STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. ALEXIS NUNEZ (16-08-1057, 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  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-5598-16T4
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    ALEXIS NUNEZ,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    __________________________
    Argued October 24, 2018 – Decided November 9, 2018
    Before Judges Nugent and Reisner
    On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Hudson County, Indictment No. 16-08-1057.
    Tamar Lerer, Assistant Deputy Public Defender, argued
    the cause for appellant (Joseph E. Krakora, Public
    Defender, attorney; Tamar Lerer, of counsel and on the
    briefs).
    Evgeniya Sitnikova, Deputy Attorney General, argued
    the cause for respondent (Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney
    General, attorney; Evgeniya Sitnikova, of counsel and
    on the briefs).
    PER CURIAM
    Defendant Alexis Nunez appeals from his conviction for possession of a
    firearm by a convicted felon. His appeal focuses on a May 15, 2017 order
    denying his suppression motion. We affirm.
    I
    By way of background, defendant filed a motion to suppress evidence
    found during a search of his garage, which the police conducted pursuant to a
    search warrant. Defendant challenged the search warrant on two grounds. First,
    defendant claimed that Officer Bove gave inaccurate information about the
    garage, in his affidavit in support of the warrant application. Second, invoking
    the "fruit of the poisoned tree" doctrine, defendant asserted that the search
    warrant application was the product of the unlawful stop of a co-defendant's
    vehicle and an unlawful stop of defendant. See Wong Sun v. United States, 
    371 U.S. 471
    , 485 (1963).
    Before the trial judge heard any testimony, he asked for a copy of the
    warrant affidavit, because neither party had provided it, although it was the
    subject of the hearing. Without objection from the defense, the State provided
    the judge with a copy of Officer Bove's affidavit. 1 Officer Bove then testified
    at the hearing. During his testimony, Bove confirmed that he prepared the
    1
    Defense counsel also attached a copy of the affidavit to her post-hearing brief.
    A-5598-16T4
    2
    warrant affidavit and swore to its truth before the warrant judge. He confirmed
    that "there is nothing that needs to be added to the affidavit." In other words,
    while testifying at the suppression hearing, he adopted the accuracy of his
    affidavit. Defense counsel then had an opportunity to cross-examine Bove on
    the contents of the affidavit and on the rest of his hearing testimony.
    To summarize the evidence, in April 2016, two different units of the
    Jersey City Police Department received multiple citizen complaints reporting
    that a man named "Alexis" was selling large amounts of marijuana from a
    specific address on Paterson Street (Paterson Street house).2 The police also
    received a complaint that Alexis was selling heroin from the second floor of the
    house. The complainants described Alexis as a bald, light-skinned Hispanic
    male. The information was relayed to Officer Bove, a member of the street
    crimes unit, who had extensive training in narcotics-related investigations.
    Bove researched various databases, learned that Alexis Nunez lived at the
    Paterson Street house, and obtained a photo of Nunez.
    On April 18, 2016, Bove conducted undercover surveillance of the
    Paterson Street house. That evening, he saw defendant Nunez emerge from the
    2
    We do not provide the exact address in order to protect the privacy of the
    occupants.
    A-5598-16T4
    3
    house and stand on the front steps holding an orange and white shopping bag.
    A short time later, Bove saw a white Buick Rendezvous automobile drive slowly
    westbound down Paterson Street. The Buick slowed down in front of the
    Paterson Street house, and Bove saw the driver (later identified as co-defendant
    Guerrero) motion to defendant, pointing west toward Passaic Street. The Buick
    drove past the house, continued down Paterson Street, and turned right on
    Passaic Street. Within thirty seconds, Bove saw Guerrero run around the corner
    from Passaic Street down Paterson Street, and saw him meet defendant a few
    doors down from defendant's house.           The two men conducted a brief
    conversation, after which defendant passed the shopping bag to Guerrero. Right
    after the exchange, Guerrero walked back down Paterson Street and disappeared
    around the corner on Passaic Street.
    Bove called the perimeter unit officers, who were in the area, to alert them.
    Those two officers observed Guerrero get back into the Buick as a passenger.
    They stopped the Buick, based on Bove's observations.           During the stop,
    Guerrero gave the officers the shopping bag, which turned out to contain about
    A-5598-16T4
    4
    a half-pound of marijuana.      They relayed that information to Bove, who
    continued his surveillance of defendant. 3
    Bove saw defendant go back into his house and, through a window, he
    saw defendant ascend to the second floor. About an hour later, Bove saw
    defendant come downstairs and leave the house carrying two backpacks. He
    observed defendant walk down a driveway, carrying the backpacks, and enter
    one of several garages behind the house. Bove testified that he saw defendant
    take a bicycle out of the garage, then take several small packets out of the
    backpacks and put them in a storage compartment under the seat of the bicycle.
    Defendant left the backpacks in the garage, and began walking back up the
    driveway toward the street, wheeling the bicycle.         Bove alerted the two
    perimeter unit officers, who by that time had returned to the area after arresting
    Guerrero and taking him to the police station.
    Bove testified that he knew the police needed to stop defendant before he
    left the area. As all three officers stood on the street, defendant approached
    them with his bicycle. They showed their badges and "informed him of their
    investigation." While they were speaking with defendant, Bove and the other
    3
    Defendant's prehearing brief did not contest the State's assertion that when the
    police stopped the car, Guerrero voluntarily handed over the bag of marijuana.
    A-5598-16T4
    5
    officers began smelling the odor of raw marijuana coming from defendant's
    person and his bicycle. At that point, they arrested him, and retrieved three bags
    of marijuana from the compartment under the bicycle seat.
    Based on that information, Bove applied for and obtained a warrant to
    search the garage and defendant's house. At the hearing, Bove conceded that
    his affidavit stated that there were three garages behind the house, when in fact
    there were five garages. However, he explained that from his vantage point on
    the street, he could only see three garages. He also confirmed that the police
    only searched the specific, distinctly marked garage described in the warrant.
    Inside the garage, the police found assorted contraband, including several
    packages of marijuana and two guns. Defendant was charged with multiple
    weapons and drug offenses, including distributing marijuana to Guerrero and
    conspiring with Guerrero to distribute marijuana. Guerrero was also charged
    with drug offenses, including conspiring with defendant to distribute marijuana.
    Defendant pled guilty to possessing one of the guns while a convicted felon, and
    the State dismissed the other drug and weapons charges.
    II
    In reviewing the trial court's decision of a suppression motion , we defer
    to the court's factual findings so long as they are supported by substantial
    A-5598-16T4
    6
    credible evidence. State v. Gamble, 
    218 N.J. 412
    , 424-25 (2014). We will
    disturb the trial court's findings "only if they are so clearly mistaken 'that the
    interests of justice demand intervention and correction.'" State v. Elders, 
    192 N.J. 224
    , 244 (2007) (quoting State v. Johnson, 
    42 N.J. 146
    , 162 (1964)).
    However, we do not defer to the trial court's legal interpretations. Gamble, 218
    N.J. at 425. We review a judge's evidentiary rulings for abuse of discretion.
    State v. Nantambu, 
    221 N.J. 390
    , 402 (2015).
    The trial court held that defendant did not have standing to challenge the
    stop of Guerrero's car. We cannot agree with that legal conclusion. Based on
    principles discussed in State v. Randolph, 
    228 N.J. 566
     (2017), and State v.
    Mollica, 
    114 N.J. 329
     (1989), we conclude that defendant had standing to
    challenge the stop of the co-defendant's automobile. Both cases recognize that
    a defendant may have standing based on a participatory interest in contraband
    seized in the search of a third party. Randolph, 228 N.J. at 582; Mollica, 
    114 N.J. at 340
    .
    In Randolph, the Court summarized the relevant standard and the three
    important purposes it serves:
    Although the proprietary, possessory, or
    participatory interest standard “incorporates the notion
    of a reasonable expectation of privacy, [it] also
    advances other important state interests.”        Those
    A-5598-16T4
    7
    interests are evident in the three principles undergirding
    New Jersey's standing rule.
    The first principle is that “a person should not be
    compelled to incriminate himself by having to admit
    ownership of an item that he is criminally charged with
    possessing in order to challenge the lawfulness of a
    search or seizure.” The second is that the State should
    not take seemingly conflicting positions at a
    suppression motion and trial. Thus, our standing rule
    restricts the State from arguing, on one hand, that the
    defendant did not possess a privacy interest in the place
    searched or property seized for standing purposes
    while, on the other, arguing that the defendant is
    inextricably tied to the place searched and possessed
    the item seized to prove his guilt. The last principle is
    that “by allowing a defendant broader standing to
    challenge evidence derived from unreasonable searches
    and seizures under our State Constitution, we increase
    the privacy rights of all New Jersey's citizens and
    encourage law enforcement officials to honor
    fundamental constitutional principles.”          Thus, a
    defendant challenging a search under New Jersey's
    standing rule may be vindicating the rights of others as
    well.
    [Randolph, 228 N.J. at 582-83 (alteration in original)
    (citations omitted).]
    Our State's rule of automatic standing "confers standing on a person who
    'had some culpable role, whether as a principal, conspirator, or accomplice, in a
    criminal activity that itself generated the evidence.'" State v. Bruns, 
    172 N.J. 40
    , 51 (2002) (quoting Mollica, 
    114 N.J. at 339-40
    ); see also State v.
    Biancamano, 
    284 N.J. Super. 654
    , 659 (App. Div. 1995) (concluding, based on
    A-5598-16T4
    8
    State v. Alston, 
    88 N.J. 211
    , 228 (1981), that an accused student drug dealer had
    standing to challenge the principal's allegedly illegal search of a drug-filled pen
    possessed by a student to whom defendant allegedly distributed drugs). Thus,
    in Mollica, the defendant's participatory interest in a gambling conspiracy gave
    him standing to challenge the warrantless search of a co-defendant's hotel phone
    records. Mollica, 
    114 N.J. at 340
    .
    The automatic standing rule may not apply if the search is too attenuated
    from a defendant's alleged illegal activity. Bruns, 
    172 N.J. at 56
    . In Bruns, for
    example, the stop of a third party's automobile occurred a week after the crime
    with which defendant was eventually charged, and it was completely unrelated
    to any investigation of that crime. 
    Id. at 57
    . That is not the case here, where
    the stop of Guerrero's car followed almost immediately after defendant's alleged
    distribution of the drugs to Guerrero, and the stop was an integral part of the
    investigation of defendant's drug dealing activity. Additionally, possession of
    the drugs was a necessary antecedent to distributing them.
    Because defendant had a participatory interest in the contraband and the
    underlying drug deal that justified the stop, he had standing to challenge the
    stop. See Mollica, 
    114 N.J. at 340
    . Accordingly, we part company with the trial
    court on the standing issue.
    A-5598-16T4
    9
    III
    On the other hand, we agree with the trial court that the vehicle stop was
    lawful, as was the stop of defendant and the search of his bicycle, and the search
    warrant was properly issued. Hence, the court correctly denied the suppression
    motion. Before addressing the trial court's factual findings, we briefly address
    the evidence he considered. We conclude that the trial court was entitled to
    consider the facts to which Bove attested in his warrant affidavit, because the
    State presented Bove as a witness at the suppression hearing, and the defense
    had a full and fair opportunity to cross-examine him on the contents of the
    affidavit. 4
    Defendant's reliance on State v. Attwood, 
    232 N.J. 433
     (2018), is
    misplaced. In Attwood, the State refused to present a witness at the suppression
    hearing, insisting instead that it was entitled to rely exclusively on a search
    warrant affidavit. 
    Id. at 446-47
    . The State also relied on the novel and entirely
    meritless contention that the issuance of a search warrant could serve as after-
    the-fact justification for a prior warrantless search. 
    Id. at 446
    .     The Court
    emphatically rejected the State's argument. 
    Id. at 446-47
    . In that context, the
    4
    The State incorporated facts from the warrant affidavit in its pre-hearing brief,
    and the judge considered those facts as established based on what he found to
    be Bove's credible testimony.
    A-5598-16T4
    10
    Court noted that at a suppression hearing, the State was obligated to produce
    witnesses whom the defense could cross-examine, and could not simply rely on
    the warrant affidavit. 
    Id. at 446
    . In this case, the State did not rely on issuance
    of the search warrant to justify the vehicle stop or the search of defendant's
    bicycle. Rather, the State presented a witness, and the defense cross-examined
    him.
    Next, we consider whether, given the facts as found by the trial court,
    Bove and his colleagues had reasonable grounds to suspect that Guerrero had
    just obtained illegal drugs from defendant, so as to justify the stop of the car.
    The United States Supreme Court has described
    the reasonable-suspicion standard as requiring “some
    minimal level of objective justification for making the
    stop.” Its application is highly fact sensitive and,
    therefore, not “readily, or even usefully, reduced to a
    neat set of legal rules.” Facts that might seem innocent
    when viewed in isolation can sustain a finding of
    reasonable suspicion when considered in the aggregate,
    so long as the officer maintains an objectively
    reasonable belief that the collective circumstances are
    consistent with criminal conduct.
    [State v. Nishina, 
    175 N.J. 502
    , 511 (2003) (citations
    omitted).]
    We agree with the trial court that under the totality of the circumstances,
    there were grounds for reasonable suspicion. State v. Arthur, 
    149 N.J. 1
     (1997),
    involves an analogous situation, although in that case, the defendant challenged
    A-5598-16T4
    11
    the police stop of his customer while she was walking on the street, after she
    bought drugs from defendant. 
    Id. at 3
    . The police observed defendant sitting in
    his parked car, and saw a woman get into the car and have a short conversation
    with defendant, after which defendant gave her a brown paper shopping bag. 
    Id. at 4
    . The woman departed the scene after looking anxiously around. 
    Ibid.
    Based on those facts, the police stopped the woman and seized the bag. 
    Id. at 5
    .
    Most significantly, in Arthur the Court found that under all the
    circumstances, the police had reasonable grounds to engage in an investigatory
    stop of the woman. 
    Id. at 15
    . As in Nishina, the Court emphasized that the issue
    is not whether what the police observed could possibly have an innocent
    explanation. Arthur, 
    149 N.J. at 11
    . Rather, the issue is whether, viewed in
    context, which includes the police officer's training and experience, the
    circumstances are consistent with (in this case) the distribution of illegal drugs.
    
    Id. at 11-12
    . We conclude they were.
    In this case, the police received multiple citizen complaints about alleged
    large-scale marijuana dealing by an individual who fit defendant's description
    and who lived at a specific named address. Bove's investigation confirmed
    defendant's name, photograph, and the fact that he resided at that address.
    A-5598-16T4
    12
    During his undercover surveillance, Bove saw defendant leave the house with a
    shopping bag and stand outside on the steps.
    Bove then saw Guerrero and defendant engaging in activity consistent
    with an exchange of a large quantity of illegal drugs. Their conduct appeared
    facially suspicious.   Although Guerrero evidently intended to have only a
    momentary transaction with defendant, he took pains to avoid stopping in front
    of defendant's house. Instead he drove around the corner, while signaling to
    defendant to head west on Paterson Street. Then Guerrero ran back around the
    corner from Passaic Street to a location on Paterson Street that was a few houses
    away from defendant's house. There, the men engaged in a short conversation,
    and defendant handed over a shopping bag to Guerrero, who went back around
    the corner.
    Viewed against the backdrop of multiple citizen complaints about
    defendant's large-scale drug dealing from the Paterson house, this course of
    conduct gave rise to a reasonable suspicion that Guerrero was in possession of
    illegal drugs in the shopping bag. Thus, the police had lawful grounds to
    conduct a stop of Guerrero's vehicle. See Arthur, 
    149 N.J. at 12-13
    .
    Once Bove's colleagues informed him that they had retrieved the
    marijuana from Guerrero, Bove had reasonable grounds to conduct an
    A-5598-16T4
    13
    investigatory stop of defendant. See Nishina, 
    175 N.J. at 514-15
    . Those grounds
    also included Bove's prior observation of the exchange of the shopping bag and
    his observation of defendant putting small objects under the seat of his bicycle.
    In addition, according to Bove, when Bove and his colleagues approached
    defendant, they smelled raw marijuana coming from defendant's person and his
    bicycle. The smell of marijuana furnished separate and independent grounds on
    which to arrest defendant and search his bicycle. See State v. Witt, 
    223 N.J. 409
    , 450 (2015); Nishina, 
    175 N.J. at 515-16
    .
    The trial court's decision to deny the motion was supported by substantial
    credible evidence. Gamble, 
    218 N.J. 424
    -25. Because the search warrant was
    not the product of an illegal search or seizure, the trial court correctly denied the
    suppression motion. Defendant's appellate arguments do not warrant further
    discussion. R. 2:11-3(e)(2). We affirm the order on appeal.
    Affirmed.
    A-5598-16T4
    14