State v. Michael A. Maltese (073584) , 222 N.J. 525 ( 2015 )


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  •                                                      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
    interest of brevity, portions of any opinion may not have been summarized).
    State of New Jersey v. Michael A. Maltese (A-96-13) (073584)
    Argued March 3, 2015 -- Decided August 17, 2015
    SOLOMON, J., writing for a unanimous Court.
    In this appeal, the Court considers whether defendant’s requests to speak with a family member during
    interrogation were sufficient to invoke his right to remain silent and, if so, whether his statements, and the physical
    evidence recovered as a result of those statements, should be suppressed.
    In October 2008, after one of defendant’s sisters had tried unsuccessfully to reach their parents, Michael
    and Kathleen Maltese, she called defendant and the police for assistance. On October 17, 2008, police were
    informed that the couple was missing and that unauthorized charges had been made to Kathleen Maltese’s bank
    account. On October 18, 2008, police went to the Maltese residence, where defendant and his girlfriend, Nicole
    Taylor, resided with defendant’s parents. At that time, police found shovels in the trunk of defendant’s father’s car.
    That same day, defendant agreed to go to the police station for questioning. After being read his Miranda rights,
    defendant told police that he had last seen his parents on October 10, 2008 when he dropped them off in
    Pennsylvania. After additional questioning, he told them that his parents had disappeared and admitted using his
    mother’s bank card without her permission. The police arrested defendant for obstruction of justice and false
    swearing, but released him later that day.
    On October 24, 2008, defendant returned to the police station for a polygraph test. After being read his
    Miranda rights, defendant took the test, in which he denied knowing his parents’ whereabouts. After scoring the
    test, Sergeant (Sgt.) Paul Vallas told defendant that he had no doubt that he knew his parents’ location. Defendant
    agreed to give a statement, but demanded that he talk to his uncle first. Sgt. Vallas advised him that was not in his
    best interest, but defendant continued to insist. Sgt. Vallas agreed, but before allowing them to speak, privately
    informed defendant’s uncle that his nephew had failed the test, that he knew where his parents were, and that
    although defendant requested that the camera be turned off, the camera would actually be left on. Defendant’s uncle
    agreed to help with the investigation. When Sgt. Vallas returned to the interview room, defendant asked if the
    conversation with his uncle would be protected under lawyer-client privilege. Sgt. Vallas replied that his uncle was
    not an attorney, but told him that he would turn off the camera. Defendant told his uncle that he knew where his
    parents’ bodies were buried and that one other person was involved. After a short cigarette break, with a detective
    nearby, defendant returned to the interview room and received Miranda warnings for a second time. He admitted to
    police that, after a fight with his father on October 8, 2008, he strangled his parents and buried them in the woods
    behind Friendship Park. Defendant also said that Taylor helped dispose of their bodies. Police found the bodies
    buried in a shallow grave in Friendship Park.
    Defendant was charged with two counts of murder, unlawfully disturbing, moving or concealing human
    remains, hindering apprehension or prosecution, theft, fraudulent use of a credit card, attempted theft, failing to
    dispose of human remains in a manner required by law, and tampering with physical evidence. One count of murder
    was subsequently amended to charge defendant with the passion/provocation manslaughter of his father. Defendant
    moved to suppress his statements to his uncle and police, as well as the evidence collected as a result of those
    statements. The trial court suppressed the statement to his uncle, but did not exclude his statement to police. At
    trial, the jury found defendant guilty of the manslaughter of his father, the murder of his mother, hindering
    prosecution, fraudulent use of a credit card, tampering with evidence, false swearing, and disturbing, moving, or
    concealing human remains. Defendant received an aggregate sentence of sixty-four years in prison, with an eighty-
    five percent period of parole ineligibility, pursuant to the No Early Release Act.
    Defendant appealed, arguing that his statement to police should have been suppressed. The Appellate
    Division concluded that defendant invoked his right to remain silent by requesting that he speak to his uncle first,
    the police improperly recorded that conversation and, as such, the trial court properly suppressed the recorded
    conversation with his uncle. The Appellate Division further concluded, as did the trial court, that defendant’s
    statement to police “was obtained voluntarily after the police re-administered defendant’s Miranda rights.” The
    Court granted certification. 
    217 N.J. 623
    (2014).
    HELD: Because defendant’s statement to his uncle occurred after officers violated his Fifth Amendment right to
    remain silent, that statement is inadmissible. Defendant’s subsequent statement to police was fruit of the
    unconstitutionally obtained statement to his uncle and must also be suppressed. Thus, defendant’s convictions for
    manslaughter and murder are reversed. His other convictions are affirmed because they are supported by evidence
    independent of the suppressed statements. On remand, the trial court shall conduct a pretrial hearing to determine
    whether the physical evidence obtained as a result of defendant’s suppressed statements is admissible under the
    inevitable discovery exception to the exclusionary rule.
    1. The privilege against self-incrimination includes the right of a person to remain silent unless he chooses to speak of
    his own free will. Efforts by police to persuade a suspect to talk are proper as long as the will of the suspect is not
    overborne. The inquiry turns on whether an investigator’s statements were so manipulative or coercive that they
    deprived defendant of his ability to make an autonomous decision to confess. Once a defendant unambiguously
    invokes his right to remain silent, interrogation must cease. Further, even when the suspect’s invocation is ambiguous,
    officers are required to stop the interrogation completely, or to ask only questions narrowly directed to determine
    whether defendant is willing to continue. Of particular relevance to this matter, in State v. Harvey, 
    121 N.J. 407
    (1990),
    this Court addressed a situation in which a defendant requested permission to speak with his father. There, the Court
    held that the defendant’s request was sufficient to invoke his right to remain silent, and therefore required the
    interrogation to cease. As in Harvey, defendant here indicated that he wanted to speak with a family member to obtain
    advice before proceeding with questioning. Considering the circumstances, defendant affirmatively asserted his right to
    remain silent. Therefore, the statement he made to his uncle was obtained in violation of his Fifth Amendment right to
    remain silent and was properly suppressed by the trial court. (pp. 20-22)
    2. The United States Supreme Court has concluded that the admissibility of statements obtained after the person in
    custody has decided to remain silent depends on whether his right to cut off questioning was scrupulously honored.
    Michigan v. Mosley, 
    423 U.S. 96
    , 104 (1975). There, the Court focused on four factors: (1) two hours passed after
    the defendant first asserted his right to remain silent; (2) the defendant received fresh Miranda warnings before the
    interrogation resumed; (3) the defendant was questioned by a different police officer; and (4) the defendant was
    questioned about a different crime. Here, the break in questioning was less than seven minutes, defendant was
    always in the presence of an officer, and the officers who took defendant’s statement were known by defendant to be
    conducting the investigation. Additionally, after defendant confessed to his uncle, police made it clear that they
    knew about that confession. Considering these factors, the statement to police was the fruit of the unconstitutionally
    obtained statement to his uncle. (pp. 22-27)
    3. As for whether the admission of defendant’s statement to police constituted harmless error, the Court notes that
    all of his convictions, with the exception of the convictions for manslaughter and murder, were independently
    substantiated by evidence other than his statement to police. However, because that statement was particularly
    relevant to the manslaughter and murder convictions, the Court cannot conclude that the statement’s admission was
    harmless. Therefore, while his other convictions are affirmed, his manslaughter and murder convictions are
    reversed and the matter is remanded for retrial. On retrial, the statements may be used for impeachment purposes if
    defendant chooses to testify.
    4. Finally, as the record now exists, the State has not met its burden to establish that normal police procedures would
    have inevitably led to discovery of the bodies. Therefore, on remand, the court must determine whether the physical
    evidence discovered because of defendant’s statements should also be suppressed. (pp. 28-33)
    The judgment of the Appellate Division is AFFIRMED in part and REVERSED in part. The matter is
    REMANDED to the trial court for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER; JUSTICES LaVECCHIA, ALBIN, PATTERSON, and FERNANDEZ-
    VINA; and JUDGE CUFF (temporarily assigned) join in JUSTICE SOLOMON’s opinion.
    2
    SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    A-96 September Term 2013
    073584
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    MICHAEL A. MALTESE,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Argued March 3, 2015 – Decided August 17, 2015
    On certification to the Superior Court,
    Appellate Division.
    Elizabeth C. Jarit, Assistant Deputy Public
    Defender, argued the cause for appellant
    (Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender,
    attorney; Ms. Jarit, Robert J. Kipnees, and
    Natalie J. Kraner, Designated Counsel, on
    the briefs).
    Jane C. Schuster, Deputy Attorney General,
    argued the cause for respondent (John J.
    Hoffman, Acting Attorney General, attorney).
    JUSTICE SOLOMON delivered the opinion of the Court.
    In this appeal, we must determine whether defendant’s
    repeated requests to speak with a family member during
    interrogation was sufficient to invoke the right to remain
    silent and, if so, whether defendant’s subsequent statements and
    1
    physical evidence recovered as a result of those statements
    should be suppressed.
    We conclude that defendant, Michael Maltese, asserted his
    Fifth Amendment right to remain silent before any admissions
    were made.   Because defendant’s surreptitiously recorded
    statement to his uncle occurred after officers violated
    defendant’s right to remain silent that statement is
    inadmissible.   We further conclude that defendant’s following
    statement to law enforcement officers was the fruit of the
    unconstitutionally obtained statement to defendant’s uncle, and
    must also be suppressed.   The State will be allowed to use
    defendant’s statements on cross-examination for impeachment if
    defendant chooses to testify at trial.
    Therefore, we reverse defendant’s convictions for second-
    degree passion/provocation manslaughter of his father, Michael
    Maltese, N.J.S.A. 2C:11-4(b)(1)-(2); and first-degree murder of
    his mother, Kathleen Maltese, N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3(a)(1)-(2).     On
    remand, the trial court shall conduct a hearing to determine
    whether the evidence obtained as a result of defendant’s
    statements -- the whereabouts of the victims’ remains -- is
    admissible under the inevitable-discovery exception to the
    exclusionary rule.
    However, we affirm defendant’s convictions for second-
    degree disturbing, moving or concealing human remains, N.J.S.A.
    2
    2C:22-1(a)(1); fourth-degree tampering with evidence, N.J.S.A.
    2C:28-6(1); third-degree hindering apprehension or prosecution,
    N.J.S.A. 2C:29-3(b)(1); third-degree theft by unlawful taking,
    N.J.S.A. 2C:20-3; third-degree fraudulent use of a credit card,
    N.J.S.A. 2C:21-6(h); and fourth-degree false swearing, N.J.S.A.
    2C:28-2(a); because those convictions are supported by evidence
    independent of the suppressed statements.
    I.
    A.
    The record before us reveals the following.     On October 11,
    2008, a relative attempted to contact defendant’s mother, but
    was unable to do so.    That relative notified defendant’s sister,
    Leela Parent, who unsuccessfully attempted to contact her
    parents.   Subsequently, Parent called defendant, other family
    members, hospitals, and police stations in an attempt to locate
    her parents.
    On October 17, 2008, defendant and another sister, Ricky
    Lee Fodor, reported their parents missing to the South Brunswick
    Police Department.     Also, Parent told police that unauthorized
    charges had been made to a joint bank account she held with her
    mother.    The police investigation revealed that the account’s
    bank card had been used to make cash withdrawals and numerous
    charges between October 10, 2008, and October 13, 2008.
    3
    Thereafter, police obtained video footage from the bank that
    showed defendant using the bank card to make a withdrawal.
    On October 18, 2008, Detective James Ryan of the North
    Brunswick Police Department and Investigator James Mullin of the
    Middlesex County Prosecutor’s Office went to the Maltese
    residence, where, in addition to defendant’s parents, defendant
    resided with his girlfriend, Nicole Taylor.       Detective Ryan
    walked through the home, and searched the automobile owned by
    defendant’s father.1   Detective Ryan discovered shovels in the
    trunk of the car, and had the vehicle impounded for further
    investigation.
    On the same day, defendant, Taylor and Fodor agreed to go
    to the police station for questioning.       At the police station,
    defendant was read his Miranda rights, and agreed to provide a
    statement, which was videotaped.       Although defendant initially
    maintained that he last saw his parents when he dropped them off
    in New Hope, Pennsylvania on October 10, 2008, he stated later
    that his parents had disappeared and admitted to using his
    mother’s bank card without her permission.2      The police arrested
    defendant for obstruction of justice and false swearing, but
    released him later that day.   The next day, Parent provided to
    1 This search is not challenged in this appeal.
    2 The statements given by defendant to police on October 18 are
    not at issue here.
    4
    police receipts she found in her parents’ home for the
    transactions that were charged using the bank card for the joint
    account she held with her mother.
    On October 24, 2008, defendant agreed to go to the police
    station a second time, and to submit to a polygraph test.
    Before administering the polygraph examination, Sergeant Paul
    Vallas of the New Jersey State Police engaged defendant in
    conversation, asked preliminary questions in preparation for the
    test, and read defendant his Miranda rights.     During the
    polygraph examination, defendant denied knowing his parents’
    whereabouts.
    After “scoring” the polygraph test, Sergeant Vallas told
    defendant that, “no doubt . . . you know exactly where your
    mother and father are right now.”   Sergeant Vallas then told
    defendant that members of his family were at the station and
    needed to know “exactly where the bodies are.”    The following
    exchange ensued.
    DEFENDANT: I feel at this point I have to talk
    to my uncle. I need to talk to my uncle.
    . . . .
    VALLAS: What exactly do you want to talk to
    your uncle about?
    DEFENDANT: I don’t know where to go, what to
    do from here.
    VALLAS: Okay.   I hear what you’re saying.
    5
    . . . .
    VALLAS: Okay, and, obviously, you know and I
    know they’ve been on your back knowing what
    the results were going to be, okay? So, . .
    . before you go sit out there and talk to your
    parent   -–  your uncle, let’s get this
    clarified, as you’re sitting here –-
    DEFENDANT: I’d like to talk to my uncle first.
    VALLAS: As you’re sitting here, as you’re
    sitting here with your feet flat on the ground
    . . . [y]ou’re thinking to yourself, I want to
    tell them. No doubt about it. And when you
    think to yourself and you realize it’s the
    right thing to do, just go ahead and say it.
    So why don’t we just clear the air now. Let’s
    just clear the air now.
    DEFENDANT: I’d like to talk to my uncle first.
    Sergeant Vallas replied that, while he could “understand”
    why defendant wanted to speak to his uncle, “what we gotta do
    right now is clarify this” because defendant owed the family an
    explanation as to what happened.       Sergeant Vallas further
    explained that “just throwing it out to them raw isn’t going to
    be a good thing, . . . you need a buffer.”      Defendant again
    asked to speak with his uncle first, and the exchange continued.
    VALLAS: I understand what you’re saying.
    DEFENDANT: I don’t think you do.
    VALLAS: No, I do. No, I do understand what
    you’re saying, I do.
    DEFENDANT: I want his opinion.
    VALLAS: His opinion as far as what?
    6
    DEFENDANT: As far as what I do.   You’re saying
    I failed [the polygraph].
    . . . .
    VALLAS: That’s no longer an issue. . . . Now
    it’s just a question of you pointing out where
    they are. . . . Your uncle is going to say to
    you tell them the truth, tell them where the
    bodies are at, that’s what your uncle is going
    to tell you.
    DEFENDANT: I’d like to talk to my uncle.
    VALLAS: I understand what you’re saying to me.
    DEFENDANT: Or if you’re not going to let me do
    that –-3
    VALLAS: No, no, no, no, listen, listen,
    listen. Understand something, what I’ve made
    perfectly clear –-
    DEFENDANT: Um-hum.
    VALLAS: -- when we first walked in here, is
    that you’re free to leave here at any time,
    but you gotta understand something here,
    though, alright? What we got here is . . . a
    very serious situation. Would you agree with
    me?
    DEFENDANT: Yeah.
    . . . .
    VALLAS: I understand what you’re saying, but
    the point being here is this is the
    opportunity for you to sit down here and tell
    me what the truth is.    Do you see what I’m
    saying? This is your opportunity --
    DEFENDANT: And I might just do that.
    3
    The record is unclear as to what defendant was about to say
    before being interrupted by Sergeant Vallas.
    7
    VALLAS: Okay, well, listen --
    DEFENDANT: But I’d like to talk to my uncle
    first.
    Sergeant Vallas then advised defendant that it was not in
    defendant’s “best interest” to speak to his uncle because they
    could not be sure of his uncle’s reaction.   He further urged
    defendant to tell the truth to give his sisters “the opportunity
    to have closure” or for “nothing else, for your mother, okay?”
    Defendant again insisted on speaking with his uncle.
    DEFENDANT: I do, I gotta talk to him.
    VALLAS: I know you gotta talk to your uncle,
    and you’re gonna have a chance to talk to your
    uncle, no doubt about it.
    DEFENDANT: What it comes down to, as far as it
    goes, I can’t say anything to anybody before
    [I] talk to him, you know what I mean?      If
    it’s going the way that it’s looking like it’s
    going, I’m telling him first.
    Still, Sergeant Vallas did not end the interrogation.
    Defendant explained that he considered his uncle “even better
    than a freaking attorney.”   When Sergeant Vallas asked why
    defendant would not speak with him, defendant replied, “I met
    you today,” and the questioning continued.
    VALLAS: Okay. So what you’re saying to me is
    that there’s no doubt it happened, it’s a
    question of whether or not you’re going to
    take us to the location or not, is that what
    it is?
    DEFENDANT: No, I’m saying that before anything
    else happens I want to talk to my uncle.
    8
    VALLAS: Okay.   And then what?
    DEFENDANT: And then we’ll go from there.
    . . . .
    VALLAS: So when your uncle walks in here and
    he says take us to where the bodies are, are
    you taking us to the bodies?
    DEFENDANT: If he said that? Um, I don’t know
    what to say, you know, I don’t know what to
    say, but I’d like to talk to him.
    Nevertheless, Sergeant Vallas continued to query defendant,
    who again asserted that he would not speak with Sergeant Vallas
    before he spoke with his uncle.       Sergeant Vallas finally agreed,
    then left the room to call a prosecutor to “make sure” that the
    camera could be left on while defendant’s uncle was in the
    interview room with defendant.    The prosecutor advised that as
    long as defendant’s uncle knew that the camera was on, the
    officers could record the conversation.      Sergeant Vallas told
    defendant’s uncle that defendant had failed the polygraph test,
    that he knew where his parents were, and that although defendant
    requested that the camera be turned off, the camera would
    actually be left on.   Defendant’s uncle agreed to help with the
    investigation.
    Sergeant Vallas returned to the interview room, and told
    defendant that he would shut off the camera.       Sergeant Vallas
    also stated that defendant’s uncle was aware of “the results of
    9
    the polygraph exam,” and knew defendant was responsible for his
    parents’ disappearance.   Defendant asked if his conversation
    would be “protected under lawyer, lawyer-client privilege?       . .
    . .   You know what I mean?   You’re not allowed to listen to
    somebody consult with their lawyer kind of thing?”    Sergeant
    Vallas replied that defendant’s uncle was “not an attorney,” but
    nonetheless the camera would be turned off.
    Investigator Mullin watched and listened to defendant’s
    conversation with his uncle from the observation room.
    Defendant admitted to his uncle that he knew where his parents’
    bodies were buried and that “only one other” person was
    involved.   Investigator Mullin then heard defendant and his
    uncle mention going someplace else to talk, and called the
    prosecutor again to ask whether defendant and his uncle should
    be left alone to speak in private.    The prosecutor told
    Investigator Mullin not to let defendant and his uncle go
    outside to smoke a cigarette and to “make sure” that they spoke
    in the room.   Nevertheless, defendant was permitted to step
    outside with his uncle to smoke a cigarette with Detective Ryan
    nearby.
    After reentering the interview room and receiving Miranda
    warnings for a second time, defendant admitted to Detective Ryan
    and Investigator Mullin that he and his father had a fight on
    October 8, 2008, and that he had strangled his parents and
    10
    buried them in the woods behind Friendship Park.   Initially,
    defendant denied that Taylor was involved, but later admitted
    that she had helped dispose of his parents’ bodies.   The police
    discovered the bodies buried in a shallow grave in Friendship
    Park.
    B.
    A grand jury returned an indictment charging defendant with
    the following:   two counts of first-degree murder, N.J.S.A.
    2C:11-3(a)(1) and (2); third-degree hindering apprehension or
    prosecution, N.J.S.A. 2C:29-3(b)(1); third-degree theft by
    unlawful taking, N.J.S.A. 2C:20-3; third-degree fraudulent use
    of a credit card, N.J.S.A. 2C:21-6(h); third-degree attempted
    theft, N.J.S.A. 2C:5-1 and 2C:20-3; and fourth-degree tampering
    with physical evidence, N.J.S.A. 2C:28-6(1).   One count of
    first-degree murder was subsequently amended to charge
    passion/provocation manslaughter of defendant’s father, N.J.S.A.
    2C:11-4(b)(1)-(2).   Co-defendant Taylor was charged in the same
    indictment.   The grand jury returned a separate indictment
    charging defendant with second-degree unlawfully disturbing,
    moving or concealing human remains, N.J.S.A. 2C:22-1(a)(1), and
    third-degree failing to dispose of human remains in a manner
    required by law, N.J.S.A. 2C:22-1(b).
    Defendant filed a motion to suppress both his statement to
    his uncle and his statement to Detective Ryan and Investigator
    11
    Mullin, as well as the evidence collected as a result of those
    statements.   The trial court, after hearing testimony from
    Sergeant Vallas, Detective Ryan, and Investigator Mullin and
    reviewing a recording of defendant’s statements, suppressed
    defendant’s statement to his uncle, but did not exclude
    defendant’s statement to police.     The court determined that
    defendant, by asking to speak to a close relative, effectively
    asserted his right to remain silent, and that defendant’s
    statement to his uncle was not freely and voluntarily made
    because the police misrepresented that the camera would remain
    off while defendant spoke to his uncle.
    However, in finding defendant’s statement to police
    admissible, the trial court determined that the police
    scrupulously honored defendant’s initial request to remain
    silent.   The court noted that the officers administered Miranda
    warnings a second time, and permitted defendant to take “a break
    to speak to his uncle,” and smoke a cigarette.    Further,
    defendant “was questioned by different officers, and expressed a
    willingness to provide a statement.”
    [D]efendant appeared calm, relaxed, and eager
    to tell his story . . . . [T]hroughout the
    entire questioning of the defendant there were
    no threats, bribes, or other inducement that
    would coerce defendant to confess or lead the
    [c]ourt to question the reliability of the
    defendant’s statements.
    12
    Thus, the court concluded that, with respect to the statement to
    Detective Ryan and Investigator Mullin, defendant voluntarily
    waived his right to remain silent.     The court did not consider
    whether the prior statement to defendant’s uncle impacted the
    admissibility of the statement to police.
    At trial, the prosecution played for the jury defendant’s
    statement to Investigator Mullin and Detective Ryan.
    Additionally, Taylor testified that she restrained defendant’s
    mother until defendant finished strangling his father, at which
    point defendant strangled his mother.    Taylor explained that,
    after both parents were dead, defendant and Taylor removed the
    clothing from the bodies, placed them into a bathtub filled with
    bleach, rolled the bodies into garbage bags, placed them into
    the trunk of defendant’s father’s car, and drove the car to
    Friendship Park.     Once they arrived, defendant and Taylor dug a
    shallow grave and buried the bodies.     Taylor also testified
    about some of the purchases she witnessed defendant make on the
    bank card following the murders.
    Defendant testified on his own behalf.     He claimed to have
    killed his father in self-defense, and that Taylor, not he,
    killed his mother.
    The jury found defendant guilty of second-degree
    passion/provocation manslaughter of his father; first-degree
    murder of his mother; third-degree hindering prosecution; third-
    13
    degree theft; third-degree fraudulent use of a credit card;
    fourth-degree tampering with evidence; fourth-degree false
    swearing; and second-degree disturbing, moving or concealing
    human remains.   Defendant received an aggregate sentence of
    sixty-four years in prison, with an 85% period of parole
    ineligibility pursuant to the No Early Release Act, N.J.S.A.
    2C:43-7.2.
    Defendant appealed, arguing that his statement to
    Investigator Mullin and Detective Ryan should also have been
    suppressed.   Defendant argued the statement to his uncle was
    involuntary, the subsequent statement to police was tainted by
    the first involuntary statement to defendant’s uncle, and the
    evidence recovered as a result of the statements should also
    have been suppressed.
    The Appellate Division concluded that defendant initially
    invoked his right to remain silent by requesting to speak to his
    uncle, the police improperly recorded that conversation and, as
    such, the trial court properly suppressed the recorded
    conversation with defendant’s uncle.   The Appellate Division
    concluded, as did the trial court, that defendant’s statement to
    police “was obtained voluntarily after the police re-
    administered defendant’s Miranda rights.”
    We granted certification on the issue of whether
    defendant’s statement to police was tainted by the improperly
    14
    obtained statement to defendant’s uncle, and therefore should
    have been suppressed as the fruit of the poisonous tree.      State
    v. Maltese, 
    217 N.J. 623
    (2014).
    II.
    A.
    Relying on the trial court’s finding that the police
    violated defendant’s right to remain silent by continuing to
    question him after he asked to speak with his uncle, defendant
    argues that his statement to police “should have been suppressed
    as part and parcel of prior unconstitutional interrogation
    procedures or, alternatively, as the fruit of the poisonous
    tree.”   Defendant claims that the entire event constituted a
    single interrogation, which became constitutionally defective
    when Sergeant Vallas continued to interrogate defendant for ten
    minutes after he first invoked his right to remain silent.      In
    support of that argument, defendant asserts that: he was never
    free from police observation; he made his inculpatory statement
    to police less than seven minutes after he spoke with his uncle;
    Investigator Mullin was involved in orchestrating the State’s
    recording of defendant’s conversation with his uncle in the
    interview room; and Detective Ryan interviewed defendant
    previously, coordinated the polygraph test, and led defendant
    into the interview room.   Moreover, defendant argues, that the
    officers themselves believed the event was one continuous
    15
    interview, as is apparent from Investigator Mullin’s testimony
    that defendant’s uncle “was happy to continue the investigation”
    and by the fact that the officers used information learned from
    defendant’s statement to his uncle during the second half of the
    interrogation.
    Defendant argues that the officers’ repetition of Miranda
    warnings does not constitute an intervening event between his
    admissions to his uncle and his statement to police because the
    investigating officers failed to explain that defendant’s prior
    admissions to his uncle could be used against him.
    Additionally, defendant asserts that his will to resist
    providing the statement to police was overcome by the
    interviewing officers’ use of the information he told his uncle.
    Defendant next asserts that the physical evidence uncovered
    as a result of the involuntary statement to police -- the bodies
    of defendant’s parents -- should have been suppressed as fruit
    of the unlawful statements.   Defendant notes that “the location
    where the victims were buried was nondescript, with no markings
    that would have alerted them to the burial location,” and that
    there was no evidence that the officers could have discovered
    the physical evidence without defendant’s statement to police.
    Finally, defendant argues that his statement to police was
    crucial to the State’s case against him -- it was used both as
    substantive evidence and for impeachment -- and as such, the
    16
    admission was not harmless error, and a reversal of his
    convictions and remand for a new trial is warranted.
    B.
    The State contends that defendant’s request to speak to his
    uncle does not qualify as an invocation of the right to remain
    silent.   Further, the State argues that the officers’
    misrepresentation that the camera would be off during
    defendant’s conversation with his uncle did not render
    defendant’s statement to police involuntary because defendant
    did not rely on that misrepresentation.   The State notes that
    defendant asserted that he did not “trust” that the camera was
    off, and Sergeant Vallas explained to defendant that the
    conversation was not protected by attorney-client privilege.
    The State also argues that, even if defendant had invoked
    his right to remain silent, that right was scrupulously honored
    before defendant confessed to police.   The State notes that
    Sergeant Vallas allowed defendant to speak with his uncle before
    the interrogation resumed, allowed defendant to leave the
    interrogation room for a cigarette break, and administered fresh
    Miranda warnings.
    Next, in reliance on Taylor’s testimony and the physical
    evidence in support of defendant’s conviction, the State asserts
    that admission of defendant’s statement to the police was, at
    most, harmless error.   The State contends that police would have
    17
    inevitably discovered the physical evidence because the manner
    of burial and location of the victims’ remains was susceptible
    to discovery, and Taylor knew the location of the bodies.
    Additionally, the State asserts that this Court’s grant of
    certification was sufficient to permit the State to challenge
    the underlying reasons for the decision below.    The State argues
    that defendant was not in custody when he asked to speak to his
    uncle and, therefore, the protections of Miranda do not apply.4
    III.
    We begin our analysis by considering our scope of review.
    “When faced with a trial court’s admission of police-obtained
    statements, an appellate court should engage in a ‘searching and
    critical’ review of the record to ensure protection of a
    defendant’s constitutional rights.”     State v. Hreha, 
    217 N.J. 368
    , 381-82 (2014) (quoting State v. Pickles, 
    46 N.J. 542
    , 577
    (1966)).   We do not independently assess evidence as if we are
    the trial court.   
    Id. at 382.
      Rather, “an appellate court
    4
    This argument was raised for the first time in the State’s
    reply to defendant’s petition for certification, and was not the
    subject of a cross-petition. It was not raised before the trial
    court, and therefore the trial court made no factual findings as
    to this argument. We acknowledge that in deciding the issues
    presented, this Court has the discretion to address matters not
    raised in a petition for certification. Pfenninger v. Hunterdon
    Cent. Reg’l High Sch., 
    167 N.J. 230
    , 235 n.1 (2001). However,
    in light of the foregoing, we decline to exercise that
    discretion here.
    18
    should typically defer to the trial court’s credibility and
    factual findings” because such findings are “often
    ‘substantially influenced by [its] opportunity to hear and see
    the witnesses and to have the “feel” of the case.’”    
    Ibid. (alteration in original)
    (quoting State v. Johnson, 
    42 N.J. 146
    ,
    161 (1964)).
    To warrant reversal, defendant must show not only that
    admission of his statement was error, but that it was error “of
    such a nature to have been clearly capable of producing an
    unjust result.”   R. 2:10-2.   In cases in which admitted evidence
    implicates a constitutional right, the reviewing court must
    determine whether the alleged error was “‘harmless beyond a
    reasonable doubt.’”   State v. Weaver, 
    219 N.J. 131
    , 154 (2014)
    (quoting Chapman v. California, 
    386 U.S. 18
    , 24, 
    87 S. Ct. 824
    ,
    828, 
    17 L. Ed. 2d 705
    , 710-11 (1967)); see State v. Sanchez, 
    129 N.J. 261
    , 278-79 (1992) (holding admission of confession was
    harmful error because it was “uncertain whether the error may
    have contributed to defendant’s conviction”).
    IV.
    A.
    With an understanding of our scope of review, we turn to
    the question of whether during questioning defendant asserted
    his Fifth Amendment right to remain silent.     Although the New
    Jersey Constitution contains no reference to the privilege
    19
    against self-incrimination, we have repeatedly held “that it is
    a right ‘so venerated and deeply rooted in this state’s common
    law that it has been deemed unnecessary to include the privilege
    in our State Constitution.’”   State v. Diaz-Bridges, 
    208 N.J. 544
    , 563 (2012) (quoting State v. O’Neill, 
    193 N.J. 148
    , 176
    (2007)).   Indeed, our decisions have been more solicitous of
    this privilege than decisions under the federal constitution
    alone.   
    Id. at 563-64.
    The privilege includes “‘the right of a person to remain
    silent unless he chooses to speak in the unfettered exercise of
    his own free will, and to suffer no penalty . . . for []
    silence.’”   State v. Camacho, 
    218 N.J. 533
    , 543 (2014) (quoting
    State v. P.Z., 
    152 N.J. 86
    , 100-02 (1997)).     Efforts by a law
    enforcement officer to persuade a suspect to talk “are proper as
    long as the will of the suspect is not overborne.”     State v.
    Miller, 
    76 N.J. 392
    , 403 (1978).     The inquiry turns on “whether
    an investigator’s ‘statements were so manipulative or coercive
    that they deprived [defendant] of his ability to make an
    unconstrained, autonomous decision to confess.’”     State v.
    DiFrisco, 
    118 N.J. 253
    , 257 (1990) (alteration in original)
    (police officer’s encouragement of trust did not render
    confession involuntary) (quoting Miller v. Fenton, 
    796 F.2d 598
    ,
    605 (3d Cir.), cert. denied, 
    479 U.S. 989
    , 
    107 S. Ct. 585
    , 93 L.
    Ed. 2d 587 (1986)).
    20
    In the context of custodial interrogation, once a defendant
    clearly and unambiguously invokes his right to remain silent,
    interrogation must cease.   
    Diaz-Bridges, supra
    , 208 N.J. at 564
    (citing State v. Johnson, 
    120 N.J. 263
    , 281 (1990)).     Because a
    police officer must “scrupulously honor[]” that right, even when
    the suspect’s invocation is “ambiguous,” officers are “required
    to stop the interrogation completely, or to ask only questions
    narrowly directed to determining whether defendant [is] willing
    to continue.”   
    Johnson, supra
    , 120 N.J. at 284; see also State
    ex rel. A.S., 
    409 N.J. Super. 99
    , 116-17 (App. Div. 2009)
    (finding juvenile’s “statement that she did not know whether she
    wished to speak to [an officer], her evident reluctance
    thereafter to speak, and the long silences . . . suggest[ed] at
    least an equivocal invocation of the right to silence,
    warranting further inquiry by [the officer]”), rev’d on other
    grounds, 
    203 N.J. 131
    (2010).
    Whether a suspect has invoked his right to remain silent
    requires analysis of the totality of the circumstances,
    including consideration of the suspect’s words and conduct.
    
    Diaz-Bridges, supra
    , 208 N.J. at 568-69.    The defendant’s
    statement is evaluated in the full context in which the
    statement is made, including whether the suspect wished to speak
    to another person in order to seek advice or as a condition
    before speaking with police.    See State v. Martini, 
    131 N.J. 21
    176, 231-33 (1993).    Of particular relevance to this matter,
    this Court in State v. Harvey, 
    121 N.J. 407
    (1990), addressed a
    situation where a defendant requested to speak to someone other
    than an attorney.     In Harvey, we held that the defendant’s
    statement that “he would tell [the officers] about the murder”
    after he spoke with his father was sufficient to invoke his
    right to remain silent, and therefore required the interrogation
    to cease.   
    Id. at 417,
    420.
    The facts presented here clearly indicate that defendant
    invoked his right to remain silent.      Defendant voluntarily went
    to the police station and initially appeared willing to answer
    Sergeant Vallas’s questions.     However, once Sergeant Vallas
    informed defendant that he had failed the polygraph test and
    demanded that defendant tell him where his parents were,
    defendant repeatedly stated that he wanted to speak with his
    uncle, whom he considered “better than a freaking attorney,”
    before answering any further questions.
    As in Harvey, defendant here indicated that he wanted to
    speak with a family member to obtain advice before proceeding
    with questioning.     Unlike 
    Diaz-Bridges, supra
    , 208 N.J. at 548-
    49, where the defendant failed to indicate that he wanted
    questioning to stop, defendant here unequivocally asserted more
    than ten times that he wanted to speak to his uncle before
    answering any further questions.       Additionally, unlike State v.
    22
    Brooks, 
    309 N.J. Super. 43
    , 52-57 (App. Div. 1998), defendant
    specifically stated that he wanted to consult with his uncle
    about “what to do.”
    Considering all the circumstances, we conclude that
    defendant affirmatively asserted his right to remain silent when
    confronted with the results of the polygraph.   Once his Fifth
    Amendment right was asserted, the interrogation nonetheless
    continued when police engaged defendant’s uncle to assist them
    in the investigation; the information learned from recording
    defendant’s conversation with his uncle followed Sergeant
    Vallas’s misrepresentation that “as soon as I open this door,
    the recording is going to be going off.”   The trial court found
    that defendant confessed as a direct result of the false promise
    that the recording device would be off.    Under those
    circumstances, defendant’s Miranda rights were not scrupulously
    honored.   Therefore, defendant’s statement made to his uncle was
    obtained in violation of defendant’s Fifth Amendment right to
    remain silent and was properly suppressed by the trial court.
    B.
    Having determined that defendant’s statement to his uncle
    was obtained in violation of defendant’s assertion of his right
    to remain silent and was properly suppressed by the trial court,
    we must now resolve whether defendant’s statement to Detective
    Ryan and Investigator Mullin also should be suppressed.
    23
    The United States Supreme Court concluded that “the
    admissibility of statements obtained after the person in custody
    has decided to remain silent depends under Miranda on whether
    his ‘right to cut off questioning’ was ‘scrupulously honored.’”
    Michigan v. Mosley, 
    423 U.S. 96
    , 104, 
    96 S. Ct. 321
    , 326, 46 L.
    Ed. 2d 313, 321 (1975).    In determining that the defendant’s
    right to silence was scrupulously honored, the Court in Mosley
    focused on four factors:   (1) two hours passed after the
    defendant first asserted his right to remain silent; (2) the
    defendant received fresh Miranda warnings before the
    interrogation resumed; (3) the defendant was questioned by a
    different police officer; and (4) the defendant was questioned
    about a different crime.   
    Id. at 106,
    96 S. Ct. at 327, 46 L.
    Ed. 2d at 322; see Oregon v. Elstad, 
    470 U.S. 298
    , 310, 105 S.
    Ct. 1285, 1293, 
    84 L. Ed. 2d 222
    , 232-33 (1985) (explaining that
    where statement is coerced, “the time that passes between
    confessions, the change in place of interrogations, and the
    change in identity of the interrogators all bear on whether that
    coercion has carried over into the second confession”); see also
    State v. Hartley, 
    103 N.J. 252
    , 266-67 (1986) (discussing Mosely
    factors and requiring fresh Miranda warnings before resuming
    questioning).   In this case, the break in questioning was less
    than seven minutes, defendant was always in the presence of an
    24
    officer, and the officers that took defendant’s statement were
    known by defendant to be conducting the investigation.
    Additionally, after defendant confessed to his uncle,
    Investigator Mullin and Detective Ryan made it clear that they
    knew defendant “let the cat out of the bag,”5 and therefore, “no
    matter what the inducement,” he was not “free of the
    psychological and practical disadvantages of having confessed.
    He can never get the cat back in the bag.”     
    O’Neill, supra
    , 193
    N.J. at 171 n.13 (quoting United States v. Bayer, 
    331 U.S. 532
    ,
    540-41, 
    67 S. Ct. 1394
    , 1398, 
    91 L. Ed. 1654
    , 1660 (1947)).
    Under those circumstances, “a later confession always may be
    looked upon as fruit of the first.”    
    Ibid. In determining whether
    this taint is attenuated, the Court
    considers the following factors:    “the time between confessions,
    any intervening circumstances, whether there was a change in
    place, whether defendant received an adequate warning of his
    rights, whether the defendant initiated the second confession,
    the effect of his having previously made a confession, and the
    ‘purpose and flagrancy of police misconduct.’”    
    Hartley, supra
    ,
    103 N.J. at 283 (quoting Brown v. Illinois, 
    422 U.S. 590
    , 603-
    04, 
    95 S. Ct. 2254
    , 2261-62, 
    45 L. Ed. 2d 416
    , 427 (1975)); see,
    5 Detective Ryan stated, “Jim [Mullin] is totally up to speed and
    everything, but I just want to go over -- your mom and dad are
    deceased, correct?”
    25
    e.g., 
    Harvey, supra
    , 121 N.J. at 417-18 (holding second
    confession sufficiently independent such that taint of illegal
    conduct dissipated where statement was given two days after
    alleged violation, defendant was not subjected to prolonged
    detention, and intervening circumstances separated alleged
    violation from confession).
    In 
    Hartley, supra
    , federal agents, without giving Miranda
    warnings, interrogated the defendant about ten minutes after
    state police officers met with the defendant, and he asserted
    the right to remain 
    silent. 103 N.J. at 258-59
    .   This Court
    held that, “whether seen as produced by the same interrogation
    process as the first or, even though separate, as tainted by the
    first,” the second confession was inadmissible.      
    Id. at 284.
    The Court noted the interrogations occurred “in the same room,”
    the federal agents who conducted the second interview were
    involved in the investigation with state officers who conducted
    the first, and the second interview occurred close “on the
    heels” of the first interrogation.     
    Id. at 279-80.
      Thus, we
    concluded that the two interrogations “comprise[d] a single
    continuing event.”     
    Id. at 279;
    cf. State v. Chew, 
    150 N.J. 30
    ,
    67-68 (1997) (holding five hours and twenty minutes between two
    statements sufficient “so that they were not part of the same .
    . . interrogation.”)
    26
    During his recorded meeting with his uncle, defendant
    confessed to the murders of his parents.    Approximately seven
    minutes later, officers initiated another interview of
    defendant, administered Miranda warnings a second time, and
    immediately gave a clear indication that they knew defendant
    confessed to his uncle that he killed his parents.   All of the
    questioning was conducted in the same interview room; the
    statement to police was obtained by officers who defendant knew
    were involved in the investigation; and all of the questioning
    and discussion concerned the same crimes.   We determine that,
    under these facts, the statement to police was the “fruit” of
    the unconstitutionally obtained statement to defendant’s uncle.
    Once defendant “let the cat out of the bag by confessing, no
    matter what the inducement, he [was] never thereafter free of
    the psychological and practical disadvantages of having
    confessed.   He [could] never get the cat back in the bag.”
    
    O’Neill, supra
    , 193 N.J. at 171 n.13 (citing 
    Bayer, supra
    , 331
    U.S. at 
    540-41, 67 S. Ct. at 1398
    , 91 L. Ed. at 1660).    Under
    the facts of this case, not even the second reading of Miranda
    warnings removed the taint of the first constitutional
    violation.
    V.
    Having preliminarily excluded defendant’s statements, we
    must now determine whether the admission of defendant’s
    27
    statement to police at trial amounted to harmless error beyond a
    reasonable doubt.
    The theft, fraudulent use of the bank card, hindering, and
    false swearing convictions were independently substantiated.       In
    fact, those convictions were not dependent in any way on the
    statement made by defendant to police.     The State offered, and
    the trial court admitted into evidence, the receipts, videotaped
    recordings of defendant using the bank card, and bank records
    from the account to substantiate those charges.    The hindering
    prosecution conviction was for giving false information
    regarding the whereabouts of defendant’s parents and when they
    were last seen alive, as evidenced by the October 18, 2008,
    statement to police, which occurred before defendant made the
    statements at issue here.
    Likewise, the tampering with physical evidence and
    concealment convictions were independently substantiated by
    Taylor’s testimony at trial.   Taylor testified about the manner
    in which she and defendant put the bodies in the tub, and then
    transported the bodies to the park and buried them.
    By contrast, defendant’s statement to police was
    particularly relevant to defendant’s passion/provocation
    manslaughter and murder convictions.     Based on the
    passion/provocation manslaughter conviction, the jury credited
    defendant’s statement to police supported by Taylor’s trial
    28
    testimony, which was contrary to defendant’s testimony at trial
    that he acted in self-defense.    We acknowledge that defendant’s
    murder conviction is supported by Taylor’s trial testimony, and
    the medical examiner’s trial testimony that the manner of death
    and injuries to the two victims was similar.    However, the State
    used defendant’s statement to police to contradict his testimony
    that Taylor was responsible for the death of defendant’s mother,
    and was successful in obtaining a conviction against defendant
    for his mother’s murder.
    Because the passion/provocation manslaughter and first-
    degree murder convictions were substantially dependent upon
    defendant’s statement to police, we cannot conclude that
    admission of the statement at trial was harmless beyond a
    reasonable doubt.   As such, defendant’s passion/provocation
    manslaughter and first-degree murder convictions must be
    reversed and the matter must be remanded for retrial.
    Although we have concluded that defendant’s
    unconstitutionally obtained statements must be excluded, on
    retrial, those statements may be used for impeachment purposes.
    In reaching this conclusion, we rely upon our holding in State
    v. Burris, 
    145 N.J. 509
    (1996), in which the defendant was
    charged and convicted of, among other things, murdering her
    mother.   
    Id. at 517.
      After giving a statement to police denying
    responsibility for her mother’s death, the defendant asked for a
    29
    lawyer, and despite refusing to answer any more questions,
    police continued the interrogation and obtained two more
    statements connecting the defendant to the homicide.     
    Id. at 516.
       This Court excluded the evidence in the State’s case-in-
    chief, but permitted its use to cross-examine the defendant if
    she chose to testify.    
    Id. at 532-33,
    538.   After considering
    the totality of the circumstances, we allowed the statements to
    be used for impeachment, stating that “[t]he impeachment
    exception is strictly limited to situations in which the
    suppressed statement is trustworthy and reliable in that it was
    given freely and voluntarily without compelling influences.”
    
    Id. at 525.
    Here, defendant was twenty years old and had a high school
    diploma.    The interrogation lasted approximately seven hours,
    and defendant was twice advised of his constitutional rights.
    Defendant was not subjected to physical punishment and, although
    he acknowledged he was tired, did not appear to be in physical
    distress as a result of the length or manner of the
    interrogation.    Under these circumstances, as in Burris, we
    conclude that defendant’s statements may be used by the State to
    impeach defendant if he chooses to testify at retrial.
    VI.
    On remand, a determination must be made whether the
    physical evidence discovered directly because of defendant’s
    30
    statements -- the victims’ remains -- should also be suppressed
    pursuant to the exclusionary rule.
    If the State can show that “the information ultimately or
    inevitably would have been discovered by lawful means . . . the
    deterrence rationale [of the exclusionary rule] has so little
    basis that the evidence should be received.”   Nix v. Williams,
    
    467 U.S. 431
    , 444, 
    104 S. Ct. 2501
    , 2509, 
    81 L. Ed. 2d 377
    , 387-
    88 (1984).   Under the “inevitable discovery” doctrine, the State
    must “show by clear and convincing evidence” the following:
    (1) proper, normal and specific investigatory
    procedures would have been pursued in order to
    complete the investigation of the case; (2)
    under   all  of   the   surrounding   relevant
    circumstances the pursuit of those procedures
    would   have  inevitably   resulted   in   the
    discovery of the evidence; and (3) the
    discovery of the evidence through the use of
    such procedures would have occurred wholly
    independently of the discovery of such
    evidence by unlawful means.
    [
    Johnson, supra
    , 120 N.J. at 289 (citing State
    v. Sugar, 
    100 N.J. 214
    , 238 (1984)(Sugar II).]
    However, under this standard, “the State need not
    demonstrate the exact circumstances of the evidence’s discovery
    . . . .   It need only present facts sufficient to persuade the
    court, by a clear and convincing standard, that the [evidence]
    would be discovered.”   State v. Sugar, 
    108 N.J. 151
    , 158 (1987).
    The State, in its supplemental brief, asserts that the
    officers would have inevitably discovered the bodies because
    31
    they were buried in a shallow grave and because Taylor also knew
    the location of the burial site.     The State has not provided any
    evidence that the bodies would have been discovered because of
    the way they were buried, or that Taylor would have led them to
    the remains.   As the record now exists, the State has not met
    its burden to establish by clear and convincing evidence that
    normal police procedures would inevitably have led to discovery
    of the bodies.   Cf. 
    id. at 157-58,
    161 (concluding body buried
    in defendant’s backyard would have been inevitably discovered
    because body was buried in shallow grave and would have given
    off detectable odor, defendant contracted to sell home and
    purchasers, who owned a dog, testified that they would have done
    work in that portion of yard, and it would have been obvious to
    anyone observing the site that something was abnormal); 
    Johnson, supra
    , 120 N.J. at 290 (concluding evidence inside home would
    have been inevitably discovered where police testified they were
    preparing search warrant for premises); State v. Finesmith, 
    406 N.J. Super. 510
    , 523 (App. Div. 2009) (concluding laptop
    admissible where police detective testified to specific steps he
    would have taken to uncover evidence).
    The record reveals that the victims’ bodies were discovered
    solely as a result of defendant’s statements made in violation
    of his Fifth Amendment right to remain silent.     It is possible
    that Taylor’s testimony will establish that she would have led
    32
    police to the victims’ bodies because she had knowledge of their
    location, or that the way the bodies were buried might have led
    to their discovery.   However, that evidence is not present in
    the record before us, and the State had no reason to press the
    issue in light of the trial court’s decision to admit
    defendant’s statement to Detective Ryan and Investigator Mullin.
    As such, we remand for a hearing to determine whether the bodies
    would have been discovered inevitably.   See Sugar 
    II, supra
    , 100
    N.J. at 240 (remanding for factual determination for whether
    evidence would have been inevitably discovered).
    VII.
    For the reasons set forth above, we affirm defendant’s
    convictions for second-degree disturbing, moving or concealing
    human remains, fourth-degree tampering with evidence, third-
    degree hindering apprehension or prosecution, third-degree
    theft, third-degree fraudulent use of a credit card, and fourth-
    degree false swearing, and reverse and remand for retrial the
    charges of passion/provocation manslaughter and first-degree
    murder.   On remand, the trial court shall conduct a pretrial
    hearing to determine whether the physical evidence obtained as a
    result of defendant’s suppressed statements is admissible under
    the inevitable discovery exception to the exclusionary rule.
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER; JUSTICES LaVECCHIA, ALBIN, PATTERSON,
    and FERNANDEZ-VINA; and JUDGE CUFF (temporarily assigned) join
    in JUSTICE SOLOMON’s opinion.
    33
    SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    NO.       A-96                                SEPTEMBER TERM 2013
    ON CERTIFICATION TO             Appellate Division, Superior Court
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    MICHAEL A. MALTESE,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    DECIDED                August 17, 2015
    Chief Justice Rabner                      PRESIDING
    OPINION BY            Justice Solomon
    CONCURRING/DISSENTING OPINIONS BY
    DISSENTING OPINION BY
    AFFIRM IN
    PART/
    CHECKLIST
    REVERSE IN
    PART/REMAND
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER                     X
    JUSTICE LaVECCHIA                        X
    JUSTICE ALBIN                            X
    JUSTICE PATTERSON                        X
    JUSTICE FERNANDEZ-VINA                   X
    JUSTICE SOLOMON                          X
    JUDGE CUFF (t/a)                         X
    TOTALS                                   7