STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. ARMANDO NOGUIERA (16-01-0007, HUDSON COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2018 )


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  •                             NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-3449-16T3
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    ARMANDO NOGUIERA,
    Defendant-Respondent.
    _________________________________
    Submitted September 20, 2017 - Decided October 11, 2018
    Before Judges Fuentes and Suter.
    On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Hudson County, Indictment No. 16-01-0007.
    Robert D. Laurino, Acting Essex County Prosecutor,
    attorney for appellant (Frank J. Ducoat, Special Deputy
    Attorney General/Acting Assistant Prosecutor, of
    counsel and on the brief).
    Sciarra & Catrambone, LLC, attorneys for respondent
    (Charles J. Sciarra, of counsel and on the brief;
    Deborah Masker Edwards, on the brief).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    FUENTES, P.J.A.D.
    At all times relevant to this case, defendant Armando Noguiera was a
    Sheriff's Officer with the Essex County Sheriff's Office.   On October 5, 2012,
    John Warnock, a fellow Essex County Sheriff's Officer, allegedly restrained and
    threatened to sexually assault a woman. The charges against defendant arise
    from his interactions with Warnock on the night they both encountered the
    alleged victim. The Essex County Prosecutor's Office (ECPO) charged Warnock
    with a number of criminal charges related to this incident. On October 9, 2012,
    and again on December 7, 2012, ECPO investigators questioned defendant about
    his interactions with Warnock and the alleged victim on the night of October 5,
    2012.
    Warnock's trial began in September 2014. Both the State and Warnock
    called defendant as a witness at trial. On December 2, 2014, the jury acquitted
    Warnock of all of the charges against him. On January 15, 2016, a State Grand
    Jury indicted defendant on the charge of second degree official misconduct,
    N.J.S.A. 2C:30-2, third degree perjury, N.J.S.A. 2C:28-1(a), and fourth degree
    false swearing, N.J.S.A. 2C:28-2(a).1 To prove these charges, the State intended
    1
    The indictment incorrectly cites N.J.S.A. 2C:28-1 in the count that describes
    the fourth degree offense of false swearing.
    A-3449-16T3
    2
    to introduce into evidence the statements defendant gave to ECPO investigators
    in the course of the two interviews related to the case against Warnock.2
    On June 8, 2016, defense counsel filed an omnibus pretrial motion
    seeking, inter alia, to preclude the State from using the two statements defendant
    provided in connection with the prosecution of the case against Warnock.
    Defense counsel argued that the statements are inadmissible because the ECPO
    investigators did not apprise defendant of his constitutional rights under
    Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
     (1966) and Garrity v. N.J., 
    385 U.S. 493
    (1967) before they questioned him concerning his interactions with Warnock.
    In an order dated October 6, 2016, the trial judge denied defendant's request to
    suppress these two statements.
    After reviewing court-ordered discovery material provided by the State,
    defendant again moved to preclude the State from using the statements
    defendant gave the ECPO investigators.          This time, the judge granted
    defendant's motion. The judge found that at the time they questioned defendant,
    the investigators had reasonable grounds to consider defendant a "co-
    conspirator" in the Warnock case.       In this light, the judge concluded the
    2
    Because defendant is an Essex County Sheriff's Officer, the State transferred
    venue to Hudson County.
    A-3449-16T3
    3
    investigators were required to provide defendant with "Garrity warnings" before
    questioning him about the allegations against Warnock.
    In an order dated March 3, 2017, the court suppressed the statements
    defendant gave to the ECPO investigators on October 9, 2012 and December 7,
    2012. By leave granted, the State now appeals arguing defendant was not
    entitled to Garrity warnings at the time the ECPO investigators interviewed him
    in connection with their investigation of the allegations against Warnock. We
    agree and reverse. The following facts developed before the trial court will
    inform our legal analysis.
    I
    Defendant began his career as a full-time Sheriff's Officer with the Essex
    County Sheriff's Office in 2008. Defendant also worked as a part-time security
    officer for various businesses in the Essex County area. On the night of October
    5, 2012, defendant and fellow Sheriff's Officer Richard Rickets were working
    as security officers at a TGI Friday's restaurant (Friday's restaurant) located in
    the Township of West Orange. His security shift began at 9:00 p.m. on October
    5, and ended at 2:00 a.m. on October 6, 2012.          The incident that led to
    defendant's interactions with Warnock occurred in the parking lot of the Friday's
    restaurant.
    A-3449-16T3
    4
    We derive the following facts from the statement a twenty-two-year-old
    woman provided to ECPO investigators in connection with the criminal charges
    she filed against Warnock. We identify her as I.R. to protect her privacy. See
    R. 1:38-3(c)(1).
    On the evening of October 5, 2012, I.R. was with a friend in a social club
    in the Township of West Orange, located near the Friday's restaurant where
    defendant was working as a security officer.        I.R. admitted that she was
    inebriated when she "got into a fight with a guy which resulted in her getting
    kicked out of the club." Once outside the club, a "bouncer" escorted her to the
    other side of the street and off the club's property. She decided to walk to a bus
    stop "to begin discussing getting rides home." Although not explicitly stated,
    we infer I.R. discussed this with the woman who originally accompanied her to
    the club.
    At approximately 11:30 p.m., I.R. encountered defendant for the first time
    when she walked into the Friday's restaurant parking lot. Although he did not
    produce a badge or other forms of official identification, I.R. claimed defendant
    said he was a police officer and "offered to give her a ride home." The record
    is not entirely clear about the sequence of the following events. However, I.R.
    told the ECPO investigators that she decided to return to the Friday's restaurant
    A-3449-16T3
    5
    parking lot after she realized her friend had left the area. This time, I.R.
    encountered defendant and John Warnock, who identified himself as a Sheriffs
    Officer. According to I.R., she overheard Warnock tell defendant: "you['re] not
    going to take 'her' home because you will get in trouble." I.R. also alleged that
    defendant told her Warnock was "his boss and there was nothing he could do
    about it."
    After the passage of certain intervening events that are not relevant to the
    issues we address here, I.R. accepted Warnock's offer to ostensibly drive her
    home. I.R. alleged that during the drive, Warnock engaged in conversation with
    her about personal matters and asked her whether she had a boyfriend. She told
    him she had a one-year-old child and was not romantically involved with anyone
    at the time. Warnock allegedly asked I.R. her age and whether she needed
    money. She told Warnock she was twenty-two years old and all she wanted was
    to get home. At this point, I.R. alleged that Warnock told her "to take her panties
    down." She allegedly responded: "why are you asking me that, you're a police
    officer." Warnock allegedly responded: "take your panties down now or I'll kill
    you."
    I.R. told the ECPO investigators that she became very scared and started
    to cry while thinking about her infant son. I.R. claimed that after remaining
    A-3449-16T3
    6
    silent for "a few minutes," she jumped out of Warnock's car, started running and
    began frantically knocking on every door she found. No one answered. She hid
    behind some bushes because she was uncertain whether Warnock was following
    her. She ran out into the middle of the street when she saw a car "containing
    kids in their 20's drive by her." I.R. told the occupants of the car to call the
    police because "someone was trying to kill her." Beyond this point, her only
    recollection is "finding herself in an ambulance where she continued to cry
    . . . ."
    Based on these allegations, a grand jury returned an indictment against
    Warnock charging him with second degree Official Misconduct, N.J.S.A.
    2C:30-2, third degree Criminal Restraint, N.J.S.A. 2C:13-2, third degree
    Criminal Coercion, N.J.S.A. 2C:13-5, and third degree Terroristic Threats,
    N.J.S.A. 2C:12-3.         ECPO Lieutenants Steve Roberts and Stanley Rosa
    interviewed defendant on two separate occasions as part of their investigation
    of the Warnock case. Defendant's two verbatim statements are part of the
    appellate record.
    October 9, 2012 Interview
    In this first interview, defendant confirmed that on October 5, 2012, he
    was working part time at the Friday's restaurant in West Orange, when he saw
    A-3449-16T3
    7
    Warnock come with Jodi Biondi, a Corrections Officer with the Essex County
    Department of Corrections. Warnock and Biondi stayed in the restaurant until
    it closed in the early morning hours of October 6, 2012.
    Defendant finished his shift at Friday's restaurant at approximately two
    o'clock in the morning. As he left the restaurant, two women who appeared
    intoxicated approached him after they left the nightclub located across the street.
    One of the women left the area shortly thereafter. The other one, later identified
    as I.R., asked defendant for a ride home. Defendant told I.R. he could not take
    her home and suggested that she call a taxi. According to defendant, I.R. walked
    away into the parking lot and attempted to enter a car occupied by three men.
    Concerned for her safety, defendant claimed he approached the vehicle,
    identified himself as a Sheriff's Officer, and told her to get out of the car and
    call a taxi. Defendant explained to the investigators:
    I didn't know if she knew the people [in the car]. It
    didn't seem like she knew the people. Like, she just
    jumped into the car.
    So, I wanted to make sure that she got out of the vehicle
    and she sat at the bus stop. I told her that she should
    get a cab. And eventually she walked into the parking
    lot. I lost visual contact with her and then I just left and
    went home.
    [(Emphasis added).]
    A-3449-16T3
    8
    According to defendant, Warnock left the area "a little before" him. When
    asked to estimate how much time transpired between the point when he left and
    Warnock's departure, defendant responded: "I couldn't honestly say." When the
    investigators continued to question him about his interactions with the occupants
    of the car that I.R. attempted to enter, defendant asked the following questions:
    DEFENDANT: Gentlemen, may I ask what is this
    about?
    LT. ROSA: This is an investigation we're conducting
    and - -
    DEFENDANT: I understand that, but - -
    LT. ROBERTS: It involves your part-time employment
    with your duties as a part-time employee.
    DEFENDANT: Okay.           Should I have a PBA
    representative with me at this time? I mean, am I in
    some kind of trouble?
    LT. ROBERTS: Well, not right now.            We're just
    interviewing you as a witness right now.
    LT. ROSA: As a witness, you're being interviewed.
    ....
    LT. ROBERTS: Because you clearly told us that you
    had contact with the intoxicated female.
    DEFENDANT: Did something happen to the female?
    A-3449-16T3
    9
    LT. ROBERTS: Well, we don't know.           We're just
    talking to you right now.
    ....
    DEFENDANT: . . . I understand that [it is an
    investigation] sir. But there's a reason behind the
    investigation. And I'm just asking what am I being
    interrogated about?
    LT. ROSA: You're being interviewed . . . There's a
    difference.
    Defendant continued to press the investigators to disclose the underlying
    basis of their investigation.   The record shows the investigators left the
    interview room to confer privately off the record. The following exchange
    occurred when the investigators returned to the interview room:
    LT. ROSA: We're going to change this up a little bit.
    Okay?
    ....
    LT. ROBERTS: We know that you had [a]
    confrontation with [I.R.]. We know that you agreed to
    take her home.
    DEFENDANT: Okay.
    LT. ROBERTS: We know that you went to the car with
    her and removed her from the car.
    DEFENDANT: Okay.
    A-3449-16T3
    10
    LT. ROBERTS: We know that you got off work about
    2:05 [a.m.] and you exited the bar.
    ....
    You exited the bar not by yourself.
    LT. ROSA: You were with someone. Someone was
    there when you stopped this girl. Someone was there
    when you saw the girl in the car. Someone was with
    you when you told her to leave the car. Now, I think
    you should get in front of this and tell us who was with
    you.
    LT. ROBERTS: We want straight details. We don't
    want
    ....
    No more bullshit.
    ....
    LT. ROSA: Who was with you?
    DEFENDANT: Can I speak to my PBA rep?
    LT. ROSA: Do you want to speak to a PBA rep?
    DEFENDANT: I think that - -
    LT. ROSA: It's obvious you don't want to talk to us?
    You don't want to tell us what happened. If that's what
    you want - -
    DEFENDANT: No, no, no.
    LT. ROSA: - - then you can have it. Well listen to me.
    Either you tell us what happened or we're going to
    A-3449-16T3
    11
    change this whole thing around. Right now you're a
    witness.
    LT. ROBERTS: Right now you're a witness.
    LT. ROSA: We asked . . . you who you were with and
    who was with you at the time. And when she went away
    - - she went away and you went your way. Did you do
    something wrong?
    DEFENDANT: No.
    LT. ROSA: Okay. Then tell us what happened and stop
    the bullshit, bro. Straight and simple, stop this bullshit.
    Tell us what happened, who was with you, what you
    saw. That's all we want to know right now. We're
    telling you, get in front of this right now. Get it out . .
    . stop the bullshit. If you lie about something, you're
    going to get jammed up for lying. There's no reason for
    that. You did nothing wrong. All we want is the truth.
    Now this is your opportunity to tell us the truth. Period.
    You did nothing wrong, we want the truth about
    everything.
    LT. ROBERTS: From inside the bar, out.
    LT. ROSA: And until you went home. Everything.
    This is on you now. You like your job?
    DEFENDANT: I love my job.
    LT. ROSA: Tell us the truth. Just the truth. You lie,
    you could lose your job. Do you want to lose your job
    for some bullshit, bro? That you got nothing to do
    with? We want the truth. You can tell us. Let's start
    again. You worked inside?
    [(Emphasis added).]
    A-3449-16T3
    12
    After this exchange, defendant told the investigators a different account
    of the events that occurred that night. According to defendant, Warnock first
    entered the Friday's restaurant with a woman whom defendant did not know.
    When defendant left the restaurant, he saw Warnock outside with two different
    women, one of whom appeared to be intoxicated. The women told defendant
    that they were "getting a ride." The intoxicated woman was later identified as
    I.R. Defendant claimed he told I.R. to go with her friend. When the car came,
    the two women approached the vehicle together. However, I.R. "was still left
    behind" when the car left.
    I.R. walked over and entered a car that had three male occupants.
    Defendant and Warnock approached the car, confronted the occupants, and
    demanded that the intoxicated woman get out of the car. When defendant
    seemed reluctant to elaborate beyond this point, Lieutenant Rosa pressed him to
    provide details: "Explain to us. Explain to us. Come on, come on . . . ."
    Defendant relented and told the investigators that when the occupants of the car
    asked them "who we were to say that [I.R.] had to exit the vehicle[,]" he and
    Warnock identified themselves as law enforcement officers.             Warnock
    approached the car first and told I.R. to get out.
    A-3449-16T3
    13
    According to defendant, I.R. walked over to where he was standing and
    asked him: "[Are] you going to take me home?" Defendant asked her why she
    did not leave earlier with her friend, but she was allegedly unable to give a clear
    answer. Based on I.R.'s inebriated condition, he decided it was a "bad idea" to
    take her home. Defendant claimed that Warnock joined him in recommending
    to I.R. to call a taxi to take her home. Lieutenant Rosa sensed this was a critical
    point in the narrative and admonished defendant: "You're doing good so far.
    Don't mess this . . . whole thing up, my man. Don't start throwing bullshit into
    this. . . . As this story continues, keep on the path of the truth."
    Defendant responded: "I saw her walk into the park - - she went back and
    forth from the bus stop and then she walked into the parking lot. That was the
    last I saw [of] her." When Lieutenant Rosa asked "who was in the parking lot?"
    Defendant stated: "Officer Warnock was heading to his vehicle to go home."
    Defendant claimed that he and Warnock agreed they could not take her home
    because I.R. was "too drunk." Defendant also stated that Warnock told him to
    "just go." As the following statements illustrate, the investigators did not find
    defendant credible in this respect.
    LT. ROBERTS: [Y]ou mean to tell me you got her out
    the car and then you all left her in the parking lot? After
    she was in the car that was - - you considered unsafe,
    but to leave her in the parking lot at three o'clock in the
    A-3449-16T3
    14
    morning where she - - where, I'm assuming, you
    considered she was safe because you left her?
    LT. ROSA: You ain't no dummy, kid. You're a veteran,
    right?
    DEFENDANT: Yes.
    LT. ROSA: Okay. So, you're not no dummy. This isn't
    your first rodeo.      You're concerned, you were
    concerned. You had to be concerned. You knew that
    she was going to be in good hands, that's why you left.
    I don't think you would have abandoned her. I know
    you wouldn't have abandoned her.
    So, you knew she was in good hands, correct? Yes or
    no? You knew she was in good hands
    LT. ROBERTS: Based on your relationship with
    Detective Warnock [do] you considered [him] your
    superior or boss, correct?
    LT. ROSA: It's an easy answer. Yes or no?
    DEFENDANT: Yes.
    LT. ROBERTS: So what happened?
    DEFENDANT: They went in the same direction. I
    don't know if he was going to call her [a] cab or take
    her home.
    LT. ROSA:          So, did he [Warnock] assume
    responsibility, bro [.] Go ahead, go home. I got this.
    DEFENDANT: Yes.
    A-3449-16T3
    15
    Defendant told the investigators that he called Warnock on his way home.
    Warnock allegedly told him that I.R. was "acting erratic and he left her behind."
    Defendant told the investigators that his immediate reaction to Warnock 's
    statement was relief. Defendant claimed he suspected I.R. "might have had
    some allegations toward" Warnock. According to defendant, the telephone
    conversation he had with Warnock lasted "four to five" minutes.                   The
    investigators asked defendant a number of questions concerning the substance
    of the conversation between him and Warnock. Defendant consistently failed
    to provide a responsive answer.
    Lieutenant Roberts finally said: "We . . . know that you're holding back.
    Defendant assured the investigators he had been truthful in all of his answers to
    their questions. Lieutenant Rosa stated: "Which is also a lie. You forget to tell
    me something and you choose not to tell me something because I didn't ask you,
    it's a lie. It's going to be a lie and I'm going to - - we're going to prove it, bro."
    Defendant stated: "All right. I think at this point I do need to see my PBA rep."
    This prompted the investigators to momentarily leave the interview room.
    When the investigators returned to the interview room, they asked
    defendant if he had anything else to say about this incident "before we close the
    statement[.] Because once we close it, we're going to find out more." The
    A-3449-16T3
    16
    investigators urged defendant to disclose everything that happened that night
    between Warnock and I.R, even if it related to events or comments made by
    Warnock and I.R that were not directly raised by the investigators. In the words
    of Lieutenant Rosa: "We want it all." Defendant responded: "I just gave it."
    December 7, 2012 Interview
    After Lieutenants Rosa and Roberts interrogated Warnock on December
    7, 2012, they decided to interview defendant again. Lieutenant Rosa began this
    second interview by advising defendant "[y]ou are just a witness" in a criminal
    investigation. Lieutenant Roberts admonished defendant, however, that "if you
    don't answer our questions truthfully and it's proven that you lied to us, then
    you'd be subject to penalties by the sheriff's department. Criminal. Okay?"
    When the investigators asked defendant if he remembered the incident of
    October 5, 2012 involving Warnock, he responded: "Vaguely, yes."               The
    investigators asked defendant a series of questions that revisited many of the
    topics covered in the first interview. In the course of this exchange, defendant
    clarified certain details about Warnock's interactions with I.R. that night.
    According to defendant, Warnock was the first to approach I.R. and
    identify himself as a Sheriff's Officer. Defendant was wearing his Sheriff's
    Officer's uniform; Warnock was in plain clothes. Defendant claimed Warnock
    A-3449-16T3
    17
    had a good-faith belief that I.R. did not know the men who offered to drive her
    home. Warnock thus concluded it was not wise for her to leave with these men,
    especially in light of her intoxicated state. Defendant and Warnock suggested
    to I.R. to return to the club "or call a cab." For the first time in the course of
    this investigation, defendant claimed that I.R. offered him money to take her
    home. When the investigators asked defendant if he agreed to take I.R. home,
    defendant responded: "I believe I might have said that, yes, I'd be able to."
    Again, for the first time in this investigation, defendant revealed that I.R.'s friend
    actually sat inside his parked car. When pressed about whether both I.R. and
    her friend were inside his vehicle, defendant stated: "Her friend definitely was.
    I don't recall if [I.R. was] or not."
    Defendant told the investigators that Warnock advised him against taking
    I.R. home, and "I took his advice." According to defendant, Warnock planned
    to call a taxi to take her home. Once again, when pressed to provide details,
    defendant told the investigators that neither of them made any effort to call a
    taxi. Warnock merely told defendant to go because he would "take care of it."
    As he drove away, defendant saw Warnock walking to his vehicle with I.R.
    walking six to ten feet behind him. According to defendant, this encounter
    between Warnock and I.R. lasted approximately one hour. As he drove home,
    A-3449-16T3
    18
    defendant said he called Warnock because he had "a bad feeling about leaving
    him alone in that situation." When the investigators asked him why he did not
    stay with Warnock until I.R. could find a way to get home safely, defendant
    responded: "Lapse of judgment."
    Defendant told the investigators that when he reached Warnock on the
    cellphone, Warnock told him: "I left that batty bitch there."           When the
    investigators asked him to explain what made I.R. a "batty bitch," defendant
    responded: "I'm trying to think of a better word to describe it. For example, the
    fact that she needed a ride to Clifton, Paterson, [the State of] Ohio. She was
    definitely, like, very drunk, and irrational - - irrational is the word." Defendant
    claimed his cellphone conversation with Warnock lasted "only, like, two
    minutes." He also told the investigators that he had not spoken to Warnock
    "since then until now." However, when asked whether he called Warnock the
    day after the incident, defendant responded: "I could have." When pressed to
    give a "yes or no" answer, defendant merely repeated: "I could have."
    Before the interview ended, defendant admitted to Lieutenant Rosa that
    he had spoken to Warnock "minutes before" the second interview to let him
    know "I was getting called in." When Lieutenant Roberts asked defendant "why
    would [he] reach out" to Warnock if he did not know the reason he was being
    A-3449-16T3
    19
    summoned to appear, defendant responded: "He's a friend of mine. . . . He's a
    good enough friend that I would call him for advice."
    Interrogation 3 of John Warnock
    Lieutenants Rosa and Roberts interrogated Warnock on December 7,
    2012, before they interviewed defendant for a second time.         They advised
    Warnock that the subject of the interrogation concerned what occurred on the
    night of October 5, 2012, into the early morning hours of October 6, 2012.
    Warnock told the investigators that sometime after ten o'clock on the evening of
    October 5, 2012, he received a text message from Jodi Biondi about getting
    together for a drink. Biondi suggested they meet at the Friday's restaurant in
    West Orange. Warnock and Binodi left the Friday's restaurant at approximately
    2:30 a.m. on October 6, 2012.
    According to Warnock, as he and defendant were talking in the Friday's
    parking lot, "we observed two girls coming . . . from the nightclub across the
    street . . . [both of whom] were drunk." The two women were also "trying to get
    a ride from whoever they can get a ride from." Warnock told the investigators
    3
    We use the word "interrogation" because by this time I.R. had identified
    Warnock as the man from whose car she fled in the early morning of hours of
    October 6, 2012, after he told her "to take her panties down." Stated differently,
    the ECPO considered Warnock a suspect in a crime, not a witness. Warnock
    was represented by counsel at the time. His attorney was present during the
    entire interrogation.
    A-3449-16T3
    20
    that out of concern for their safety, he asked the women: "do you want a cab?"
    One of the women walked away and "started talking to some guy. Yells over, I
    know him. He's giving me a ride home. I'll see you later and takes off." The
    woman who remained was later identified as I.R.
    Warnock corroborated defendant's account of what transpired with respect
    to I.R. He told the investigators about I.R.'s attempts to get in a car with three
    men she did not know. He claimed that when Biondi called him to confirm she
    was home, he told her: "I'm still here, you know, trying to get this girl home.
    We're still - - we're still dealing with this." We infer that by using the pronoun
    "we," Warnock intended to convey that Biondi was aware defendant was helping
    him to get I.R. safely home.
    Warnock told the investigators that when he saw I.R. walk over to the bus
    stop, he told her: "Get away from the bus stop. It's not safe for you." He then
    asked her if she needed a phone or money, or "whatever, you know, I'll give you
    the money. It's no big deal." According to Warnock, I.R. responded: "I'm not
    sleeping with you because you're giving me money for a cab." Warnock said he
    was "perplexed" by I.R.'s response. He told the investigators that he made clear
    to I.R. that he had not said anything about "sleeping" with her. Warnock also
    claimed that when defendant "looked" at him, he "waived him off."
    A-3449-16T3
    21
    Warnock believed he had done enough to help I.R., and started to walk to
    where his truck was parked. However, when he turned around, he noticed I.R.
    was following him saying: "I need a ride, I need a ride." He told the investigators
    that he made clear to I.R. that she was not getting in his truck. "You're not
    coming with me . . . I'll give you money for a cab, I'll call a ride, husband,
    boyfriend, whoever you need me to call, I'll call for you. But you're not coming
    in my car." At one point, Warnock said "another car pulled up, said something.
    [I.R.] walked over. I got into my truck - - I was already in my truck at this point
    and I left." Warnock emphasized that I.R. never was inside his truck.
    Of particular relevance here, Warnock told the investigators that during
    his conversation with I.R., he purposely called Biondi so she would hear "all the
    tirades and – and everything that was going on like, the way [I.R.] was acting."
    Warnock confirmed that defendant called him at approximately 3:15 a.m. and
    asked him how he "made out[.]" Warnock told the investigators: "I told him
    straight out, I left this girl. She was crazy. She was nuts. There's something
    wrong with her. . . . I offered [her] every aspect and avenue I could to help her.
    I said, I left her."
    A-3449-16T3
    22
    Defendant's Trial Testimony for the State
    On September 18, 2014, defendant testified as a witness for the State in
    the case against Warnock.       In the course of his direct testimony, defendant
    largely repeated what he told the ECPO investigators during his two interviews
    in October and December 2012. Corrections Officer Jodi Biondi testified she
    interacted with I.R. outside the parking lot when she left Friday's with Warnock.
    Biondi specifically noticed I.R.'s "distinct Hispanic accent." Biondi testified
    that I.R. asked her for the telephone number of a taxi, but she was not able to
    provide her with one.
    When Biondi left Friday's, Warnock, defendant, I.R. and the other woman
    I.R. was with that night were still in the restaurant's parking lot. Biondi testified
    it took her between fifteen to twenty minutes to drive home. She called Warnock
    when she arrived at approximately three o'clock in the morning, "[j]ust to let
    him know that I was home okay."           She characterized the call "as a short
    conversation."
    At 3:02 a.m., Biondi received a call from Warnock's cellphone that
    sounded to her like an unintentional "pocket dial."4 She said "hello" a number
    of times, but did not get a response. Biondi testified she "stayed on just to be I
    4
    Biondi testified she knew it was Warnock's cellphone because she had saved
    his phone number on her contact list.
    A-3449-16T3
    23
    guess curious to see if anything was happening." She heard the voice of "a
    female" with a "distinct accent that I heard earlier in the night." Biondi testified
    it was "the Hispanic accent from the parking lot." However, "[t]he only thing
    that [Biondi] could make out . . . was, why would you want to hurt me, why
    could you want to kill me. And then I heard [Warnock] say, take down your
    panties, and then the phone dropped[.]"
    During the two 2012 interviews, defendant did not mention anything about
    Warnock's "pocket dial" phone call to Biondi at 3:02 a.m. In his testimony as
    a witness for the State at Warnock's trial, defendant did not say he was with
    Warnock at the time of the 3:02 a.m. phone call to Biondi.
    Defendant's Testimony as a Defense Witness at Warnock's Trial
    On September 24, 2014, Warnock called defendant as a witness for the
    defense.   On direct examination, Warnock's counsel asked defendant the
    following questions:
    Q. Now, was there a point in time when you were at the
    scene that [Warnock] dialed a phone number on his cell
    phone?
    A. Yes, sir.
    Q. Did he tell you who he was dialing?
    A. Yes, sir.
    A-3449-16T3
    24
    Q. Who was it?
    A. I don't remember the name, sir.
    Q. If I said Jodi Biondi, would that refresh your
    recollection?
    A. That sounds accurate, yes sir.
    ....
    Q. Are you positive in West Orange he was dialing in
    front of you?
    A. Yes sir.
    ....
    Q. So he's dialing definitely Jodi Biondi in West
    Orange at 3:02, right?
    A. Yes, sir.
    Q. Any doubt about in your mind?
    A. No, sir.
    Q. Why didn't you say that when you first testified
    before these 14 people? 5
    A. I was told not to, sir.
    Q. Who told you not to say that?
    A. The prosecutor, sir.
    5
    The "14 people" was a reference to the jury.
    A-3449-16T3
    25
    On cross-examination, the prosecutor confronted defendant with the
    transcriptions of the two interviews conducted by the two ECPO investigators.
    Defendant confirmed that the investigators admonished him "to always tell the
    truth." However, defendant claimed that at the pretrial interview the prosecutor
    conducted before he testified as a witness for the State, he told the prosecutor:
    "I recall a phone call, should I mention it. You [addressing the prosecutor
    directly] stated, no, that is hearsay. If you're asked about it, then say it, but if
    not, don't mention it."
    Defendant also conceded he did not mention this phone call in either one
    of the statements he gave to the ECPO investigators in October and December
    2012.    The prosecutor again asked defendant to recount the details of his
    encounter with I.R. and his interactions with Warnock when the latter allegedly
    called Biondi. Defendant testified he specifically remembered seeing Warnock
    "[pull] out his [cell] phone . . . and [dial] a number. I asked him what are you
    doing, he says I'm dialing Jodi Biondi - - obviously he didn't say it that way. I
    think he said Jodi. And I was like, for what? He's like, just to cover our ass."
    Defendant's testimony in this respect specifically and directly corroborated
    Warnock's testimony on direct examination.
    A-3449-16T3
    26
    Telephone records of defendant's cellular phone reflect that at 2:53 a.m.,
    on October 6, 2012, defendant's cellphone was in communication with a cell
    tower in the Township of Montville in Morris County. At 3:11 a.m. on October
    6, 2012, cellphone records reflect that defendant's cellphone was in
    communication with a cell tower in Jefferson Township, also in Morris County;
    and at 3:21 a.m., the communication shifted to Sparta Township in Sussex
    County. Phone records of Warnock's cellular phone indicate that at 3:02 a.m.,
    Warnock's cellphone was in communication with cell towers in East Orange City
    and the Township of Nutley; both of these municipalities are in Essex County.
    At 3:11 a.m. when defendant called Warnock, the cell tower data places
    Warnock in the Lyndhurst/Belleville area and places defendant in Jefferson
    Township. The data support the State's argument that defendant and Warnock
    could not have been together at 3:02 a.m. on October 6, 2012. The State
    attempted to use the report documenting the cell tower analysis during
    defendant's cross-examination at Warnock's trial. The judge denied the State's
    application.
    II
    The State argues the trial judge erred in granting defendant's second
    motion to suppress the two statements defendant gave the ECPO investigators.
    A-3449-16T3
    27
    In reviewing the grant or denial of a motion to suppress, this court must defer to
    the factual findings of the trial court "so long as those findings are supported by
    sufficient evidence in the record." State v. Hubbard, 
    222 N.J. 249
    , 262 (2015)
    (citing State v. Gamble, 
    218 N.J. 412
    , 424 (2014); see also State v. Elders, 
    192 N.J. 224
    , 243 (2007)). This standard of review is predicated on the unique
    opportunity the motion judge has "to hear and see the witnesses and to have the
    "feel" of the case, which a reviewing court cannot enjoy." State v. Johnson, 
    42 N.J. 146
    , 161 (1964).      Our authority to disregard a motion judge's factual
    findings is limited to those rare cases in which the record shows the judge's
    findings of fact "are clearly mistaken." 
    Id. at 162
    . However, we review the
    motion judge's legal determinations de novo. State v. Hagans, 
    233 N.J. 30
    , 38
    (2018).
    Defendant filed two motions to suppress the two statements he gave to the
    ECPO investigators. The first motion to suppress was argued on June 22, 2016,
    and denied by the judge on September 22, 2016. After reviewing the evidence
    and considering the argument of counsel, the motion judge found the ECPO did
    not consider defendant complicit in any way in the criminal allegations I.R.
    made against Warnock. The judge found I.R. alleged Warnock was the only
    person who lured her into his car with the intent to sexually assault her, and
    A-3449-16T3
    28
    threatened her with bodily harm after she refused to submit to his sexual
    advances. The judge also did not find any evidence that implicated defendant
    in any wrongdoing at the time the investigators interviewed him in October and
    December 2012.
    The judge also addressed defendant's unanticipated alibi testimony at
    Warnock's trial:
    At the time there would have also been no reason to
    believe that this [d]efendant, Mr. Nogueira, would in
    any way have been called as an alibi witness or other
    type of exculpatory witness on behalf of [Warnock]
    because the evidence that they had at that time was that
    the phone records of Mr. Warnock suggested that he
    was in one location and the phone records of Mr.
    Nogueira suggested he was in a different location. And
    further, the first interview of Mr. Nogueira in no way
    discussed the phone conversation surrounding the
    victim or the allegations contained therein by the
    witness that there was a butt dial or actual phone
    conversation wherein [Warnock] was attempting to
    cover his own butt and Mr. Nogueira was present and
    witnessed that information.
    The judge thereafter granted defendant's motion to compel the State to
    produce copies of all correspondence, emails, notes and conversations or reports
    related to any assistant prosecutor, including the prosecutor who tried the case
    against Warnock.    In short, the judge ordered the State to deliver to defense
    counsel "anything that had to do with Mr. Nogueira's interview," notes that were
    A-3449-16T3
    29
    made after his testimony at the Warnock trial, and notes or emails exchanged
    "with regards to how [the State] intended to proceed" based on defendant's
    testimony at Warnock's trial.
    On January 27, 2017, defendant filed a motion to dismiss the indictment
    and suppress the statements he made to the ECPO investigators. The judge heard
    argument on the motion on March 3, 2017. This time, the judge focused on the
    tone of the investigators' questions and interactions with defendant during the
    interviews and found that
    when Mr. Nogueira was brought into the station, at that
    time, he may not have been the main target of the
    investigation, but it was clear that they had questions
    . . . when they brought him in, whether he was going to
    be part of the target of the investigation.
    Anyone could have seen that it was a possibility that
    depending on what Mr. Nogueira said, at that particular
    time and moment, that he, in fact, could have been a co-
    conspirator.
    Based on this reinterpretation of defendant's statements, the motion judge
    concluded that "it is clear to the [c]ourt, or at least the impression of this [c]ourt
    that Garrity warnings should have attached because, as indicated by the
    prosecutor, they had no idea what Mr. Nogueira was going to say during the
    course of that interview, whether he was going to inculpate himself, or anything
    of that nature."
    A-3449-16T3
    30
    We start our analysis with an examination of the relevant legal principles.
    In Garrity v. New Jersey, the United States Supreme Court held that "the
    protection of the individual under the Fourteenth Amendment against coerced
    statements prohibits use in subsequent criminal proceedings of statements
    obtained under threat of removal from office, and . . . it extends to all, whether
    they are policemen or other members of our body politic." Garrity v. New
    Jersey, 
    385 U.S. 493
    , 500 (1967).
    In State v. Lacaillade, 
    266 N.J. Super. 522
     (App. Div. 1993), this court
    reviewed the application of the Supreme Court's holding in Garrity in the context
    of an investigation of a police officer who was accused of misrepresenting the
    circumstances that led to the discharge of his service weapon. 
    Id. at 525-26
    .
    Writing for the panel, Judge Brody explained that pursuant to Garrity:
    [l]aw enforcement officers may not attach a penalty to
    the exercise of that right by a public employee through
    the threat of dismissal. Thus where a police officer's
    answers to police questioning are coerced by the threat
    of removal from office, the answers are not admissible
    unless the officer waives his or her constitutional right
    to remain silent.
    [Id. at 528.]
    After reviewing the record of the internal affairs investigation, Judge
    Brody explained that the invocation of the protections available under Garrity
    A-3449-16T3
    31
    depend upon whether the record shows evidence of what "the consequence to
    [the] defendant [was] of disobeying the order to answer by exercising his
    constitutional right to remain silent." 
    Id. at 529
    .   In Lacaillade, we held that
    "[e]ven if there were evidence that [the police officer] subjectively believed that
    he would be removed if he refused to answer, there is no evidence that such a
    belief would have been reasonable." 
    Ibid.
    Stated differently, Garrity prevents internal affairs investigators from
    coercing police officers into giving incriminating statements by threatening
    them with the termination of employment. However, Garrity does not immunize
    a police officer from the consequences of committing a subsequent crime. State
    v. Falco, 
    60 N.J. 570
    , 585 (1972).     In Falco, the defendant, a Newark Police
    Detective, was convicted on two counts of official misconduct in office. 
    Id. at 573
    . The defendant failed to file a report involving a barroom brawl at a local
    tavern and later misrepresented he was in the tavern at the time of the brawl. 
    Id. at 574
    . On direct appeal, this court reversed the defendant's conviction based
    on Garrity, holding that if the defendant filed the false report "because he feared
    he would lose his job if he refused to do so, then the report was not admissible
    in evidence. . . ." 
    Id. at 574-75
    .
    A-3449-16T3
    32
    Our Supreme Court reversed this court's decision. Writing for the Court
    in Falco, Chief Justice Weintraub explained:
    Garrity involved the interrogation of a policeman with
    respect to prior misconduct. The case did not involve a
    prosecution for the failure to perform an assigned duty.
    It would be remarkable if a public official who accepted
    a bribe, let us say, in connection with the issuance of a
    license or the making of a tax assessment could omit to
    record the issuance of the license or the assessment on
    the plea that, to do so, would link him with that crime.
    A public official cannot urge his misfeasance or
    malfeasance in office as a defense to a charge of
    nonfeasance in office. Surely the Fifth Amendment
    does not spare an officeholder that dilemma.
    Nor is there any basis in Garrity for the defendant's
    other proposition, that the Fifth Amendment afforded
    him the privilege affirmatively to commit a criminal
    act. As we have said, Garrity forbad the use of the
    "coerced" statement to prove a prior criminal offense.
    Here, however, the "coerced" report is itself the
    criminal event. It is this false report which was the
    basis of the second charge upon which defendant was
    convicted, and defendant contends in effect that Garrity
    entitled him to commit that crime in office in order to
    hold on to his office. The Fifth Amendment privilege
    is to be silent; it is not a privilege to commit crime. It
    has consistently been held that the Fifth Amendment
    privilege does not entitle a witness to commit perjury.
    [Id. at 584-85; see also State v. Williams, 
    59 N.J. 493
    ,
    500 (1971).]
    Here, defendant had an affirmative obligation as a law enforcement officer
    to cooperate with the investigation of allegations of criminal conduct by
    A-3449-16T3
    33
    Warnock. Defendant had a duty to disclose to the investigators everything he
    knew of Warnock's interactions with I.R. candidly, forthrightly, and completely.
    If he intentionally misrepresented his location at 3:02 a.m. on October 6, 2012,
    to provide Warnock with a false alibi, he must face the legal consequences of
    that decision. Garrity is not a license for law enforcement officers to commit
    future crimes. Here, the motion judge misapplied the Court's holding in Garrity
    to dismiss the indictment against defendant.
    Reversed and remanded. We do not retain jurisdiction.
    A-3449-16T3
    34