STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. JAMAL WADE (17-02-0125, PASSAIC COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2020 )


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  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-4388-18T4
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    JAMAL WADE, a/k/a
    JAMAL WILLIAMS,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    __________________________
    Submitted October 21, 2020 – Decided November 23, 2020
    Before Judges Alvarez and Geiger.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Law Division, Passaic County, Indictment No. 17-02-
    0125.
    Bruno & Ferraro, attorneys for appellant (John
    Latoracca, of counsel and on the brief).
    Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney General, attorney for
    respondent (Amanda G. Schwartz, Deputy Attorney
    General, of counsel and on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    Defendants Jamal Wade and Gyasi Allen were charged with murder and
    related offenses for the fatal shooting in Paterson of Cosmeik Gee on
    September 30, 2016.       Wade appeals:       the September 20, 2018 order
    determining that his statement to police was admissible at trial; a September
    24, 2018 order determining that the testimony of the State's historical cell-site
    analysis expert regarding the location of Wade's cell phone was admissible at
    trial; and an April 29, 2019 amended judgment of conviction. We affirm.
    We discern the following facts from the record. At around 11:43 p.m.
    on September 30, 2016, a dark-colored Audi sedan pulled out from the
    intersection of William Street and Twelfth Avenue in Paterson and stopped
    next to Gee's vehicle.     Several shots were fired into Gee's car, fatally
    wounding him.
    While investigating the shooting, Paterson Police Department (PPD)
    detectives viewed several surveillance videos, eventually recovering footage
    from a neighborhood liquor store that captured the faces of two men they
    believed were involved. Footage taken by a city camera at the intersection of
    East Twenty-Second Street and Twelfth Avenue recorded the victim walking
    toward his vehicle, which was parked west of East Twenty-Third Street on
    Twelfth Avenue, and a dark-colored Audi sedan pull out from the intersection
    of William Street and Twelfth Avenue and stop next to the victim's vehicle. A
    A-4388-18T4
    2
    man wearing a black jacket, a gray hooded sweatshirt, gray pants, and black
    shoes exited the front passenger door and fired several shots into the victim's
    vehicle. The shooter re-entered the sedan, and the vehicle sped off, traveling
    northwest on Twelfth Avenue and turning right onto East Twenty-Second
    Street. A detective identified Wade as the driver of the sedan and Allen as the
    passenger and shooter.     The court granted the State's motion to admit the
    identification at trial.
    Detectives recovered additional footage from the area.      The footage
    showed the sedan traveling north on Twenty-Second Street for several blocks
    from 11:47 to 11:48 p.m. that night and passing several buildings along East
    Twenty-Second Street and Tenth Avenue before disappearing from view.
    The State Police Auto Theft Task Force (Task Force) conducted a large-
    scale investigation into automobile theft in Paterson and surrounding areas.
    As part of the investigation, the Task Force obtained a September 20, 2016
    communications data warrant (CDW) authorizing installation of a signal
    monitoring and GPS tracking device to "allow members of the New Jersey
    State Police, the New Jersey Division of Criminal Justice, and members of any
    law enforcement agencies assigned to this investigation ('the participating law
    enforcement agencies'), to instantly and continuously track the position and
    location of [a black 2012 Audi A6]" with New Jersey registration number
    A-4388-18T4
    3
    H76GUD, for thirty days. The CDW was authorized to identify individuals
    engaged in the crimes of Receiving Stolen Property, Fencing-Dealing in Stolen
    Property, Theft by Unlawful Taking, and Conspiracy to commit those crimes.
    The CDW stated that any "information obtained pursuant to the Warrant
    [could] be disclosed to members of the participating law enforcement agencies,
    as well as any other law enforcement officer who may be assigned to
    participate in [the] investigation."
    After hearing that a dark-colored sedan was involved in the Paterson
    shooting, Detective Sergeant Vittorio Flora of the Task Force reviewed the
    GPS data and learned that the Task Force had been tracking a stolen dark-
    colored 2012 Audi A6 sedan that was parked near the scene of the shooting at
    the time it occurred Flora provided the PPD detectives with GPS data and
    tracking sheets recovered pursuant to the CDW that showed the vehicle's travel
    path after it departed from William Street.
    After locating the stolen Audi A6, PPD detectives recovered surveillance
    footage from the area. From the videos obtained, they observed the Audi A6
    traveling west on Seventh Avenue and parking at 11:52 p.m. at the location
    where it was recovered. Two men exited the vehicle—the driver wearing a
    gray hooded sweatshirt with a black line across the front, gray sweatpants, and
    black shoes, and the passenger wearing a black jacket, a light-colored hood
    A-4388-18T4
    4
    underneath, gray sweatpants, and dark shoes.        The passenger wiped the
    exterior door handles with a cloth, which he then placed in a white duffle bag,
    before following the driver toward East Sixteenth Street. The men turned
    south onto East Sixteenth Street and then east onto Eighth Avenue.
    After reviewing the videos, the team returned to the Detective Bureau,
    and lead Detective Anthony Petrazzuolo began examining the GPS tracking
    sheets. He determined that the Audi A6 had been parked at 451 East Twenty-
    Fourth Street from about 8:39 p.m. until 10:54 p.m. on the night of the
    shooting, so the team decided to visit the area to locate additional footage.
    The footage did not show the exact location of the vehicle, but it did show that
    around 8:39 p.m., two men were walking south on East Twenty-Fourth
    Street—one wearing the same clothing as the driver of the Audi A6, and the
    other wearing all black clothing—and then turned west onto Tenth Avenue.
    The team visited a liquor store near the corner of Tenth Avenue and East
    Twenty-Second Street. Footage obtained from the liquor store suggested that
    one of the men arriving at the scene was the driver of the Audi A6. Detective
    Jimmy Maldonado reviewed the footage and determined that the driver who
    entered the liquor store was Wade.
    Later in the footage, at around 10:47 p.m., a dark-colored Honda sedan
    pulled up in front of the liquor store, and a man who appeared to be wearing
    A-4388-18T4
    5
    the same clothing as the passenger/shooter exited the vehicle. A local Paterson
    man identified him as Allen.     Wade and Allen then walked east on Tenth
    Avenue, entered a minivan, and exited the minivan after a short period of time;
    at about 10:51 p.m., the camera captured the men turning onto East Twenty-
    Fourth Street, where the Audi A6 was parked.
    On October 3, 2016, Maldonado spotted Wade in front of a convenience
    store on Tenth Avenue. The detectives stopped and exited their vehicle. After
    confirming his identity, Petrazzuolo drew his weapon, placed Wade in hand
    restraints, seized two cell phones, and told him he was under arrest for murder.
    The gun that was used in this case was never recovered. A marked patrol car
    transported Wade to the Detective Bureau for an interview.
    Petrazzuolo and Maldonado took Wade's videotaped statement. Wade
    was not handcuffed during the twenty-minute interview. A redacted version
    was played for the jury.
    First, Petrazzuolo said, "So, we told you why you're here," and Wade
    agreed and nodded his head. Then, Petrazzuolo read Wade his Miranda1 rights
    from a rights and waiver form. The rights read to Wade included:
    You have the right to remain silent. Anything you say
    can be used against you in a court of law. You have
    the right to speak to an attorney for advice before we
    1
    Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
     (1966).
    A-4388-18T4
    6
    ask any questions. Also, you have the right to have a
    lawyer with you during any questioning. If you
    cannot pay for the service of a lawyer, a lawyer will
    be appointed to represent you without cost before any
    interrogation. If you decide to answer questions now
    without a lawyer present, you will still have the right
    to stop answering questions at any time. You also
    have the right to stop answering questions at any time
    until you speak to a lawyer.
    Wade watched the detective as he spoke and nodded his head several times.
    Wade orally confirmed he understood "each and every one of those
    rights," then wrote his answers to the questions on the Miranda form and
    signed it. Petrazzuolo next read aloud the waiver of rights section of the form:
    I have read my rights and I understand what my rights
    are. I am willing to make a statement and answer
    questions. I do not want a lawyer at this time. I
    understand and know what I am doing. No promises
    or threats have been made to me and nobody has used
    pressure or force of any kind against me.
    Petrazzuolo then said, "So, if you want to speak to us, you're going to have to
    waive your rights." The following exchange then occurred:
    MR. WADE: I have a lawyer, though.
    DET. PETRAZ[Z]UOLO: You have a lawyer?
    MR. WADE: Yeah.
    DET. PETRAZ[Z]UOLO: So you want a lawyer?
    MR. WADE: I got a lawyer. I don't -- yeah, let me
    talk to him.
    A-4388-18T4
    7
    DET. MALDONADO: Does he have a lawyer for
    something else or you --
    MR. WADE: He's paid for everything. I got a case in
    Delaware, a case here. He's paid for everything
    DET. MALDONADO: Oh, okay.
    DET. PETRAZ[Z]UOLO: All right, so you—you
    don't want to speak to us without your lawyer; is that
    what you're saying?
    MR. WADE: There's nothing to be mad at, I'm a man.
    DET. PETRAZ[Z]UOLO: All right, well you're going
    to have to wait to speak --
    MR. WADE: Yeah, but I got a lawyer. So you said
    I'm under arrest, right?
    DET. MALDONADO: No, I didn't say you're under
    arrest.
    MR. WADE: You just read me my rights.
    DET. MALDONADO: If you -- He hasn't been
    charged with anything --
    DET. MALDONADO: (indiscernible)
    DET. PETRAZ[Z]UOLO: You haven't been charged
    with anything yet.
    Mr. WADE: So then talk. I don't need to tell you shit
    if I ain't under arrest. I know I ain't do nothing wrong.
    DET. PETRAZ[Z]UOLO:            Are you . . . verbally
    agreeing to speak to us?
    MR. WADE: Yeah, I'm a man.
    A-4388-18T4
    8
    DET. PETRAZ[Z]UOLO: Without your lawyer here?
    MR. WADE: (indiscernible). He knew you.
    DET. PETRAZ[Z]UOLO: Are you verbally agreeing
    to speak to you without your lawyer?
    MR. WADE: Yeah, verbally. (indiscernible) I think
    you think I'm stupid, 'cause I got --
    DET. MALDONADO: I don't think you're stupid. I'm
    just saying that you said --
    MR. WADE: You saying the only way you need a
    lawyer is I'm under arrest, and I'm not under arrest, I
    can talk to anybody, the judge, the fucking mayor,
    whoever.
    DET. MALDONADO: All right, Jamal.
    During this exchange, Wade signed the waiver section of the Miranda form,
    acknowledging that he waived his rights.
    The detectives questioned Wade about what he was doing the night the
    victim was shot. Wade told them he was drinking at the liquor store with some
    neighborhood people, and he stayed there until 2 a.m. Around midnight that
    night, he learned the victim had been shot while in a bad part of the
    neighborhood. He also told the detectives that he was wearing an all gray
    outfit, with a hat and black belt. When Petrazzuolo asked Wade to identify an
    image of a man's profile, Wade confirmed it was him.            According to
    A-4388-18T4
    9
    Petrazzuolo, the image was a still shot photograph derived from the liquor
    store surveillance footage.
    The detectives then told Wade they knew he was lying about being at the
    liquor store until 2:00 a.m. based on footage from surveillance cameras in the
    area.    They told him the cameras showed that around 10:30 p.m., he was
    walking near Twenty-Third Street and Tenth Avenue and then to Twenty-
    Fourth Street. There, he got into an Audi, drove first to William Street, then to
    Twelfth Avenue between Twenty-Second and Twenty-Third Streets, where a
    passenger exited the Audi and shot the victim. Wade was later observed near
    Fifteenth Street and Seventh Avenue.
    Petrazzuolo told Wade, "[A]ll you can do at this point is help yourself,"
    but Wade claimed the detectives were telling "fabricated stories" and requested
    to speak to his lawyer because "[t]his just got bad." Maldonado continued to
    speak with Wade, explaining that "[o]ut of respect" for him, they "put it all out
    there," so Wade would understand what they already knew about his
    connection to the shooting. Wade briefly responded but requested his lawyer
    again after the detective told him, "We know you didn't do it by yourself."
    The detectives ceased questioning Wade at that point and ended the interview.
    Wade was then formally charged and booked.            Petrazzuolo prepared the
    criminal complaint.
    A-4388-18T4
    10
    Detective David Posada of the Passaic County Prosecutor's Office
    obtained a CDW for Wade's iPhone and related T-Mobile account records.
    Posada sent the CDW to T-Mobile. T-Mobile provided a call log and cell site
    data detailing which towers Wade's iPhone communicated through during
    those calls. The call log showed that Wade's iPhone had been used during the
    relevant hours.
    The call log, cell site data, and GPS tracking data were sent to the
    Federal Bureau of Investigation's (FBI) Cellular Analysis Survey Team
    (CAST) for historical cell-site analysis.   FBI Special Agent Agit David, a
    member of CAST assigned to the FBI's Technical Operations Division in
    Newark, was responsible for real-time cellular phone location and historical
    cell-site analysis.
    David analyzed the historical cell site data for Wade's T-Mobile account
    to determine whether Wade's iPhone was used in the general area of the
    shooting and travel path of the Audi A6 at the approximate time of the crime.
    He was also asked to determine if the cell site data was consistent with the
    GPS data the Task Force had obtained. In addition, he performed drive tests 2
    2
    To perform a drive test, a person drives or walks around the streets or paths
    in a particular area and carries a radio scanner that collects data about the
    frequencies transmitted from a cell phone tower in that area. The data shows
    the effective coverage for a particular cell phone tower, which encompasses
    A-4388-18T4
    11
    during July 2018 to provide a more accurate analysis of the coverage area of a
    particular cell site.
    David focused on three calls of interest that were made at 11:49 p.m.,
    11:51 p.m., and 11:54 p.m. on the night of the shooting. David created a map
    for each of the three calls. The maps showed the cell tower that handled the
    call, the extent of the coverage for that cell site and sector, the effective
    coverage for that site and sector, the dominant coverage area, and the GPS
    tracker information—all in relation to the crime scene.             Based on this
    information, David determined the cell dominant phone coverage was
    consistent with Wade's iPhone being present at GPS-derived locations of the
    Audi A6 during the three calls. He also determined that the drive test data
    confirmed that the coverage of the cell site could include at least some points
    along the GPS tracker. The GPS data, in turn, showed the Audi A6 was parked
    in the area of the shooting just before it occurred and the vehicle's travel path
    after it departed.
    A Passaic County grand jury returned an indictment charging Wade
    with: second-degree unlawful possession of a weapon, N.J.S.A. 2C:39-5(b)(1)
    (count one); first-degree purposeful or knowing murder, N.J.S.A. 2C:11-
    each location that a user can receive and make phone calls. However, a drive
    test cannot identify a cell phone's exact location; it can only identify that a cell
    phone was in a particular area when being serviced by a certain tower.
    A-4388-18T4
    12
    3(a)(1), (2) (count two); first-degree conspiracy to commit murder, N.J.S.A.
    2C:5-2 and 2C:11-3(a) (count three); fourth-degree certain persons not to have
    weapons, N.J.S.A. 2C:39-7(a) (count four); second-degree possession of a
    weapon for an unlawful purpose, N.J.S.A. 2C:39-4(a)(1) (count five); and
    third-degree receiving stolen property, N.J.S.A. 2C:20-7(a) and 2C:20-
    2(b)(2)(b) (count six). The indictment charged Allen with the offenses set
    forth in counts one, two, three, and five.
    The Miranda Hearing
    Before trial, the State moved to allow admission of Wade's statement to
    the Paterson detectives during its case-in-chief. The court conducted a Rule
    104 hearing.    After the State played the recording of Wade's statement,
    Petrazzuolo testified that he did not threaten or force Wade to give a statement
    and did not make any promises to Wade. He also confirmed that Wade was
    not formally charged until after the interview. Petrazzuolo described Wade as
    "pretty calm" and mostly cooperative during the interview, other than when he
    made statements that contradicted what the detectives observed on the
    surveillance videos.
    Detective Maldonado briefly explained his involvement in Wade's arrest
    and in taking Wade's statement. He explained that he misspoke when he told
    Wade he was not under arrest. He "meant to say that [Wade] hadn't been
    A-4388-18T4
    13
    charged with anything" because usually when individuals make a statement,
    they ask if they have been charged. After Wade responded to Maldonado's
    statement that he was not under arrest, Maldonado told him he had not been
    charged yet.
    The court found that Wade voluntarily and knowingly waived his
    Miranda rights and ruled that Wade's statement was admissible at trial. While
    the court acknowledged it was arguable that Wade's waiver was "somewhat
    equivocal," the court found it significant that: Wade had previous encounters
    with law enforcement; the detectives advised him of all his rights; the
    detention was brief; the time between the reading of his rights and his
    statement was brief; Wade's statement was likewise brief; and the detectives
    did not prolong the questioning or subject Wade to physical or mental abuse.
    The court found Maldonado's misstatement that Wade was not under arrest was
    immaterial, because even if not truthful, Wade "understood what was going
    on."
    The Motion to Suppress the GPS Data
    On the first day of trial, Wade moved to suppress the GPS data and
    tracking sheets that Paterson detectives obtained from the Task Force.
    Following oral argument and a review of the CDW, the court denied
    defendant's motion to suppress the GPS data and tracking sheets. The court
    A-4388-18T4
    14
    concluded that common sense dictated that when the lead "agency authorized
    by the CDW . . . contacts another agency, that's part of the investigation."
    Eventually, Wade was charged with receiving stolen property, one of the
    crimes listed in the CDW, which the judge found to be a further "indication of
    the nexus between the State Police contacting . . . the Paterson Police
    Department and then Paterson Police in turn using that information to one of
    the charges that is common [to] both." The court found there was "no [CDW]
    violation under the circumstances."
    The Trial
    During the ten-day joint trial, the State called fourteen witnesses,
    including Petrazzuolo, Maldonado, Flora, Posada, David, Pagano, and forensic
    scientist Brett Hutchinson. The State's witnesses did not provide a motive for
    the homicide. Neither defendant testified nor did they call any witnesses.
    Wade's statement was played for the jury. The jury was also presented
    with two photos taken from the liquor store video and signed by Wade. The
    photos were of Wade's face, and during his statement, Wade agreed that the
    person depicted in both photos was him
    State Police Detective Sergeant Clinton Pagano testified that his duties
    with the auto theft task force were to "investigate high[-]end motor vehicle
    thefts and try and develop cases against theft crews and individuals stealing
    A-4388-18T4
    15
    motor vehicles." In his affidavit in support of the application for the CDW,
    Pagano requested that the State Police be permitted: "to disclose the requested
    search warrants and communications data warrants as well as the supporting
    affidavit filed in this matter to members of the New Jersey Attorney General's
    Office as well as other law enforcement agencies who are assisting the New
    Jersey State Police." Pagano testified that he believed it was permissible to
    turn over the information to "law enforcement involved in any investigation."
    The court recognized David as an expert in historical cell-site analysis
    without objection.         David provided the jury with detailed information
    explaining how he performed the cell site analysis. We need not repeat his
    comprehensive testimony as Wade does not contest the validity of the cell-site
    analysis in this appeal.
    David opined that the cell site records for Wade's iPhone could coincide
    with the GPS coordinates and that the drive test "further confirm[ed] that the
    coverage for that particular cell site could include at least some points along
    that GPS tracker."      When then asked whether it was still his opinion that
    Wade's iPhone "could have aligned with the GPS coordinates," David replied:
    "Yes, it's possible."      Considering all the GPS and cell tower data, David
    concluded "that the phone could have been located with [the Audi A6] at the
    time that these calls were made."
    A-4388-18T4
    16
    The jury found Wade guilty on all counts.3 At sentencing, the trial court
    dismissed count four and merged counts three and five into count two. Wade
    was sentenced to an aggregate forty-year term, subject to a thirty-four-year
    period of parole ineligibility and a five-year period of mandatory parole
    supervision under the No Early Release Act, N.J.S.A. 2C:43-7.2. Count two
    ran consecutively to any sentence defendant was already serving. This appeal
    followed.
    Defendant raises the following points for our consideration:
    POINT I
    THE    STATE'S  MOTION    TO    ADMIT
    DEFENDANT'S STATEMENT DURING ITS CASE-
    IN-CHIEF SHOULD HAVE BEEN DENIED
    BECAUSE THE POLICE NEVER INFORMED
    DEFENDANT OF THE CHARGES HE WAS
    FACING, AND THEY LIED WHEN THEY
    INFORMED HIM THAT HE WAS NOT UNDER
    ARREST; PURSUANT TO STATE V. A.G.D.,4
    JAMAL WADE'S WAIVER OF HIS RIGHT
    AGAINST SELF-INCRIMIMATION WAS NOT
    VALID AND THEREFORE HIS STATEMENT
    SHOULD HAVE BEEN SUPPRESSED.
    POINT II
    THE EVIDENCE GARNERED FROM THE GPS
    TRACKER ON THE STOLEN AUDI SHOULD NOT
    3
    The jury found Allen guilty of counts one through three and five.
    4
    State v. A.G.D., 
    178 N.J. 56
     (2003).
    A-4388-18T4
    17
    HAVE BEEN ADMITTED INTO EVIDENCE
    BECAUSE IT WAS SUPPLIED TO THE
    PATERSON      POLICE      IN      DIRECT
    CONTRAVENTION OF A COURT ORDER, AND
    ITS  ADMISSION    AT   TRIAL   DEPRIVED
    DEFENDANT OF HIS RIGHT TO A FAIR TRIAL.
    A.
    We first address the admissibility of Wade's statement to police.
    Relying on A.G.D., Wade contends that he did not make a knowing and
    voluntary waiver of his right against self-incrimination because Maldonado
    and Petrazzuolo did not inform him of the nature of the charges against him or
    that he had been arrested.        
    178 N.J. 56
    .    He asserts they materially
    misrepresented that he was not under arrest, which he claims was the basis for
    agreeing to waive his rights. The State contends that the detectives did not
    violate A.G.D. because neither an arrest warrant nor a criminal complaint had
    been issued before Wade gave his statement. 
    Ibid.
     The State further argues
    that, even if the court did err, it was harmless because there was overwhelming
    evidence of Wade's guilt and because Wade's single admission during his
    statement did not lead to an unjust verdict.
    We are guided by the following well-established legal principles. When
    reviewing "a trial court's admission of police-obtained statements," we "engage
    in a 'searching and critical' review of the record to ensure protection of a
    defendant's constitutional rights." State v. Maltese, 
    222 N.J. 525
    , 543 (2015)
    A-4388-18T4
    18
    (quoting State v. Hreha, 
    217 N.J. 368
    , 381-82 (2014)).              "We do not
    independently assess evidence as if we are the trial court." 
    Ibid.
     (citing Hreha,
    217 N.J. at 382). Rather, we "typically defer to the trial court's credibility and
    factual findings." Hreha, 217 N.J. at 382. Such "findings should be disturbed
    only if they are so clearly mistaken 'that the interests of justice demand
    intervention and correction.'"    State v. Tillery, 
    238 N.J. 293
    , 314 (2019)
    (quoting State v. A.M., 
    237 N.J. 384
    , 395 (2019)). "However, we owe no
    deference to conclusions of law made by lower courts in suppression
    decisions, which we instead review de novo." State v. Boone, 
    232 N.J. 417
    ,
    426 (2017) (citing State v. Watts, 
    223 N.J. 503
    , 516 (2015)).
    The record demonstrates that Petrazzuolo advised Wade of the full
    panoply of his Miranda rights before subjecting him to custodial interrogation.
    Petrazzuolo also advised Wade of the need to waive those rights before
    questioning could begin. Wade confirmed both verbally and in writing that he
    understood his Miranda rights.
    If the suspect consents to proceed with the interrogation, his rights must
    be "voluntarily, knowingly and intelligently" waived. Miranda, 
    384 U.S. at 444
    ; State v. Hartley, 
    103 N.J. 252
    , 261 (1986).      Any evidence obtained in
    violation of Miranda must be suppressed at trial. Hartley, 
    103 N.J. at 262
    .
    A-4388-18T4
    19
    The record fully supports the trial court's conclusion that Wade voluntarily and
    knowingly waived his Miranda rights and agreed to answer questions.
    Whether a defendant invoked the right to remain silent is determined
    under the totality of the circumstances.     Maltese, 222 N.J. at 545.     If the
    suspect invokes the right to remain silent, that invocation must be
    "scrupulously honored."     Hartley, 
    103 N.J. at
    255-56 (citing Michigan v.
    Mosley, 
    423 U.S. 96
     (1975)). If the invocation is ambiguous, the officer may
    only ask clarifying questions about whether he or she meant to invoke the right
    to remain silent.    State v. Johnson, 
    120 N.J. 263
    , 283 (1990) (citations
    omitted).
    An ambiguous invocation can arise where a subject refuses to respond to
    questioning for a prolonged period and has made statements that "convey[] an
    unwillingness to respond to any questions."       
    Id. at 285
    .    An ambiguous
    invocation of the right to remain silent must be clarified before authorities can
    proceed to question a suspect. State v. S.S., 
    229 N.J. 360
    , 384, 386 (2017).
    Where the totality of the circumstances demonstrates that the defendant
    exercised his right to remain silent or to counsel, whether ambiguously or
    unambiguously, the Hartley bright line rule requires Miranda warnings to be
    readministered. Hartley, 
    103 N.J. at 267
    . Here, Wade did not exercise his
    right to remain silent, to speak to an attorney, or to have an attorney present
    A-4388-18T4
    20
    during questioning at any point during the interview, either ambiguously or
    unambiguously.
    In A.G.D., the police had obtained an arrest warrant for the defendant
    before interviewing him. 
    178 N.J. at 59
    . The Court held that a Miranda
    waiver is per se invalid when police withhold the fact that a criminal complaint
    has been filed against the suspect or a warrant has been issued for his arrest.
    
    178 N.J. at 68
    . Here, neither of those events had yet occurred.
    In State v. Vincenty, 
    237 N.J. 122
    , 134 (2019), the Court reaffirmed its
    holding in A.G.D. There, the police sought to question Vincenty about an
    attempted robbery and attempted murder. Id. at 126-27. After obtaining a
    signed Miranda waiver, detectives began questioning Vincenty; it was not until
    later in the interview that they showed him a list of the charges that had
    already been filed against him.    Id. at 127-28.      The Court concluded that
    "Vincenty's interrogation is precisely what A.G.D. prohibits." Id. at 134. It
    held that because Vincenty was not informed by police of the charges filed
    against him until after he signed the waiver, he was deprived of "critically
    important information" and could not have knowingly and voluntarily waived
    his right against self-incrimination.    Id. at 135.     These facts are clearly
    distinguishable.
    A-4388-18T4
    21
    The facts in this case are similar to those in State v. Nyhammer, 
    197 N.J. 383
     (2009). There, the Court considered whether Nyhammer could knowingly
    and voluntarily waive his right against self-incrimination where the police
    failed to inform him that he was a suspect. 
    Id. at 387-88
    . The police asked
    Nyhammer if he was willing to discuss allegations that his uncle had sexually
    abused Nyhammer's minor niece.       
    Id. at 389
    .   The police did not inform
    Nyhammer that the victim had also made similar allegations against him. 
    Id. at 390
    . Nyhammer agreed to speak with the detectives, and after being read
    his Miranda rights, he agreed to waive them. 
    Id. at 389-90
    . After discussing
    the allegations about Nyhammer's uncle, the detective informed Nyhammer of
    the allegations against Nyhammer. 
    Id. at 391
    . Nyhammer then confessed to
    sexually abusing his niece. 
    Id. at 391-92
    .
    The Court declined to adopt a per se rule to determine whether
    Nyhammer's waiver was valid. 
    Id. at 404
    . In so holding, it distinguished the
    matter from A.G.D.:
    The issuance of a criminal complaint and arrest
    warrant by a judge is an objectively verifiable and
    distinctive step, a bright line, when the forces of the
    state stand arrayed against the individual.         The
    defendant in A.G.D. was purposely kept in the dark by
    his interlocutors of this indispensable information.
    Unlike the issuance of a criminal complaint or arrest
    warrant, suspect status is not an objectively verifiable
    and discrete fact, but rather an elusive concept that
    A-4388-18T4
    22
    will vary depending on subjective considerations of
    different police officers.
    [Id. at 404-05.]
    The Court concluded:
    In the typical case, explicit knowledge of one's
    status as a suspect will not be important for Miranda
    purposes. However, explicit knowledge of one's
    suspect status, in some unusual circumstance, might
    be a useful piece of information in exercising a waiver
    of rights under our state-law privilege against self-
    incrimination. Nevertheless, the failure to be told of
    one's suspect status still would be only one of many
    factors to be considered in the totality of the
    circumstances.
    [Id. at 407.]
    The Court was "mindful that the Miranda warnings themselves strongly
    suggest, if not scream out, that a person is a suspect," and this "should be a
    sobering wake-up call to a person under interrogation." 
    Id. at 407-08
    .
    We discern no error in admitting Wade's statement at trial. Wade had
    not yet been charged or indicted when interviewed.       When the detectives
    located Wade, however, Petrazzuolo drew his weapon, placed Wade in
    handcuffs, and told him he was under arrest for murder.        Wade was then
    transported to the Detective Bureau in a marked police car, advised of his
    Miranda rights, and interviewed in a locked room at the Detective Bureau.
    These circumstances "screamed out" that Wade was a suspect in the homicide
    A-4388-18T4
    23
    and under arrest. Moreover, this was not Wade's first encounter with police or
    arrest.
    At one point during the interview, Wade asked: "So you said I'm under
    arrest, right?" Maldonado immediately responded: "No, I didn't say you're
    under arrest."    Maldonado then accurately told Wade:           "He hasn't been
    charged."
    The record fully supports the findings that Wade: knew he was a suspect
    for the murder; understood his Miranda rights; voluntarily, knowingly and
    intelligently waived those rights; did not exercise his rights to remain silent, to
    speak to an attorney, or have one present; and gave a voluntary statement to
    the detectives. Accordingly, the trial court properly determined that Wade's
    statement to police was admissible.
    B.
    We next address Wade's argument that the trial court erred in denying
    his motion to suppress the GPS data that Paterson detectives obtained from the
    State Police. Wade contends the GPS data was inadmissible because it was
    obtained pursuant to a CDW issued for the sole purpose of investigating
    automobile theft and related offenses. Wade asserts that the trial court erred in
    allowing the State to use the GPS data for a purpose not expressly stated in the
    warrant because the PPD was not involved in the automobile theft
    A-4388-18T4
    24
    investigation, was not designated as one of the "participating agencies" in the
    CDW, and used the GPS data for an unrelated purpose.
    The State counters that the sharing of information between different law
    enforcement agencies is not unlawful. In addition, since Wade was charged
    with one of the crimes described in the CDW, the State Police did not exceed
    the scope of the CDW when it shared the GPS data with the PPD.
    "We review the trial court's evidentiary ruling under a deferential
    standard; it should be upheld 'absent a showing of an abuse of discretion, i.e.,
    there has been a clear error of judgment.'" State v. J.A.C., 
    210 N.J. 281
    , 295
    (2012) (quoting State v. Brown, 
    170 N.J. 138
    , 147 (2001)). A reviewing court
    applying this deferential standard "should not substitute its own judgment for
    that of the trial court, unless 'the trial court's ruling is so wide of the mark that
    a manifest denial of justice results." 
    Ibid.
     (quoting State v. Marrero, 
    148 N.J. 469
    , 484 (1997)).
    Defendant does not challenge the validity of the CDW and concedes he
    lacked standing to challenge the GPS tracker on the stolen car he was driving
    on the night of the homicide. The State Police lawfully acquired the GPS data
    from the tracking device installed on the stolen Audi A6 pursuant to the CDW.
    The CDW limited the use of the tracker to identifying the vehicle's location
    A-4388-18T4
    25
    and travel; there is no evidence that the tracker identified a wider range of
    information.
    We have recently recognized that "[t]he circumstances here are no
    different than one law enforcement agency shares information relevant to an
    ongoing investigation with another law enforcement agency in order to assist
    in the apprehension of a suspect." State v. Jackson, 
    460 N.J. Super. 258
    , 274-
    75 (App. Div. 2019) (citing Phila. Yearly Mtg. of Religious Soc'y of Friends v.
    Tate, 
    519 F.2d 1335
    , 1337-38 (3d Cir. 1975)) (noting that the sharing of
    information among law enforcement agencies for a legitimate law enforcement
    purpose is only impermissible if the initial gathering of that information was
    unlawful).     Here, the installation of the tracking device and resulting
    acquisition of GPS data were carried out pursuant to a valid CDW.
    More fundamentally, the CDW was issued to identify individuals
    engaged in the crime of receiving stolen property. Wade was charged with and
    convicted of receiving stolen property for traveling to and departing from the
    scene of the shooting in the stolen Audi A6. Consequently, the PPD was a
    "participating" law enforcement agency in the Task Force's auto theft
    investigation as defined by the CDW.
    As noted by the trial court, it would "defy common sense" to conclude
    that the police were required to overlook what they believed might be evidence
    A-4388-18T4
    26
    related to the homicide, merely because homicide was not a crime enumerated
    in the CDW, when a stolen vehicle being tracked via GPS by the Task Force
    was used as the getaway vehicle.      As we similarly concluded in State v.
    Jackson, "the circumstances here are no different than when one law
    enforcement agency shares information relevant to an ongoing investigation
    with another law enforcement agency in order to assist in the apprehension of
    a suspect." 
    460 N.J. Super. 258
    , 273 (App. Div. 2019), aff'd o.b., 
    241 N.J. 547
    (2020).
    We discern no error. The trial court properly denied Wade's motion to
    suppress the GPS data.
    Affirmed.
    A-4388-18T4
    27