State of New Jersey v. Tawian Bacome ( 2015 )


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  •                   NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-3734-12T1
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,                   APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    April 16, 2015
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    v.
    TAWIAN BACOME,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    _________________________________________________
    Submitted September 23, 2014 – Remanded October 17, 2014
    Argued March 24, 2015 - Decided April 16, 2015
    Before Judges Fisher, Nugent and Accurso.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New
    Jersey, Law Division, Middlesex County,
    Indictment No. 11-08-1221.
    Jacqueline    E.  Turner,   Assistant   Deputy
    Public   Defender,   argued   the  cause   for
    appellant    (Joseph   E.   Krakora,    Public
    Defender, attorney; Ms. Turner, on the
    brief).
    Frank Muroski, Deputy Attorney General,
    argued the cause for respondent (John J.
    Hoffman, Acting Attorney General, attorney;
    Mr. Muroski, of counsel and on the brief).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    FISHER, P.J.A.D.
    After   the    denial    of    his       suppression   motion,    defendant
    pleaded guilty to a drug possession offense and was sentenced to
    a three-year prison term.          In this appeal, defendant argues only
    that the trial judge erred in denying his motion to suppress
    evidence seized during a warrantless search of the motor vehicle
    he was operating.        We conclude – on the pivotal question – that
    police lacked a reasonable and articulable basis for ordering
    defendant's passenger out of the vehicle and reverse the order
    denying suppression.1
    I
    At the suppression hearing, the State's only witness was
    Woodbridge Detective Brian Jaremczak.                 He testified that, at
    approximately 4:30 p.m., on April 29, 2011, he and his partner,
    Detective Patrick Harris, observed defendant operating a Ford
    Bronco;   S.R.,    the    owner    of   the     vehicle,    was   in   the   front
    passenger seat.     The detective testified he was "very aware" of
    S.R. and "had just recently heard about" defendant; he believed
    1
    We first heard this appeal earlier in the term.   By way of an
    unpublished opinion (hereafter Bacome I) filed on October 17,
    2014, we remanded for additional findings, which the trial judge
    promptly provided. This circumstance provides a valid basis for
    our citing and quoting Bacome I even though it was unpublished.
    See State v. W. World, Inc., __ N.J. Super. __, __ n.1 (App.
    Div. 2015) (slip op. at 3 n.1); Badiali v. N.J. Mfrs. Ins. Grp.,
    
    429 N.J. Super. 121
    , 126 n.4 (App. Div. 2012), aff’d, __ N.J. __
    (2015).
    2                              A-3734-12T1
    they   were     "narcotic       users     and       narcotic    dealers"   because    the
    police       department        had     received      "information     from     concerned
    citizens"      about      "a     lot     of    traffic    coming     and     going   from
    [defendant's] apartment."
    The    detectives,        driving        an    unmarked     vehicle,     followed
    defendant's Ford Bronco out of Woodbridge and onto Routes 1 and
    9, heading toward Newark; they eventually lost the Bronco on
    Frelinghuysen Avenue.                Suspecting defendant and S.R. "were going
    to purchase narcotics" and "would be back very shortly," the
    detectives drove to Woodbridge and awaited the Bronco's return.
    At approximately 5:30 p.m., while waiting on the border of
    Woodbridge and Rahway, Detective Jaremczak observed the Bronco
    traveling south on Routes 1 and 9.                       When asked what happened
    next, the detective testified that "we" observed S.R. "wasn't
    wearing his seatbelt."                They activated their vehicle's emergency
    lights and directed the Bronco to stop.
    Detective Jaremczak approached the passenger side, and his
    partner approached the driver's side.                          When asked whether he
    "notice[d] any movement by either" occupant, Detective Jaremczak
    responded that "[his] partner did," and that his partner "saw
    [defendant] reaching forward . . . like, reaching under his
    seat."       Defense counsel immediately objected because the witness
    lacked personal knowledge.                    The judge made no ruling but only
    3                               A-3734-12T1
    asked the witness whether he observed defendant's movement, and
    Detective     Jaremczak       responded       "no."         In        answer    to     the
    prosecutor's       next    question,    the     detective        explained      he     was
    "focused on" S.R., confirming he did not see defendant's alleged
    furtive movement.           The detective testified his partner asked
    defendant to exit the vehicle, and he directed S.R. out of the
    vehicle.     Both occupants complied.
    The      detectives     separately       questioned       the      occupants,      who
    gave different responses to where they were coming from, which,
    according     to     the     witness,     "further       heighten[ed]           [their]
    suspicion as to what occurred."              During his questioning of S.R.,
    Detective Jaremczak noticed "a rolled up piece of paper[,] which
    was in the shape of a straw[,] [a]nd a piece of Chore Boy
    Brillo" "near the front of the middle console."                           He testified
    that,   in   his    experience,      "[t]he     straw   can      be    used    to    snort
    narcotics,"    and    the    other    item    "is   used,     pretty      much,      as    a
    filter in a crack pipe."             As a result of these observations,
    Detective    Jaremczak      requested     and    obtained        S.R.'s    consent        to
    search the vehicle.         The detective read him the consent form; to
    him, S.R. did not "appear to be under the influence of any
    narcotics or drugs" and appeared to understand the consent form
    that he signed.
    4                                      A-3734-12T1
    In the search of the vehicle that followed, the officers
    seized the straw and scrubber observed in "plain view," as well
    as "blunt wrappers," "a used crack pipe inside of a Maverick
    cigarette     pack,"     "[a]   larger     piece     of     Chore        Boy    copper
    scrubber," and "[thirteen] vials of crack cocaine in a Newport
    cigarette pack."
    Although during direct examination the detective testified
    only that "we" observed S.R. was not wearing a seatbelt, when
    cross-examined he testified that he observed it, although he
    could not remember any details and did not issue a summons for
    that   alleged    violation.      When     pressed,       Detective        Jaremczak
    acknowledged     there   were   actually    two    reasons         for    the     motor
    vehicle stop: (1) S.R. was not wearing a seatbelt, and (2) he
    "believe[d]      that    they   just     went   to        Newark     to        purchase
    narcotics."      The detective also agreed the observations of the
    straw and scrubber were not made until after S.R. stepped out of
    the vehicle as commanded:
    Q. Did you see [those items] through                    the
    windshield or through the side [window]?
    A. Once he got out; the door was opened; and
    that's when I s[aw] it.
    Q. How did he get out?
    A. I asked him out.
    . . . .
    5                                       A-3734-12T1
    Q. So you ordered him out of the car because
    you were conducting what kind of investi-
    gation?
    A. I asked him out of the vehicle. And at
    that time it became a narcotic investiga-
    tion.
    Q. Isn't it true that it already was a
    narcotics investigation before [defendant]
    was ordered out of the car?
    A. Yeah.   I did believe that they went to
    Newark to purchase narcotics.
    During      direct     examination,        the         prosecutor        elicited
    testimony      from   the   detective    that    the        consent    form    for    the
    search   was    executed    at   5:55    p.m.         The    defense      demonstrated
    during   cross-examination,       through       use    of     a   video      taken   from
    another police vehicle, that the detective was likely in error
    about the timing of consent.
    As can be seen, Detective Jaremczak did not have personal
    knowledge of part of the circumstances that ostensibly justified
    the warrantless search.          He did not see defendant reach under
    the   seat;    Detective     Jaremczak       testified       only     that    Detective
    Harris said he observed this.           When asked where Detective Harris
    was the day of the hearing, Detective Jaremczak said Harris was
    home and not expected to appear at the hearing.
    No one else testified.
    6                                      A-3734-12T1
    II
    A week after the hearing, the trial judge rendered an oral
    decision, in which he found: the observation of S.R. not wearing
    a seatbelt gave the detectives a lawful reason for stopping the
    vehicle; defendant's reaching under his seat gave the detectives
    a reasonable suspicion of criminal activity and authorized their
    directions that defendant and S.R. exit the vehicle; once S.R.
    was out of the vehicle, drug paraphernalia was seen in plain
    view;   and    S.R.   thereafter   freely    and   voluntarily     gave     his
    consent   to   the    vehicle   search,   resulting    in   the   seizure    of
    thirteen vials of crack cocaine.          For these reasons, the judge
    denied the motion to suppress.
    Defendant later pleaded guilty to third-degree possession
    of a controlled dangerous substance, N.J.S.A. 2C:35-10(a)(1),
    and was sentenced to a three-year prison term.
    III
    In this appeal, defendant argues only that the judge erred
    in denying his suppression motion because the officers "did not
    have cause to order [S.R.] from the car."             Accordingly, we need
    not question the legitimacy of the vehicle stop,2 notwithstanding
    2
    See Delaware v. Prouse, 
    440 U.S. 648
    , 663, 
    99 S. Ct. 1391
    , 1401,
    
    59 L. Ed. 2d 660
    , 673 (1979); State v. Locurto, 
    157 N.J. 463
    ,
    (continued)
    7                               A-3734-12T1
    the   officers'       overarching        desire        to   conduct    a    narcotics
    investigation in the absence of reasonable suspicion to support
    that undertaking.3           In addition, there is no dispute about the
    observations of drug paraphernalia in plain sight once S.R. was
    ordered   out    of    the    vehicle.         And   the    voluntariness     of    the
    consent   given       for    the   search       that      followed    has   not    been
    questioned.       Consequently,          this    appeal      rises    and   falls    on
    whether S.R. was lawfully ordered out of the vehicle because,
    without   that    link       in    the    chain      of     events,   the    evidence
    thereafter seized would have to be excluded.4
    (continued)
    470 (1999); State v. Moss, 
    277 N.J. Super. 545
    , 547 (App. Div.
    1994).
    3
    See State v. Kennedy, 
    247 N.J. Super. 21
    , 28 (App. Div. 1991)
    (holding that "courts will not inquire into the motivation of a
    police officer whose stop of an automobile is based upon a
    traffic violation committed in his presence").
    4
    We reject the State's contention, based on State v. Robinson,
    
    200 N.J. 1
    , 18-19 (2009), that we should not consider this
    argument because defendant failed to pose this precise question
    in the trial court. Robinson involved a pretrial application as
    to which the defendant was saddled with the burden of proof.
    Here, the opposite is true; defendant moved for the suppression
    of evidence, and it was the State's burden to prove the
    admissibility of the fruit of its warrantless search. State v.
    Brown, 
    216 N.J. 508
    , 517 (2014).       We see no harm to the
    administration of justice, nor do we discern an inappropriate
    tilt of the field of the type that prompted the Court's ruling
    in Robinson.   
    See 200 N.J. at 19
    .   Indeed, in adhering to and
    quoting from an article written by a federal appellate judge,
    the Robinson Court expressed concern that permitting "late-
    blooming issues . . . would be an incentive for game-playing by
    (continued)
    8                                 A-3734-12T1
    A
    We   initially       observe     that         an    officer's     command    that     a
    driver exit a vehicle constitutes a seizure, State v. Smith, 
    134 N.J. 599
    ,   609     (1994),        but       a        seizure     understood     to    be
    constitutionally permissible, Pennsylvania v. Mimms, 
    434 U.S. 106
    , 111, 
    98 S. Ct. 330
    , 333, 
    54 L. Ed. 2d 331
    , 337 (1977);
    
    Smith, supra
    ,    134    N.J.      at    611,         and   based    on   the     policy
    determination that police officer safety should prevail over the
    minimal     intrusion       on   the    driver's            privacy     interest,     
    Mimms, supra
    , 434 U.S. at 
    110-11, 98 S. Ct. at 333
    , 54 L. Ed. 2d at
    336-37; 
    Smith, supra
    , 134 N.J. at 610-11.5
    In declaring this new federal constitutional principle, the
    Mimms Court was not clear whether it applied to all occupants of
    a vehicle.      And in cases that followed the Court did not appear
    (continued)
    counsel." 
    Ibid. We detect no
    game-playing here. In any event,
    because the State was not prejudiced by defendant's refinement
    of his argument about this warrantless search – the State having
    rested at the hearing before the significance of the evidence
    was argued – we will consider on its merits the slightly
    different argument defendant has posed in this appeal.
    5
    See also State v. Mai, 
    202 N.J. 12
    , 22-23 (2010) (finding no
    difference in whether an officer orders an occupant out of a
    vehicle or opens the vehicle door to accomplish the same
    object).
    9                                      A-3734-12T1
    to confine this rule's application to drivers.6                          This uncertainty
    about Mimms's reach was finally swept away in 1997, when the
    Court held, as a matter of federal constitutional law, that
    "danger   to       an    officer    from    a     traffic       stop    is   likely     to    be
    greater when there are passengers in addition to the driver in
    the    stopped      car"      and   concluded           –    despite     the    passenger's
    "stronger" "personal liberty interest" than the driver's in that
    instance – the intrusion remains "minimal"; consequently, the
    Court held that "an officer making a traffic stop may order
    passengers     to       get   out   of    the     car       pending    completion     of     the
    stop."    Maryland v. Wilson, 
    519 U.S. 408
    , 413-15, 
    117 S. Ct. 882
    ,   886,    137       L.   Ed.   2d    41,    47-48       (1997)    (emphasis      added).
    Insofar       as        defendant        relies      on        federal       constitutional
    principles, there is no merit to his argument that the command
    that S.R. exit the vehicle was constitutionally prohibited.
    6
    Mimms had referred to the right of police to order a driver out
    of a vehicle rightfully 
    detained. 434 U.S. at 111
    , 98 S. Ct. at
    
    333, 54 L. Ed. 2d at 337
    .     But questions as to Mimms's scope
    later arose from Michigan v. Long, 
    463 U.S. 1032
    , 1047-48, 
    103 S. Ct. 3469
    , 3480, 
    77 L. Ed. 2d 1201
    , 1218-19 (1983) (emphasis
    added), where the Court restated the rule as authorizing police
    to "order persons out of an automobile during a stop for a
    traffic violation."    And in a concurring opinion in Rakas v.
    Illinois, 
    439 U.S. 128
    , 155 n.4, 
    99 S. Ct. 421
    , 436 n.4, 58 L.
    Ed. 2d 387, 409 n.4 (1978) (emphasis added), Justice Powell
    mentioned that Mimms determined "that passengers in automobiles
    have no Fourth Amendment right not to be ordered from their
    vehicle, once a proper stop is made."
    10                                    A-3734-12T1
    B
    Not long before the Court decided Maryland v. Wilson, our
    Supreme     Court    considered         the   application     of     paragraph     7   of
    Article I of the New Jersey Constitution to police seizure of a
    driver      or    occupant     from     a     vehicle   stopped      for   a   traffic
    violation.        The Court concluded in Smith that "as applied to
    drivers,"        Mimms's     per   se       rule    passes   state    constitutional
    
    muster. 134 N.J. at 610-11
    (emphasis added).                  Unlike the per se
    rule that the Court ultimately adopted in Maryland v. Wilson,
    however, our Supreme Court "decline[d] to extend [Mimms's] per
    se rule to passengers," and determined that "an officer must be
    able   to    point    to   specific         and    articulable     facts   that   would
    warrant heightened caution to justify ordering the occupants to
    step out of a vehicle detained for a traffic violation."                          
    Smith, supra
    , 134 N.J. at 618.               The Court described the scope of this
    principle in the following way:
    To support an order to a passenger to alight
    from a vehicle stopped for a traffic
    violation, . . . the officer need not point
    to specific facts that the occupants are
    "armed and dangerous."   Rather, the officer
    need point only to some fact or facts in the
    totality of the circumstances that would
    create in a police officer a heightened
    awareness of danger that would warrant an
    objectively reasonable officer in securing
    the scene in a more effective manner by
    ordering the passenger to alight from the
    car.
    11                               A-3734-12T1
    [Ibid.]
    Although not relevant to this appeal, the Smith Court further
    noted    that    to    justify      a    pat-down       in   this      circumstance,           the
    prosecution       must    satisfy        the   more     stringent        requirements           of
    Terry v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
    , 27, 
    88 S. Ct. 1868
    , 1883, 
    20 L. Ed. 2d
    889, 909 (1968).             See 
    Smith, supra
    , 134 N.J. at 619.
    The Smith Court also observed that, in one respect, "the
    Terry standard and the standard for ordering a passenger out of
    a car are the same," rejecting "the proposition that such an
    intrusion       will   be    justified         solely    because        of    an     officer's
    'hunch.'"         
    Ibid. Instead, "the officer
           must     be      able    to
    articulate specific reasons why the person's gestures or other
    circumstances caused the officer to expect more danger from this
    traffic stop than from other routine traffic stops."                               
    Ibid. C In considering
    these principles and the matter at hand, the
    record    reveals        that     much    of    what     motivated          this     stop      and
    investigation was the detectives' assumption that defendant and
    S.R.    were     narcotics       users    or    sellers      or     both.          The    record
    contains       nothing      but     rumor      and     innuendo        to     support        that
    assertion.       Detective Jaremczak testified that this supposition
    of   illegal      narcotic        activity     was     based      on    the     department's
    receipt     of    citizen        complaints         about    the       number      of     people
    12                                        A-3734-12T1
    entering and leaving defendant's residence and by the fact that
    defendant        and    S.R.     were        observed    traveling      toward       Newark.
    Obviously, these two circumstances do not suggest anything other
    than    a    mere      "hunch"    that       defendant    and    S.R.   may    have      been
    engaged in buying, using or selling illegal narcotics.                           The fact
    that S.R. was alleged not to have been wearing his seatbelt when
    the detectives observed the vehicle's return to Woodbridge adds
    nothing to whether either defendant or S.R. "caused the officer
    to expect more danger from this traffic stop than from other
    routine traffic stops."                
    Smith, supra
    , 134 N.J. at 619.                  S.R.'s
    failure to wear a seatbelt generated a danger only to himself.
    This leaves the assertion that, after the vehicle came to a
    stop, defendant was seen by Detective Harris "reaching forward
    . . . reaching under his seat."                     This event was not observed by
    Detective Jaremczak, the only witness called by the State to
    testify at the suppression hearing.                      Defendant objected to this
    hearsay      testimony,        and   the      judge   never     adequately     responded.
    Although Detective Harris's absence and the lack of evidence
    based       on   personal        knowledge       on     this    critical      point        are
    troubling, it is understood that, as a general matter, the State
    may     offer       evidence      at     a     suppression      hearing       that      would
    constitute inadmissible hearsay if offered at trial.                            See e.g.,
    State v. Wright, 
    431 N.J. Super. 558
    , 565 n.3 (App. Div. 2013),
    13                                    A-3734-12T1
    certif. granted on other grounds, 
    217 N.J. 283
    (2014); N.J.R.E.
    101(a)(2)(E).7   The   weight   such   testimony   should   be    given,
    however, is a matter left to the trial judge as factfinder, with
    the prosecution running the risk that the factfinder may draw an
    7
    The Supreme Court of the United States has rejected the notion
    that due process is denied by such a rule, reasoning that "the
    interests at stake in a suppression hearing are of a lesser
    magnitude than those in the criminal trial itself."       United
    States v. Raddatz, 
    447 U.S. 667
    , 679, 
    100 S. Ct. 2406
    , 2414, 
    65 L. Ed. 2d 424
    , 435 (1980). This, however, is not always true;
    in fact, the matter at hand presents one of those many instances
    where the denial of a suppression motion leaves the accused
    defenseless, inexorably leading to a guilty plea or easy
    conviction. See United States v. Wade, 
    388 U.S. 218
    , 235, 87 S.
    Ct. 1926, 1937, 
    18 L. Ed. 2d 1149
    , 1162 (1967) (recognizing that
    "[t]he trial which might determine the accused's fate may well
    not be that in the courtroom but that at the pretrial
    confrontation"); United States v. Green, 
    670 F.2d 1148
    , 1154
    (D.C. Cir. 1981) (finding a suppression hearing to be "a
    critical stage of the prosecution which affects substantial
    rights of an accused person . . . [that] may often determine the
    eventual outcome of conviction or acquittal"); Olney v. United
    States, 
    433 F.2d 161
    , 163 (9th Cir. 1970) (observing that a
    suppression hearing may be a critical stage of a prosecution
    "particularly in narcotics cases, where the crucial issue may
    well be the admissibility of narcotics allegedly found in the
    possession of the defendant").   Indeed, we are not so quick to
    assume the Confrontation Clause may not be violated when the
    admission of damning evidence turns on inadmissible hearsay –
    frustrating or precluding the accused's right to cross-examine
    the absent declarant – because the prosecution decided to
    present certain critical facts through a witness who only
    received the critical information from someone the State chose
    not to call.     See, e.g., 
    Green, supra
    , 670 F.2d at 1154.
    Nevertheless, the understanding our courts have adopted – that
    hearsay may be admitted at a suppression hearing without
    apparent offense to the Confrontation Clause – has not been
    challenged here, so we consider the point no further.
    14                              A-3734-12T1
    inference adverse to the prosecution's interests when a key fact
    is supported only by hearsay.8
    Here,    notwithstanding   the    presentation    of   this    key    fact
    through hearsay testimony, the judge initially made no finding
    regarding whether there was "some fact or facts in the totality
    of the circumstances that would create in a police officer a
    heightened awareness of danger that would warrant an objectively
    reasonable officer in securing the scene in a more effective
    manner."     
    Smith, supra
    , 134 N.J. at 618.        We quote the entirety
    of the judge's initial decision on this pivotal question:
    While    effectuating  the   stop   the
    detective says he witness[ed] [defendant]
    reach under the driver's seat.[9]  He – they
    don't say – they don't call – movements
    nowadays. Because they know that's not good
    language.   But, basically, that's what he's
    saying.    Seen some – movements under the
    driver seat.
    In a totality of the circumstances
    analysis does the officer have a reasonable
    and articula[ble] suspicion to believe that
    criminal activity is afoot? All right.   So
    he removes the defendants [sic] from the
    vehicle to speak with them.
    [Emphasis added.]
    8
    There was no showing that Detective Harris was unavailable; to
    the contrary, Detective Jaremczak testified Detective Harris was
    home at the time of the hearing.     The judge drew no adverse
    inference.
    9
    Again, the testifying     detective       did   not   witness     this;   his
    partner allegedly did.
    15                             A-3734-12T1
    The judge did not thereafter address this question again in his
    initial    decision,     but    instead       turned   to    what    he   found   the
    officers saw in plain sight once the occupants were removed from
    the vehicle, and then to the events that followed the plain-view
    observations.
    D
    In     our    earlier      opinion    we    concluded     that    the   judge's
    findings    did    not   adequately       address      the    permissibility       of
    ordering S.R. from the vehicle.
    First, we previously stated that
    even if we liberally interpret the judge's
    comments to suggest that the "movement[]
    under the driver seat" was found to be "some
    fact" that would "create . . . a heightened
    awareness of danger," the judge did not
    explain how the driver's movement suggested
    the passenger posed a danger.
    [Bacome 
    I, supra
    , slip op. at 15-16.]
    In a footnote in our earlier opinion, we observed that
    in such an instance, the prosecution should
    be expected to present evidence of a
    reasonable and articulable suspicion that a
    weapon was under the driver's seat and the
    passenger was capable of reaching it while
    remaining seated in the vehicle.       Here,
    there was no testimony that the Bronco's
    console did not constitute an obstacle to
    the passenger reaching under the driver's
    seat, or that the officer on the passenger's
    side of the vehicle was not capable of
    keeping watch over the passenger or prevent
    16                                 A-3734-12T1
    him from reaching under the driver's seat,
    without   unnecessarily  intruding  on   the
    passenger's privacy by removing him from the
    vehicle.
    [Id. at 16 n.9.]
    These alleged circumstances may have been a reason for ordering
    defendant out of the vehicle, but the judge originally did not
    explain why defendant's movement suggested S.R. posed a danger.
    Second,   the   "fact"   that    triggered    the   order   that   the
    passenger exit the vehicle had to be considered in light of "the
    totality of the circumstances."          
    Smith, supra
    , 134 N.J. at 618.
    The mere fact that the vehicle's occupants were traveling to and
    from Newark, or the fact that defendant received many visitors
    at his residence, did not suggest a danger was posed when the
    vehicle was stopped for a seatbelt violation.            Certainly, not
    every driver entering or leaving Newark may be assumed to be a
    drug user or drug dealer.      Nor, even were this so, would it
    suggest the occupants posed a risk for the officers.              In our
    earlier opinion, we directed "[t]he judge to discuss further
    whether and – if so – how these circumstances supported the
    removal of [S.R.] from the vehicle."          Bacome 
    I, supra
    , slip op.
    at 16.
    Third, in his earlier decision, the judge considered only
    whether defendant's movement under the driver's seat provided a
    reasonable and articulable suspicion "that criminal activity is
    17                           A-3734-12T1
    afoot" (emphasis added).     That was not the right question.           The
    "fact or facts" to which the officer alludes must "create . . .
    a heightened awareness of danger."         
    Smith, supra
    , 134 N.J. at
    618 (emphasis added).      Accordingly, we previously held in this
    case:
    No matter how broadly we may interpret the
    judge's comments, we cannot locate in his
    opinion a finding that defendant's alleged
    movement would have suggested "a heightened
    awareness of danger."   We are not splitting
    hairs in focusing so closely on the judge's
    precise words; it is all we have to
    consider.    An officer's limited right to
    order a passenger out of a vehicle arises
    from the policy determinations made by the
    Courts in Mimms and Smith that officer
    safety – not the investigation of criminal
    activity – overrides the minor intrusion
    into the passenger's privacy right.
    [Bacome 
    I, supra
    , slip op. at 17.]
    And fourth, we previously concluded that the judge's posing
    of   this   incorrect   question   of   whether   the   officer   had    "a
    reasonable and articul[able] suspicion to believe that criminal
    activity is afoot," followed by his answer – "All right" – did
    not sufficiently convey the substance of his findings.            Even if
    that was the correct question, it was not clear whether "All
    right" was intended as the means of expressing a finding that
    the officers did have a reasonable and articulable suspicion of
    "criminal activity [being] afoot."
    18                             A-3734-12T1
    As a result, we concluded that "[a]lthough we are required
    to defer to a trial judge's factual findings on a motion to
    suppress,    State     v.     Elders,    
    192 N.J. 224
    ,   254   (2007),    the
    factfinding on the critical issue that this appeal poses does
    not command our deference.              The judge clearly posed the wrong
    question and then gave no clear answer."                  Bacome 
    I, supra
    , slip
    op. at 17.      We, thus, remanded for further findings.
    IV
    By   way    of    a    brief   written     decision,10     the   trial    judge
    responded to the questions posed in Bacome I.                   Based on the same
    evidence,    the      judge    drew     the    factual    conclusion    that    the
    movement of the driver – a fact before the court only by way of
    hearsay that would be inadmissible at trial                     – suggested the
    passenger posed a danger.             The judge described these conclusions
    by employing a series of double negatives and by delineating
    what it was that the record did not reveal:
    ∙  If the [d]efendant put a weapon under his
    seat, there is nothing to suggest that S.R.
    would have been unable to reach or gain
    access to it while remaining seated in the
    vehicle.
    10
    We   provided  the   parties   with  an  opportunity to  file
    supplemental briefs.    Defendant provided a brief, the Acting
    Attorney General declined the invitation.
    19                              A-3734-12T1
    ∙ there was no indication that the vehicle's
    center console constituted an obstacle to
    S.R. reaching under the [d]efendant's seat.
    ∙  there was also no testimony that the
    officer who was standing on the passenger
    side of the vehicle was not capable of
    keeping watch over S.R. so as to prevent him
    from reaching under the [d]efendant's seat.
    [Emphasis added.]
    In other words, based on that which was not explained by the
    factual   record,      the       judge   determined       that      in   light   of      "the
    danger inherent in motor vehicle stops" and the "totality of the
    circumstances,"       the     driver's       movement      under      his     seat     was    a
    "specific and articulable fact" that would create a "heightened
    awareness of danger."             The judge added that because the officers
    were   surveilling         defendant     and      S.R.   for     drug    activity,         and
    because they were "suspected of having made a drug run to Newark
    just prior to the traffic stop," it was not unreasonable "for
    the officers to believe" that defendant "did indeed place a
    weapon under his seat," and, for that additional reason, the
    order that both individuals exit the vehicle "was necessary to
    secure the scene in a more effective manner."                            Based on these
    suppositions,       the    judge      concluded     that      the    ordering    of      both
    defendant and S.R. from the vehicle was warranted.
    What   is    lost    in    this   blizzard        of    double    negatives         and
    speculative        findings      is   that    it   was     the      State's    burden        to
    20                                      A-3734-12T1
    justify this warrantless search.           
    Brown, supra
    , 216 N.J. at 517.
    "A search conducted without a warrant is presumptively invalid,
    and the burden falls on the State to demonstrate that the search
    is justified by one of the 'few specifically established and
    well-delineated exceptions' to the warrant requirement."                       State
    v. Frankel, 
    179 N.J. 586
    , 598 (2004).                Contrary to the trial
    judge's    determination,     the   absence     of     adequate      evidence     is
    detrimental to the State's position, not defendant's.
    The     record   unmistakably     compels    our     agreement       with    the
    judge's determination that there was an absence of proof on
    these critical questions.        No officer testified to a heightened
    safety    concern.    No    officer     testified      S.R.    was     capable    of
    reaching under defendant's seat if he remained seated in the
    passenger    seat.    No    officer     described      the    interior    of     the
    vehicle at all,      let alone with enough concrete details from
    which an inference could be drawn that S.R. posed a danger if he
    remained in the passenger seat while being watched by an armed
    police officer.       Absent findings that S.R. remaining in the
    vehicle    created   "a    heightened      awareness    of     danger,"     
    Smith, supra
    , 134 N.J. at 618, the State could not sustain its burden
    of proof on this motion.
    As we have already demonstrated, the mere fact that the
    vehicle   traveled   to    and   returned    from    the      Newark    area    adds
    21                                  A-3734-12T1
    nothing to the circumstances.   And the basis for the stop itself
    – S.R.'s unbuckled seatbelt – was not ground alone for ordering
    either individual out of the vehicle.11    If that was the only
    legitimate basis for the stop in this case – and it was – then
    11
    Although the principles governing appellate review generally
    require deference to a trial judge's fact findings, they do not
    require a surrender of our common sense or the adoption of a
    standard of credulity.    See United States v. City of Jackson,
    
    318 F.2d 1
    , 5 (5th Cir. 1963). We are not being unduly cynical
    in concluding what is plainly apparent: the unbuckled seatbelt
    was a ruse for the stop and the officers were interested only in
    pursuing their hunch – concededly accurate – that the vehicle's
    occupants were involved in illegal drug activity. Why else did
    the officers remain on the outskirts of Woodbridge awaiting the
    vehicle's return from the Newark area?    Are we to believe they
    remained there for no other purpose but to ensure S.R. was
    wearing his seatbelt on the return trip? Our dissenting
    colleague emphasizes that in Smith it was the driver – not the
    passenger – who "engaged in the culpable conduct that result[ed]
    in the vehicle 
    stop," 134 N.J. at 615
    , and because the opposite
    is true here – S.R.'s unbuckled seatbelt generated the stop –
    that S.R. cannot claim the same liberty interest possessed by
    the passenger in Smith. Even if we accept the premise that the
    unbuckled seatbelt was a legitimate ground for stopping the
    vehicle, our colleague gives too much weight to S.R.'s
    "culpability" in this chain of events. The record demonstrates
    the officers were unconcerned about the seatbelt and, more
    importantly, the unbuckled seatbelt posed them no danger. We do
    not depart from the letter or spirit of the applicable standard
    of appellate review, nor the principles enunciated in Smith, in
    concluding that the State failed to demonstrate a basis for
    overriding S.R.'s liberty interest in remaining in the vehicle.
    Just as a fluidity of events may transform an unlawful
    investigatory stop into a lawful search, State v. Williams, 
    192 N.J. 1
    , 10-11 (2007), the opposite can be true, and the lack of
    a link between the unbuckled seatbelt and the order given S.R.
    to exit the vehicle transformed what may have been a lawful stop
    into an unlawful deprivation of S.R.'s liberty interests.
    22                       A-3734-12T1
    S.R. should have been served with a summons and he and defendant
    permitted to go on their way.
    The order that S.R. exit the vehicle was impermissible and
    –    because    it     was   the   linchpin   for    all   that   followed       –
    defendant's motion to suppress what was thereafter discovered
    and seized should have been granted.12
    V
    The      order    denying     defendant's     suppression    motion      is
    reversed, the judgment of conviction vacated, and the matter
    remanded       for     further     proceedings.       We   do     not    retain
    jurisdiction.
    12
    We lastly note that the State has argued defendant lacked the
    requisite expectation of privacy to assert the infringement of
    S.R.'s liberty interest, citing State v. Hinton, 
    216 N.J. 211
    (2013). In Hinton, the Court recognized that the defendant had
    standing to argue but ultimately did not possess a reasonable
    expectation of privacy in an apartment he shared with his mother
    for six years because he had been "served with official notice
    that a court officer would soon enter the premises and repossess
    it on the landlord's behalf."    
    Id. at 216.
       In reaching that
    conclusion, the Court emphasized it was dealing with a "novel
    case" that arose "in unusual circumstances."    
    Id. at 236.
     We,
    therefore, reject the argument that Hinton has any bearing on
    the significantly different circumstances presented here.
    23                              A-3734-12T1
    ___________________________________________
    NUGENT, J.A.D., dissenting.
    I agree with the majority that "this appeal rises and falls
    on whether S.R. was lawfully ordered out of the vehicle because,
    without     that       link    in     the    chain       of    events,      the   evidence
    thereafter seized would have to be excluded."                           Ante at ___ (slip
    op. at 8).       Unlike the majority, however, I find that Detective
    Jaremczak       lawfully      ordered       the    passenger,       S.R.,    to   exit    the
    vehicle.    In my view, the detective violated neither the Federal
    nor the State Constitution by ordering S.R. to exit the Bronco.
    Detective Jaremczak's testimony at the suppression hearing
    established, indisputably, that when the detectives stopped the
    Bronco they believed defendant and S.R. had purchased drugs in
    Newark.     The detectives did not stop the Bronco, however, until
    they    observed       that    S.R.    was    not       wearing     a   seatbelt.        When
    Detective Jaremczak was questioned on cross-examination about
    his    motive    for     ordering     S.R.        out   of    the   car,    the   following
    exchange took place:
    A.   Once [the passenger] got out; the door
    was opened; and that's when I seen [the
    straw and scrubber].
    Q.        How did he get out?
    A.      I asked him out.
    Q.        Why did you ask him out?
    A.   Just so that I could bring him back to
    the car.    Because my partner was speaking
    with [defendant].   It's just easier if both
    us - - if they're both watched at the same
    time in case one of them wanted to act.
    Q.   So you ordered him out of the car
    because you were conducting what kind of
    investigation?
    A.   I asked him out of the vehicle. And at
    that    time    it    became   a    narcotic
    investigation.
    Q.   Isn't it true that it already was
    a narcotics investigation before [defendant]
    was ordered out of the car?
    A.   Yes.   I did believe that they went to
    Newark to purchase narcotics.
    Q.    Who opened the door?
    A.   He would have.
    The   critical   issue   we   must   decide   is   whether   Detective
    Jaremczak's order to S.R. to get out of the car was reasonable.
    See State v. Smith, 
    134 N.J. 599
    , 609 (1994).
    Ordering a person out of a car constitutes a
    seizure under the Fourth Amendment because
    the person's liberty has been restricted.
    See State v. Davis, 
    104 N.J. 490
    , 498 (1986)
    (citing Terry [v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
    , 16, 
    88 S. Ct. 1868
    , 1877, 
    20 L. Ed. 2d
    889, 903
    (1968)]).     Whether such a seizure is
    constitutional depends on the reasonableness
    of the order.
    [Ibid.]
    Under a Fourth Amendment analysis, it is reasonable for an
    officer to order a driver and passenger out of the car after the
    2                             A-3734-12T1
    officer has pulled the driver over for a traffic offense.                                       In
    Pennsylvania v. Mimms, 
    434 U.S. 106
    , 111, 
    98 S. Ct. 330
    , 333, 
    54 L. Ed. 2d 331
    , 337 (1977), the Supreme Court held that even in
    the    absence        of     furtive       movements       or    evidence        of    criminal
    activity, a police officer had the right to demand that a driver
    stopped       for   a      traffic   violation          exit    the     vehicle.        Because
    "[t]he       police     have   already          lawfully    decided       that    the       driver
    shall be briefly detained; the only question is whether he shall
    spend that period sitting in the driver's seat of his car or
    standing alongside it."                   
    Ibid. Balancing the driver's
    liberty
    interest against the State's interest in protecting its police
    officers, the Supreme Court struck the balance in favor of the
    latter, finding the intrusion on the driver's liberty interest
    in    such    circumstances          to    be     de    minimis.        
    Ibid. The Court extended
    the rationale in Mimms to a vehicle's passengers in
    Maryland v. Wilson, 
    519 U.S. 408
    , 414-15, 
    117 S. Ct. 882
    , 886,
    
    137 L. Ed. 2d 41
    , 48 (1997).
    Our     Supreme       Court     has      followed        Mimms    with     respect       to
    drivers, but not passengers; at least passengers not involved in
    the culpable conduct leading to the traffic stop:
    Although the per se rule under Mimms permits
    an officer to order the driver out of a
    vehicle incident to a lawful stop for a
    traffic violation, we decline to extend that
    per se rule to passengers.      Instead, we
    determine that an officer must be able to
    3                                     A-3734-12T1
    point to specific and articulable facts that
    would warrant heightened caution to justify
    ordering the occupants to step out of a
    vehicle detained for a traffic violation.
    [
    Smith, supra
    , 134 N.J. at 618.]
    The   Supreme    Court    explained   in   Smith     that   a   standard,
    lesser than the     Terry standard, is required for officers to
    order passengers to exit a vehicle.            Significantly, however,
    Smith   did   not   involve   culpable    conduct   on    the   part    of    a
    passenger.     In explaining the rationale for its decision in
    Smith, the Court stated:
    Ordering a passenger to leave the vehicle is
    distinguishable from ordering the driver to
    get out of the vehicle because the passenger
    has not engaged in the culpable conduct that
    resulted in the vehicle's stop.     Although
    the State's interest in safety remains the
    same whether the driver or the passenger is
    involved, requiring a passenger to alight
    from a car in the course of a routine
    traffic stop represents a greater intrusion
    on a passenger's liberty than the same
    requirement does on a driver's liberty.
    With respect to the passenger, the only
    justification for the intrusion on the
    passenger's    privacy   is   the   untimely
    association with the driver on the day the
    driver is observed committing a traffic
    violation.   Because the passenger has not
    engaged in culpable conduct, the passenger
    has a legitimate expectation that no further
    inconvenience will be occasioned by any
    intrusions beyond the delay caused by the
    lawful   stop.      The  intrusion  on   the
    passenger's privacy, therefore, is greater
    than it is on the driver's privacy.
    [Id. at 615 (emphasis added).]
    4                                A-3734-12T1
    Unlike the passenger in Smith, here S.R. engaged in the
    "culpable conduct that resulted in the vehicle's stop."                   
    Ibid. Consequently, S.R.'s liberty
       interest    in    this   case    is    no
    different from that of a driver who has committed a traffic
    violation: "The police have already lawfully decided that the
    driver shall be briefly detained; the only question is whether
    he shall spend that period sitting in the driver's seat of the
    car or standing alongside it."           
    Mimms, supra
    , 434 U.S. at 
    111, 98 S. Ct. at 333
    , 54 L. Ed. 2d at 337.           In my view, that rubric
    applies equally to culpable passengers, that is, passengers who
    have    committed   traffic     violations.      For    that   reason,      the
    detectives in the case before us did not violate the protections
    afforded New Jersey citizens under our State Constitution.
    The majority's decision is based in large part upon its
    observation     "that   much    of   what     motivated    this    stop     and
    investigation was the detectives' assumption that defendant and
    S.R. were narcotics users or sellers or both."                 Ante at ____
    (slip op. at 12).       Specifically, the majority states: "We are
    not being unduly cynical in concluding what is plainly apparent:
    the unbuckled seat belt was a ruse for the stop and the officers
    were   interested   only   in    pursuing     their    hunch   –   concededly
    accurate – that the vehicle's occupants were involved in illegal
    drug activity."     Ante at ____ (slip op. at 22, n.11).              Although
    5                                A-3734-12T1
    one can debate the meaning of the term "ruse" in this context,
    it is clear that S.R.'s failure to wear a seatbelt provided the
    police    with     probable    cause     to   stop     the    Bronco.       Neither
    defendant    nor     S.R.     disputed     that     S.R.    was   not   wearing      a
    seatbelt.        Once   the    lawful    traffic     stop    occurred      for   that
    purpose, S.R.'s liberty interest in remaining in the car was
    outweighed    by     the    State's      interest    in     the   safety    of    its
    officers.    The subjective intent of the officers at that time
    was not relevant.
    In Whren v. United States, 
    517 U.S. 806
    , 808, 
    116 S. Ct. 1769
    , 1771, 
    135 L. Ed. 2d 89
    , 95 (1996), the Supreme Court
    decided
    whether   the   temporary  detention  of   a
    motorist who the police have probable cause
    to believe has committed a civil traffic
    violation is inconsistent with the Fourth
    Amendment's prohibition against unreasonable
    seizures unless a reasonable officer would
    have been motivated to stop the car by a
    desire to enforce the traffic laws.
    After reviewing relevant precedent, the Court stated:
    We think these cases foreclose any argument
    that the constitutional reasonableness of
    traffic   stops    depends    on   the   actual
    motivations   of   the   individual    officers
    involved.      We   of   course    agree   with
    petitioners that the Constitution prohibits
    selective enforcement of the law based on
    considerations such as race.           But the
    constitutional    basis    for   objecting   to
    intentionally discriminatory application of
    laws is the Equal Protection Clause, not the
    6                                 A-3734-12T1
    Fourth Amendment.      Subjective intentions
    play no role in ordinary, probable-cause
    Fourth Amendment analysis.
    [Id. at 
    813, 116 S. Ct. at 1774
    , 
    135 L. Ed. 2d
    at 98.]
    Our Supreme Court has similarly rejected a subjective test
    when determining whether police officers have acted reasonably
    for Fourth Amendment purposes.                 See e.g., State v. Brown, 
    216 N.J. 508
    ,    531    (2014)    (noting   that,     with   respect       to    whether
    property had been abandoned, "[t]he test is whether, given the
    totality of the circumstances, an objectively reasonable police
    officer would believe the property is abandoned" and that "[t]he
    subjective       belief     of     the     officer     is    not      a        relevant
    consideration, and thus the court should not delve into the
    murky area of whether an officer acted in good faith or bad
    faith"); State v. Kennedy, 
    247 N.J. Super. 21
    , 27 (App. Div.
    1991)    ("We     begin    with     the    well-recognized      principle          that
    generally        the      proper      inquiry        for     determining             the
    constitutionality of a search and seizure is whether the conduct
    of the law enforcement officer who undertook the search was
    objectively reasonable, without regard to his or her underlying
    motives or intent.") (citations omitted).
    Moreover, our Supreme Court has stated:
    [O]ur Article I, Paragraph 7 jurisprudence
    primarily has eschewed any consideration of
    the subjective motivations of a police
    7                                   A-3734-12T1
    officer in determining the constitutionality
    of a search and seizure . . . . [W]e do not
    believe that the elusive attempt to plumb
    the subjective motivations of an officer
    will meaningfully advance either the privacy
    interests of an individual or the ultimate
    determination of whether a particular search
    or seizure was unreasonable under state law.
    [State v. Edmonds, 
    211 N.J. 117
    , 132-33
    (2012) (citations and internal quotation
    marks omitted).]
    In   the     case   before   us,     Detective        Jaremczak's            cross-
    examination does not lead to an entirely unequivocal answer as
    to whether, when he ordered S.R. out of the car, his motivation
    was to continue to pursue the seatbelt violation or to pursue
    the drug investigation or both.            What is unequivocal is that he
    acted for his safety.        He testified, explicitly, that he asked
    S.R. out "[j]ust so that I could bring him back to the car
    because my partner was speaking with [defendant].                            It's just
    easier if . . . they're both watched at the same time in case
    one of them wanted to act."
    Under      the   circumstances       of    this      case        –    where       the
    passenger's liberty expectation to remain in the car was de
    minimis in view of his seatbelt violation – the State's interest
    in the safety of its officers prevailed.                In the face of federal
    and   state      precedent   eschewing          judicial     analysis             of    law
    enforcement      officers'   subjective         intentions        in       such    Fourth
    8                                          A-3734-12T1
    Amendment cases, I find no basis for engaging in such analysis
    here.   For that reason, I respectfully dissent.
    9                      A-3734-12T1