STATE OF NEW JERSEY v. RANDY VIDAL

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                               APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
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                                                         SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
                                                         APPELLATE DIVISION
                                                         DOCKET NO. A-1124-18T4

STATE OF NEW JERSEY,

          Plaintiff-Respondent,

v.

RANDY VIDAL,

     Defendant-Appellant.
____________________________

                    Argued November 18, 2019 – Decided November 26, 2019

                    Before Judges Fasciale and Rothstadt.

                    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
                    Division, Hudson County, Indictment No. 16-04-0523.

                    Margaret Ruth McLane, Assistant Deputy Public
                    Defender, argued the cause for appellant (Joseph E.
                    Krakora, Public Defender, attorney; Margaret Ruth
                    McLane, of counsel and on the brief).

                    Erin M. Campbell, Assistant Prosecutor, argued the
                    cause for respondent (Esther Suarez, Hudson County
                    Prosecutor, attorney; Erin M. Campbell, on the brief).

PER CURIAM
      After pleading guilty, defendant appeals from his conviction for second-

degree unlawful possession of a handgun,  N.J.S.A. 2C:39-5(b)(1). He focuses

on the judge's denial of his motion to suppress, contending that the judge erred

by finding the independent source doctrine applied. He primarily maintains that

police engaged in flagrant misconduct by opening the basement apartment door

to verify it was the apartment in his Facebook pictures that depicted defendant

possessing guns and marijuana.

      On appeal, defendant argues:

            POINT I

            THE EVIDENCE FOUND IN THE BASEMENT
            APARTMENT MUST BE SUPPRESSED AS THE
            FRUIT OF AN UNLAWFUL SEARCH BECAUSE
            POLICE   UNLAWFULLY    OPENED   THE
            APARTMENT DOOR AND THEN RELIED ON
            WHAT THEY SAW IN GETTING A SEARCH
            WARRANT.

We remand for the judge to make specific findings and conclusions of law as to

prong three of the independent source doctrine, and to consider the State's

argument, raised for the first time, that the inevitable discovery doctrine is a

separate basis to deny defendant's motion to suppress.

      Police received an anonymous tip that a "resident [was] posting pictures

with guns on Facebook," which included the link to a Facebook profile. Police


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discovered that defendant owned the Facebook profiles, that he was the person

holding guns and possessing marijuana in the pictures, and that he was a

convicted felon forbidden to possess weapons.        Police initially identified

defendant's residence, which appeared in several of the Facebook photos, as

apartment number two that was located on the second floor. Sergeant Thomas

McVicar applied for a search warrant of defendant's person and apartment

number two. Police later discovered that defendant did not live in apartment

number two, but instead in the building's basement apartment.

      They reached that discovery after Sergeant McVicar witnessed defendant

leave the building by exiting from an alleyway. Based on his familiarity with

similar apartment buildings, Sergeant McVicar concluded that the alleyway led

to a basement apartment.

      A few blocks away from the apartment building, other officers arrested

defendant on an open municipal warrant. At that time, defendant said he lived

in the building's basement apartment. Sergeant McVicar and other officers went

to the building's side door, located the basement apartment, and opened the door

to confirm the basement apartment was the apartment in defendant's Facebook

pictures and "to make sure there was nobody there." Thereafter, he prepared a

new search warrant affidavit.


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                                       3
      "The Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution and Article I,

Paragraph 7 of the New Jersey Constitution both safeguard the right of all

individuals to be secure in their houses against unreasonable searches and

seizures." State v. Shaw,  237 N.J. 588, 607-08 (2019) (citing State v. Hathaway,

 222 N.J. 453, 468 (2015) (citations omitted)).          "When law enforcement

undertakes a search without a warrant, that search is presumptively unlawful."

Id. at 608 (citing State v. Pineiro,  181 N.J. 13, 19 (2004)). To avoid exclusion,

the State must prove the search fell within an exception to the exclusionary rule.

See State v. Bryant,  227 N.J. 60, 71 (2016) (stating "[w]hen the seizure of

evidence is the result of the State's unconstitutional action, the principal remedy

. . . is exclusion of the evidence seized").

      Here, the parties argued whether the independent source doctrine applied.

This doctrine "allows admission of evidence that has been discovered by means

wholly independent of any constitutional violation." State v. Holland,  176 N.J.
 344, 348 (2003) (quoting Nix v. Williams,  467 U.S. 431, 443 (1984)). The

doctrine has three prongs:

             First, the State must demonstrate that probable cause
             existed to conduct the challenged search without the
             unlawfully obtained information. It must make that
             showing by relying on factors wholly independent from
             the knowledge, evidence, or other information acquired
             as a result of the prior illegal search. Second, the State

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            must demonstrate in accordance with an elevated
            standard of proof, namely, by clear and convincing
            evidence, that the police would have sought a warrant
            without the tainted knowledge or evidence that they
            previously had acquired or viewed. Third, regardless
            of the strength of their proofs under the first and second
            prongs, [the State] must demonstrate by the same
            enhanced standard that the initial impermissible search
            was not the product of flagrant police misconduct.

            [Id. at 360-61 (emphasis added).]

The State must establish all three prongs by clear and convincing evidence, and

its failure to satisfy any one prong will result in suppression.         Id. at 345.

Although prong three is the focus of this appeal, we address the first and second

prongs as well.

      As to the first prong, defendant argues Sergeant McVicar "heavily relied

on the information he learned by illegally opening the door to the basement

apartment" when he applied for the second search warrant.            Specifically,

defendant argues Sergeant McVicar lacked probable cause for the search warrant

of the basement apartment absent his unlawful entry—the opening of the door—

into the apartment.

      Probable cause is "more than mere suspicion but less than legal evidence

necessary to convict." Sanducci v. City of Hoboken,  315 N.J. Super. 475, 480

(App. Div. 1998) (internal quotation and citation omitted). It is "well-grounded


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                                        5
suspicion" that an offense has been committed. State v. Moore,  181 N.J. 40, 45

(2004) (citation omitted).     "Probable cause exists where 'the facts and

circumstances within . . . [the officers'] knowledge[,] and of which they had

reasonably trustworthy information[,] [are] sufficient in themselves to warrant

a man of reasonable caution in the belief that' an offense has been or is being

committed." Brinegar v. United States,  338 U.S. 160, 175-76 (1949) (second

and fifth alteration in original) (citation omitted).   In determining whether

probable cause existed, a judge should consider the totality of the circumstances

including the officer's "common and specialized experience[.]" Schneider v.

Simonini,  163 N.J. 336, 362 (2000) (internal quotation and citation omitted).

      Probable cause existed here. Sergeant McVicar viewed the photographs

on defendant's Facebook pages, which showed defendant had guns and

marijuana. He researched defendant’s residence on LexisNexis and the CAD

system, and he identified defendant's apartment building. Officers observed

defendant leaving from the front door of the apartment building. Sergeant

McVicar also saw defendant leave from the building's alleyway, and he said this

observation led him to believe that defendant exited from the basement

apartment. Defendant said he lived at this basement apartment during his

arrest—before the unlawful entry.


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      Further, the judge found there was probable cause for the second search

warrant, stating:

            [T]he Lexis Nexis search revealed the [apartment
            building] as [d]efendant's address and [Sergeant]
            McVicar's observations independently give rise to
            probable cause when viewed in conjunction with the
            Facebook photos showing [d]efendant's name.
            Moreover, given that [Sergeant] McVicar was familiar
            with the layout of buildings like [this one], and the fact
            that [Sergeant] McVicar verified that [d]efendant did
            not live in [a]partment [two], he reasonably believed
            that [d]efendant could have come out of the basement
            apartment. This belief is also reasonable regardless of
            whether [d]efendant stated that he lived in the basement
            apartment or not.

Thus, Sergeant McVicar had a reasonable belief that defendant resided in the

basement apartment and that the guns may be present in this apartment.

      In Holland,  176 N.J. at 348, the Supreme Court addressed the clear and

convincing evidence standard as to prong two of the independent source

doctrine. In this case, police went to assist an ambulance crew at a duplex,

where the officer noted a strong odor of burning marijuana and called for back-

up to determine the source of the odor. Id. at 349. Three other officers arrived

and concluded that the odor was coming from the adjoining residence of the

duplex. Ibid. The defendant ran out of that adjoining residence and dropped

marijuana on the ground. Id. at 349-50. Police then entered the residence to


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investigate further, finding marijuana and drug paraphernalia. Id. at 350-51.

After completing their investigation, a detective applied for a search warrant

based on the officers' observations. Id. at 351. The Court found the State failed

to satisfy prong two because the smell of marijuana and the marijuana that the

defendant dropped were insufficient to establish that police would have obtained

a search warrant absent their unlawful search. Id. at 364. Further, the Court

emphasized there was a statement from an officer that police sought a search

warrant based on what they saw in the residence. Ibid.

      Here, the judge did not outline her specific findings as to prong two,

noting that prong two was not in contention. But the judge did find that there

was "not enough credible evidence to support that the basement apartment was

searched prior to obtaining [the second search warrant]." Unlike in Holland,

officers already had a search warrant to search defendant's residence —the

second search warrant only changed defendant's residence from "#2" to

"basement apartment." Also different from Holland, officers did not "seize" any

physical evidence when they opened the basement door: they did not see the

gun or marijuana that was subsequently seized during the second search

warrant's execution. Finally, the judge found that Sergeant McVicar and other

officers only opened the door to confirm it was the apartment in defendant's


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                                       8
Facebook pictures. Thus, there exists clear and convincing credible evidence

that Sergeant McVicar would have applied for the search warrant of the

basement apartment absent opening the basement door.

      But as to the third prong, the record must be more developed. Defendant

contends that the police engaged in flagrant misconduct when they opened the

basement apartment's door to confirm it was the apartment in defendant's

Facebook pictures. He further argues that Sergeant McVicar engaged in flagrant

misconduct when he made false statements in his search warrant application,

specifically that officers did not execute the search warrant for apartment

number two.

      "Flagrancy is a high bar, requiring active disregard of proper procedure,

or overt attempts to undermine constitutional protections." State v. Camey, ___

N.J. ___, ___ (2019) (slip op. at 46) (citing State v. Smith,  212 N.J. 365, 398

(2012)). The Appellate Division addressed the concept of flagrant misconduct

in State v. Chaney,  318 N.J. Super. 217 (App. Div. 1999). In that case, police

went to execute an arrest warrant of the defendant at a local motel, which was

the defendant's last known address. Id. at 220. Officers went to the defendant's

motel room and knocked on the door; they entered when they received no

response. Ibid. While inside, officers observed stolen property, and based on


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this information, applied for a warrant to search the motel room for the stolen

property. Ibid. The defendant filed a motion to suppress the evidence, arguing

that police engaged in flagrant misconduct when they entered the motel room.

Id. at 219. We stated suppression was unwarranted, explaining:

            [T]his is not a case where the police deliberately
            conducted an unlawful search for the purpose of
            confirming the presence of contraband before applying
            for a warrant. Rather, the information received by the
            police concerning the arrest warrants for a person with
            the same name as [the] defendant, whose last known
            address was the motel in which [the] defendant was
            registered, provided the police with objectively
            reasonable grounds for believing that they were
            authorized to enter the motel room to execute the
            warrants.

            [Id. at 226 (emphasis added).]

      Here, Sergeant McVicar testified:

            When you open . . . that door, it's a small apartment. It's
            a basement apartment. I . . . don't know legal or illegal,
            but sort of, you know, it's where the garage and the
            apartments would usually be. When you open that door,
            the ceiling's kind of low and you’d look right at the
            apartment. [R]ight there is that table that we saw
            [defendant] sitting at in the numerous photographs and
            pictures. Behind the table, we could see the cabinets
            and the . . . appliances which were identified as being
            where we believed that he lived[,] and there was
            identified as . . . that they were the cabinets and the
            appliances that we had observed in the numerous
            photos. And then you could see that there [were] two
            bedrooms. And then, not that far away, only about five

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                                       10
            feet across the living room, there’s two more bedrooms
            right there. And we could see there was nobody in the
            apartment.

Similar to Chaney, the judge found that officers did not enter the basement

apartment to confirm the presence of contraband. Sergeant McVicar testified,

and the judge found credible, that officers opened the basement apartment's door

to confirm it was the apartment in defendant's Facebook pictures and to confirm

defendant's girlfriend was not present. The judge also found there was not

enough "credible evidence to support that the basement apartment was searched

prior to obtaining [the second search warrant]."

      The judge however did not make findings of fact and conclusions of law

about whether the "initial impermissible [opening of the door] was not the

product of flagrant police misconduct" as outlined in Holland. In fact, as to

prong three, the entirety of the judge's findings were:

            Indeed, the officers had a [w]arrant to search
            [apartment number two]. Therefore, they lawfully
            entered [the witness's] apartment and did not commit
            flagrant misconduct in searching [apartment number
            two]. Further . . . there is not enough credible evidence
            to support that the basement apartment was searched
            prior to obtaining [the second search warrant.]

Thus, we conclude the judge did not make sufficient findings and conclusions

as to the third prong.


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                                       11
      We reject defendant's argument that Sergeant McVicar engaged in flagrant

misconduct by making false statements in his second search warrant application.

The judge held a three-day hearing on defendant's motion to suppress. Sergeant

McVicar stated in his affidavit, and testified at the hearing, that he and other

officers did not search apartment number two once they realized it was not the

apartment in defendant's Facebook pictures. However, the judge found credible

another witness who testified that officers searched apartment number two. The

judge determined Sergeant McVicar did not make false statements in his

application, finding: "[the witness's] testimony does not prove that [Sergeant]

McVicar made material misstatements." (Emphasis added). Moreover, the

judge noted that the first search warrant allowed officers to search apartment

number two. This finding of fact is entitled to deference. State v. Elders,  192 N.J. 224, 244 (2007).

      Finally, in this appeal, the State argues for the first time that "discovery

of the proper apartment was inevitable."1 The independent source doctrine and

the inevitable discovery doctrine are two separate exceptions to the exclusionary



1
  We leave the details of that argument—and the related consequences, such as
the discovery of the gun and marijuana were likewise inevitable—to the
discretion of the judge during the remand. Of course, the parties are free to
make any contentions that are warranted on remand.
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                                      12
rule. See Camey, ___ N.J. at ___ (slip op. at 46) (describing separate tests for

the doctrines). On remand, the State can make this contention in the first

instance.

      We therefore remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion. We do

not retain jurisdiction.




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