STATE OF NEW JERSEY IN THE INTEREST OF J.B
Case Date: 10/12/1995
Court: Superior Court of New Jersey
Docket No: none
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SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
IN THE INTEREST OF
J.B., a juvenile.
Argued September 20, 1995 - Decided October
12, 1995
Before Judges King, Landau and Kleiner.
On appeal from the Superior Court of
Kathleen Covert-Miminno, Special Deputy
Attorney General, Acting Camden County
Assistant Prosecutor, argued the cause for
plaintiff-appellant, State of New Jersey
(Joseph F. Audino, Deputy Attorney General
In Charge, Acting Camden County Prosecutor,
attorney; A. Victoria Pinette, Assistant
Prosecutor, of counsel and on the letter-brief).
Jacqueline E. Turner, argued the cause for
juvenile-respondent, J.B. (Susan L. Reisner,
Public Defender, attorney; Ms. Turner,
Assistant Deputy Public Defender, of counsel
and on the letter-brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
KLEINER, J.A.D. Pursuant to leave granted, the State appeals an order suppressing evidence which was seized without a warrant from J.B. by a police officer. Defendant is a juvenile who was arrested for juvenile delinquency, specifically acts which, if committed
by an adult, would constitute: (1) unlawful possession of a
weapon, contrary to N.J.S.A. 2C:39-5; (2) possession of a
controlled dangerous substance, contrary to N.J.S.A. 2C:35-10a(1); and (3) possession of a controlled dangerous substance
with intent to distribute, contrary to N.J.S.A. 2C:35-5b(2).
the corner. He recognized one individual, later identified as
the juvenile, J.B., as someone he had seen regularly in the
neighborhood. As McLeod and Davila approached the congregated
group, J.B. ran from the group. Davila began to converse with
the remaining individuals and McLeod walked to the corner to see
if he could find J.B. with the intent to question him. McLeod
walked around the corner but J.B. was not in sight.
. . . .
. . . .
A. -- when I saw him cradled I assumed
he was just simply hiding. And when I told
him to get up, as he got -- went to grab him
to get up the drugs and everything was just
underneath of him, the drugs and the gun.
. . . .
Q. Why did you lift him up?
A. I lift -- I lift him up -- actually I
lift him up for my safety and his safety
`cause I didn't want -- I didn't want -- I
didn't know what he had underneath of him at
the time. He's like this. I just want to be
safe.
McLeod found a medicine bottle containing thirty-nine
glassine envelopes of "crack cocaine" and an automatic handgun
loaded with five live bullets under J.B. when he stood erect.
McLeod confiscated these items. J.B. was arrested and charged
with delinquency.
In Tucker, a police officer, while on routine patrol, observed two men seated on a curb. One of the men fled as the police vehicle approached. The police officer radioed for police assistance and another patrol vehicle responded. Tucker was blockaded in a yard by the two police vehicles and was apprehended after he discarded a packet of cocaine. Id. at 161-62. On Tucker's motion to suppress, the Law Division judge concluded "that the police had neither probable cause nor a reasonable, articulable suspicion to believe defendant had committed a crime." Ibid. Therefore, "neither an arrest nor an investigatory stop was justified." Ibid. The Law Division judge denied the suppression motion and concluded that Tucker had abandoned the contraband. Ibid.
We reversed the Law Division judge. State v. Tucker,
265 N.J. Super. 358 (App. Div. 1993). Although we agreed that the
police had illegally seized defendant, we concluded that the
contraband had not been abandoned but was a direct product of the
illegal seizure. Id. at 360-61. That conclusion was affirmed by
the Supreme Court. State v. Tucker,
136 N.J. 158 (1994).
[State v. Tucker, supra, at 173.]
Here, in comparison to Tucker, the police were not on a
routine patrol. These police officers were engaged in an
organized police activity designed to eliminate loitering at
night on street corners in high drug-trafficking areas.
Additionally, on this particular evening the police were
responding to a citizen telephone complaint of alleged drug
trafficking at the corner of 24th and High Streets, the very next
corner they intended to check as part of their planned activity
that evening. Flight from the police may not alone be
significant; in the absence of other compelling circumstances, it
clearly would not permit an "inference that it was done with a
consciousness of guilt and pursuant to an effort to avoid an
accusation . . . ." Id. at 169 (quoting State v. Sullivan,
43 N.J. 209, 238-39 (1964)). However, flight under the compelling
circumstances before us was sufficient to justify further
investigation and, if necessary, investigatory detention. See
also Model Jury Charges (Criminal), Flight (November 18, 1991),
as cited in Tucker, supra, 136 N.J. at 169. These facts, when
viewed collectively, permit a sufficient inference of criminal
activity to justify police inquiry.
On a November evening at 11:30, in unmarked
vehicles, police were patrolling a parking
area where drug trafficking was known to be
prevalent. Approximately twenty people had
gathered, and someone alerted the group that
the approaching car was a police vehicle.
Three or four persons, along with the
defendant, ran from the crowd. Police, in
their car, followed the defendant until he
entered an alley. They got out of the car
and pursued the defendant on foot. A police
detective repeatedly commanded the defendant
to halt. When the defendant ran into a
lighted area, the detective recognized him as
someone he had previously observed on several
occasions talking with convicted drug
dealers. The detective testified that he
suspected that the defendant had run because
he had committed a crime or that a warrant
had been issued for his arrest. Those
circumstances supported the officer's
articulable suspicion to stop and interrogate
defendant.
104 N.J. 490 (1986) (emphasizing that a call by a known, reliable
source may justify an investigation). Nonetheless, the phone
call certainly provided McLeod with a reason to conduct an
investigation. See State v. Ramos, 282 N.J. Super. 19 (App. Div.
1995). As in Davis, the facts taken as a whole justify McLeod's
investigative inquiry of J.B. The phone call and J.B.'s flight,
coupled with the designated purpose of the patrol, gave McLeod a
reasonable suspicion that J.B. was involved in criminal activity.
Furthermore, McLeod was justified in lifting J.B. to his feet.
This conduct represents the legitimate manifestation of police
authority discussed in Tucker. Lifting J.B. to his feet revealed
the evidence to McLeod's plain view. Evidence in plain view
during a custodial investigation is clearly admissible. State v.
Bruzzese,
94 N.J. 210, 237 (1983). The seized evidence, drugs
and a handgun, was admissible. We conclude that the motion judge
erred in suppressing the evidence.
On appeal, although the State urged in its brief that `"[t]he trial court erred in finding that the stop of the juvenile was improper," (Point II, A), and that "[t]he handgun and the bottle containing the narcotics were discovered in plain view," (Point II, B), defendant has only argued in his brief that "[t]he trial judge properly granted the juvenile's motion to suppress the evidence as there was [no] justification to seize
the juvenile."See footnote 1 There is no dispute that the evidence when
seized was physically visible. At oral argument, defendant did
argue that McLeod's action in lifting defendant from a crouched
position on the porch where he was hiding violated Terry v. Ohio,
393 U.S. 1,
88 S. Ct. 1868,
20 L.Ed.2d 889 (1968). As the motion
judge did not address that issue, nor was it briefed by defendant
in this appeal, we need not consider that issue. Suffice it to
say, we disagree with defendant's contention. McLeod
specifically indicated that he lifted defendant for safety
reasons. Under the total circumstances presented, we do not find
the officer's conduct to have offended Terry. Lifting a crouched
individual, found hiding on a porch on his knees at night, in a
high narcotics area, after his flight from the corner where drug-trafficking was suspected, is certainly justified as police
action designed to protect the safety of the investigating
officer. Had McLeod employed a less aggressive tact and merely
directed J.B. to stand, the medicine bottle and handgun still
would have been observed in plain view. See State v. Sugar,
84 N.J. 1, 23 (1980). The evidence would have been seized in any
event and should have been admitted. Footnote: 1 We conclude that the Point as typed contains a typographical error omitting the word "no" preceding the word "justification."
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