   made   by
    defendant does not indicate finality of his participation in
    questioning but rather 'a reflective pause to collect his thoughts,
    consider his options, and attempt to keep his emotions in check
    as he confronted the enormity of what he had done.'" (quoting
    State v. Diaz-Bridges, 
    208 N.J. 544
    , 570 (2011).
    10                                A-1510-14T4
    As for the June 12 statement, the court rejected defendant's
    argument that it should be suppressed based on the "the fruit of
    the poisonous tree doctrine" set forth in Wong Sun v. United
    States, 
    371 U.S. 471
    , 484, 
    83 S. Ct. 407
    , 415-16, 
    9 L. Ed. 2d 441
    ,
    453 (1963), since the court found no predicate violation of
    defendant's rights.
    II.
    Defendant raises the following points on appeal:
    POINT I
    THE TRIAL JUDGE ERRED IN FAILING TO SUPPRESS
    THE DEFENDANT'S STATEMENTS WHICH WERE OBTAINED
    IN VIOLATION OF HIS RIGHTS.       U.S. CONST.
    AMEND. V, VI, XIV; N.J. CONST. ART. 1, PARAS.
    1, 9, 10.
    A.   Law Enforcement Failed To Scrupulously
    Honor Defendant's Invocation Of His Right
    To Counsel.
    B.   The Waiver Of Rights Was       Not   Made
    Knowingly Or Voluntarily.
    C.   Law Enforcement Failed To Scrupulously
    Honor Defendant's Invocation Of His Right
    To Silence.
    D.   The June 12 Statement Must Be Suppressed
    As It was Directly Derived From The
    Tainted June 11 Statement.
    POINT II
    THE DEFENDANT'S MAXIMUM SENTENCE OF TWENTY
    YEARS WAS MANIFESTLY EXCESSIVE AND UNDULY
    PUNITIVE PARTICULARLY AS APPLIED TO THE
    DEFENDANT AT THE TIME HE STOOD BEFORE THE
    COURT.
    11                              A-1510-14T4
    III.
    As he did before the trial court, defendant contends that
    during the June 11 interrogation, the officers violated his rights
    by questioning him after he invoked his right to counsel and later
    after he invoked his right to remain silent. Although he initiated
    the June 12 interrogation, he argues it was tainted, because it
    derived from the unlawful questioning the day before.
    We must "engage in a 'searching and critical' review of the
    record" when reviewing the trial court's denial of a Miranda
    motion.   State v. Maltese, 
    222 N.J. 525
    , 543 (2015) (quoting State
    v. Hreha, 
    217 N.J. 368
    , 382 (2014)), cert. denied, ___ U.S. ___,
    
    136 S. Ct. 1187
    , 
    194 L. Ed. 2d 241
     (2016).          We defer to the trial
    court's   fact   findings,   if    supported   by   sufficient   credible
    evidence, Hreha, supra, 217 N.J. at 382, but we review legal
    questions de novo.    State v. Rockford, 
    213 N.J. 424
    , 440 (2013).
    With that standard of review in mind, we turn first to the
    June 11 interrogation.
    We affirm the trial court's order, substantially for the
    reasons set forth in Judge Sumner's cogent opinion.           We add the
    following comments with respect to defendant's argument that he
    sought to terminate the interrogation and invoke his right to
    remain silent when he said "there's nothing else to talk about[.]"
    12                                  A-1510-14T4
    We are mindful that "[o]nce warnings have been given, the
    subsequent procedure is clear.         If the individual indicates in any
    manner, at any time prior to or during questioning, that he [or
    she] wishes to remain silent, the interrogation must cease."
    Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
    , 473-74, 
    86 S. Ct. 1602
    , 1627,
    
    16 L. Ed. 2d 694
    , 723 (1966).
    As in this case, a question may arise as to whether a
    defendant has actually expressed the desire to remain silent. "[A]
    request to terminate an interrogation must be honored 'however
    ambiguous.'"      State v. Bey, 
    112 N.J. 45
    , 64-65 (1988) (quoting
    State v. Kennedy, 
    97 N.J. 278
    , 288 (1984)).              If a defendant's
    request is unclear, an officer may ask the defendant to clarify
    his or her meaning.       State v. Alston, 
    204 N.J. 614
    , 623 (2011).
    A defendant is not required to speak with "the utmost legal
    precision." Bey, 
    supra,
     
    112 N.J. at 65
    . Nor do we expect officers
    to   do   so,   since   they   often   "converse   in   vernacular   or   use
    colloquial expressions[.]"        Alston, 
    supra,
     
    204 N.J. at 627
    .           We
    also recognize that "a minute parsing of the words used might
    yield an inaccurate picture of what was meant."          
    Ibid.
       Therefore,
    a court must use "a totality of the circumstances approach that
    focuses on the reasonable interpretation of [a] defendant's words
    and behaviors."     Diaz-Bridges, supra, 208 N.J. at 564.
    13                                  A-1510-14T4
    Our analysis begins with Wasko's unfinished question, "is
    there -- would you like to talk about it some more, or are you
    done talking, or would you like to explain to us your whereabouts,
    or -- [.]"   Fairly interpreted, Wasko was not asking defendant
    whether he wanted suddenly to invoke his right to remain silent.
    Rather, he was asking whether defendant had anything to add to
    what he had already said, particularly with regard to where he was
    at the time of the fatal shooting. Defendant's response — "there's
    nothing else to talk about because I didn't do anything" — was
    simply another way of saying that he had no further details to
    offer, and he was innocent.
    Defendant's statement was unlike that of the defendant in
    Christopher v. Florida, 
    824 F.2d 836
    , 840 (11th Cir. 1987), cert.
    denied, 
    484 U.S. 1077
    , 
    108 S. Ct. 1057
    , 
    98 L. Ed. 2d 1019
     (1988),
    who invoked his right to remain silent when he affirmatively and
    repeatedly stated, "I got nothing else to say[,]" and also demanded
    that he be taken into custody.         (Emphasis omitted).   Nor did
    defendant say at the outset of either interrogation, "I don't want
    to talk about it," as the defendant did in State v. Bishop, 
    621 P.2d 1196
    , 1198 (Or. Ct. App. 1980).      See also State v. Johnson,
    
    120 N.J. 263
    , 281 (1990) (discussing Christopher and Bishop).
    Here, defendant did not demand that he be taken to a cell, like
    the defendant in Christopher.      Nor did he say he was unwilling to
    14                              A-1510-14T4
    talk,   using   the    first   person   "I,"   as   the   defendants   did    in
    Christopher and Bishop.        Instead, he commented on whether further
    discussion would be productive.          See State v. Williams, 3d Dist.
    Allen No. 1-96-24, 
    1996 Ohio App. LEXIS 5297
    , at *10-12 (Nov. 12,
    1996) (holding that the defendant did not invoke his right to
    remain silent when he said, "I don't know what else to say.                  You
    guys assume I did it."); cf. United States v. Adams, 
    820 F.3d 317
    ,
    322-24 (8th Cir. 2016) (defendant's statement — "Nah, I don't want
    to talk, man.         I mean, I" — followed immediately by further
    conversation with officer did not ambiguously invoke his right to
    remain silent).       In sum, we discern no error in the trial court's
    determination that defendant did not invoke his right to remain
    silent.
    As there was no violation of defendant's rights during the
    June 11 interrogation, defendant's contention that the June 12
    interrogation was "fruit of the poisonous tree" must fail.              In all
    other respects, defendant's rights were honored during the second
    interrogation, which defendant initiated.
    Finally, we discern no merit in defendant's challenge to his
    sentence.   The court's findings of fact regarding aggravating and
    mitigating factors were supported by evidence in the record; the
    court correctly applied the sentencing guidelines; and the court
    did not abuse its discretion in imposing its sentence.             See State
    15                                   A-1510-14T4
    v. Cassady, 
    198 N.J. 165
    , 180-81 (2009); State v. Roth, 
    95 N.J. 334
    , 364-66 (1984).
    Affirmed.
    16                            A-1510-14T4