State v. Antoine D. Watts(074556) , 223 N.J. 503 ( 2015 )


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  •                                                      SYLLABUS
    (This syllabus is not part of the opinion of the Court. It has been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for the
    convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Supreme Court. Please note that, in the
    interest of brevity, portions of any opinion may not have been summarized.)
    State v. Antoine D. Watts (A-21-14) (074556)
    Argued September 17, 2015 -- Decided December 2, 2015
    ALBIN, J., writing for a unanimous Court.
    The issue in this appeal is whether the police acted unreasonably, in violation of the Fourth Amendment of
    the Unites States Constitution and Article I, Paragraph 7 of the New Jersey Constitution, in executing a warrant for
    the search of drugs on defendant.
    On March 14, 2012, Detective Guillermo Valladares of the Elizabeth Police Department, believing that
    defendant was selling heroin from apartment number four at 224 Third Street, obtained a warrant to search
    defendant and his apartment. On that day, Detective Valladares and other officers set up a surveillance camera near
    defendant’s apartment and waited for defendant to leave his apartment. Shortly before 5:00 p.m., defendant was
    seen leaving his apartment. He began walking southward on Third Street and entered Seaport Liquor Store on the
    corner of Magnolia Avenue and Third Street, located one and one-half blocks from his apartment. Upon exiting the
    liquor store, defendant was detained and patted down for weapons. One detective removed the apartment keys from
    defendant’s pocket. The police decided not to conduct an “overly intrusive” search for drugs on the corner of Third
    Street, which was a busy thoroughfare of pedestrian and vehicular traffic. In Detective Valladares’s view, such a
    search on a public street would have been “undignified.”
    Detective Valladares and another detective returned to the apartment with the keys and made a peaceable
    entry. The search of defendant’s apartment uncovered no drugs or related paraphernalia. In the meantime,
    defendant was handcuffed for officer safety and transported back to his apartment in an unmarked police vehicle.
    Upon arriving in front of the apartment, defendant exited the vehicle. As he walked toward a marked patrol car
    under police escort, defendant shook his leg, and from his pants fell four bundles of heroin. Six minutes had elapsed
    from the moment of defendant’s detention to the discovery of the drugs.
    Defendant moved to suppress the drugs, claiming that the police were forbidden from detaining him to
    conduct a second search of his person after the pat down on the street. After a hearing, in an oral opinion, the trial
    court granted defendant’s motion, concluding that after the initial search failed to uncover contraband, the continued
    detention of defendant in handcuffs in the hope of finding drugs on him violated the Constitution. The court’s
    position was that the police had one shot to conduct the search correctly. The court held that the contraband later
    found by police during defendant’s detention violated his constitutional rights and the United States Supreme
    Court’s decision in Bailey v. United States, __ U.S. __ , 
    133 S. Ct. 1031
    , 
    185 L. Ed. 2d 19
    (2013).
    The Appellate Division granted the State’s motion for leave to appeal and affirmed the trial court in an
    unpublished opinion. After the initial search did not uncover contraband, the appellate panel -- like the trial court --
    discerned “no satisfactory explanation” for the need for a second search. It maintained that once the police
    exhausted the warrant authorizing the search of defendant’s person outside the liquor store, the search warrant for
    the residence did not permit a later warrantless search of defendant in accordance with Bailey. According to the
    panel, none of the Bailey factors justified a warrantless search of defendant: defendant was not armed and thus not a
    danger to the officers searching the apartment; he was not in a position to hide or destroy evidence in the apartment;
    and, last, because no contraband was found on defendant’s person or later in his apartment, law enforcement’s
    interest in preventing flight was not an issue. The panel noted that the “terms of the search warrant” permitted “a
    search rather than multiple searches.”
    The Supreme Court granted the State’s motion for leave to appeal.
    1
    HELD: The police did not act in an objectively unreasonable manner in violation of the Federal and State
    Constitutions by conducting an initial pat-down of defendant and detaining defendant for a thorough search in a
    more controlled, safe, and secure location.
    1. The Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution and Article I, Paragraph 7 of the New Jersey
    Constitution protect against “unreasonable searches and seizures” by government officials. Our constitutional
    jurisprudence expresses a decided preference that government officials first secure a warrant before conducting a
    search of a home or a person. A warrant for the search of a person carries with it implicit authority to detain that
    person for a reasonable period to complete the objective of the search. The period of the detention, however, must
    directly correspond to the purpose of the search and may not extend beyond that time. Reason suggests that a place
    where a person is detained pursuant to a search warrant may not always be suitable for conducting an intrusive
    search. A public street corner may not be the appropriate place to conduct a search for drugs that may be hidden in a
    person’s clothes or on his body. In such a scenario, neither the Federal nor State Constitution forbids the police
    from moving the individual to a secure and private setting where the search can be conducted without exposing the
    person to public degradation and the police to potential dangers. Carrying out an intrusive search on a crowded
    street corner might be misunderstood by uninformed members of the public, or the person’s friends or family, and
    spark a combustible incident. Public safety permits the police to take reasonable, commonsense measures to avoid
    interference with a search. (pp. 10-14)
    2. The police made an objectively reasonable decision that compelling defendant to disrobe, partially or completely
    on a busy Elizabeth street corner where there was pedestrian and vehicular traffic could cause public humiliation to
    defendant. Such an intrusive search at that location might also have posed potential dangers to the police. The trial
    court ruled that the police had one of two choices: search defendant where he was detained or return him to the
    apartment or some other location and search him there. The court did not allow for a more nuanced approach
    consistent with constitutional jurisprudence and the notion of reasonableness. The Court rejects, as a matter of law,
    the trial court’s all-or-nothing approach. To be sure, what occurred on the corner of Magnolia Avenue and Third
    Street constituted a search under both the Fourth Amendment and Article I, Paragraph 7 of the State Constitution.
    But it was an incidental search preliminary to fulfilling the main objective of the warrant -- a search of defendant for
    the presence of drugs and related paraphernalia. The limited search outside the liquor store did not trigger a
    constitutional requirement that the police conduct an intrusive search at the same location. The police did not act
    unreasonably by delaying completion of the search and returning defendant to the apartment. Only six minutes
    passed from defendant’s detention until discovery of the drugs. That was not an unreasonable period to hold
    defendant for the purpose of completing the search of his person. To the extent a search occurred, it was not a
    second search but the reasonable continuation of a search that had not been completed outside the liquor store. (pp.
    14-19)
    3. Because defendant was lawfully detained pursuant to a warrant to search his person when the drugs were
    discovered, the Court need not reach the issue addressed in 
    Bailey, supra
    . Unlike the present case, in Bailey, the
    police had a warrant to search only the residence, not the defendant-occupant. Bailey does not apply to a case
    involving a search warrant for a person. Therefore, the discussions of Bailey by the trial court and Appellate
    Division were not necessary to decide the suppression motion. (pp. 19-20)
    The judgment of the Appellate Division is REVERSED and the matter is REMANDED to the trial court
    for proceedings consistent with the Court’s opinion.
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER and JUSTICES LaVECCHIA, PATTERSON, and SOLOMON join in
    JUSTICE ALBIN’s opinion. JUSTICE FERNANDEZ-VINA and JUDGE CUFF (temporarily assigned) did
    not participate.
    2
    SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    A-21 September Term 2014
    074556
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    ANTOINE D. WATTS,
    Defendant-Respondent.
    Argued September 17, 2015 – Decided December 2, 2015
    On appeal from the Superior Court, Appellate
    Division.
    Deborah C. Bartolomey, Deputy Attorney
    General, argued the cause for appellant
    (John J. Hoffman, Acting Attorney General of
    New Jersey, attorney).
    Mark H. Friedman, Assistant Deputy Public
    Defender, argued the cause for respondent
    (Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender,
    attorney).
    JUSTICE ALBIN delivered the opinion of the Court.
    In this appeal, we must determine whether the police acted
    unreasonably, in violation of the Fourth Amendment of the United
    States Constitution and Article I, Paragraph 7 of the New Jersey
    Constitution, in executing a warrant for the search of drugs on
    defendant Antoine D. Watts.
    A warrant secured by the police authorized a no-knock entry
    and search of defendant’s apartment and a search of defendant
    1
    for controlled dangerous substances.    Before executing the
    search warrant, police officers waited until defendant left his
    apartment.    The officers detained defendant one and one-half
    blocks away on a busy urban street, frisking him for weapons and
    taking his apartment keys to avoid a forced entry of his
    residence.   The officers decided not to conduct a more intrusive
    search of his person in public view.    Defendant was then placed
    in an unmarked police car and taken back to his apartment.
    After defendant exited the vehicle, four bundles of heroin fell
    from the leg of his pants.
    Defendant moved to suppress the drugs, claiming that the
    police were forbidden from conducting a second search of his
    person after the pat down on the street.   After a hearing, the
    trial court granted defendant’s motion, concluding that because
    defendant was initially searched on a public sidewalk, the
    police were forbidden from searching him again at another
    location.    The court found that the police acted unreasonably,
    and therefore unconstitutionally, by exposing defendant to
    successive searches.    The court suppressed the drugs, and the
    Appellate Division affirmed.
    We now hold that the police did not act in an objectively
    unreasonable manner in violation of our Federal and State
    Constitutions.   The police were armed with a warrant to search
    defendant’s person for drugs.   The police officers were not
    2
    required to conduct a highly intrusive search of defendant on a
    public sidewalk in full view of pedestrian and vehicular
    traffic.   Such a search would have offended defendant’s
    dignitary interest and would have been contrary to the police
    interest in conducting a thorough search in a safe and secure
    setting.   Patting down defendant for weapons before transporting
    him in a police vehicle was a necessary precaution, and taking
    his apartment keys to avoid battering down his door or alerting
    occupants was a prudent step falling within the scope of the
    warrant.   The initial search was limited in scope and did not
    bar the police from moving defendant to a more controlled
    location to complete the search for drugs in accordance with the
    warrant.     We therefore reverse and remand to the trial court for
    further proceedings.
    I.
    A.
    Defendant was charged in a Union County indictment with
    third-degree possession of heroin, N.J.S.A. 2C:35-10(a)(1);
    third-degree possession of heroin with intent to distribute,
    N.J.S.A. 2C:35-5(a)(1) and N.J.S.A. 2C:35-5(b)(3); third-degree
    possession of heroin with intent to distribute in a school zone,
    N.J.S.A. 2C:35-7; and second-degree possession of heroin with
    intent to distribute within 500 feet of a public park, N.J.S.A.
    2C:35-7.1.    Defendant moved to suppress drugs seized by the
    3
    police, alleging that he was subjected to an unconstitutional
    search.
    The trial court conducted a suppression hearing at which
    the State called to the stand Detective Guillermo Valladares of
    the Elizabeth Police Department.       No other witness testified at
    the hearing.    The record consists of Detective Valladares’s
    testimony, the affidavit in support of the warrant to search
    defendant and his apartment, the warrant itself, and a
    surveillance video taken of defendant on the day the search was
    executed.    From this evidence, the facts emerge.
    On March 14, 2012, Detective Valladares applied for a
    warrant to search defendant and his apartment.       The detective
    filed an affidavit with a Superior Court judge detailing his
    reasons for believing that defendant was selling heroin from
    apartment number four at 224 Third Street in the City of
    Elizabeth.   Based on the affidavit, the judge found probable
    cause to issue a warrant authorizing the police to conduct a no-
    knock entry and search of the Third Street apartment and a
    search of defendant for such items as heroin, glassine
    envelopes, vials, and other paraphernalia related to drug
    distribution.
    Detective Valladares testified that, on March 14, police
    officers gathered at a staging area in preparation to execute
    the search and activated a fixed surveillance camera capable of
    4
    covering defendant’s apartment and the immediate environs.          The
    plan was to wait until defendant left his apartment and then
    seize the apartment keys to avoid a forced entry into the
    residence.   As Detective Valladares explained, the police did
    not want to “break any doors [or] cause any heart attacks.”
    Shortly before 5:00 p.m., the surveillance camera recorded
    defendant leaving his apartment building and walking southward
    on Third Street.   Approximately eight police officers sprang
    into action.   Five officers, including Detective Valladares,
    detained defendant as he exited Seaport Liquor Store on the
    corner of Magnolia Avenue and Third Street, located one and one-
    half blocks from his apartment.       Defendant was wearing a hooded
    sweatshirt, a shirt, jeans, and boots.       One detective patted
    down defendant for weapons, and another detective removed the
    apartment keys from defendant’s pocket.       No article of
    defendant’s clothing was removed during this limited search.
    The police decided not to conduct an “overly intrusive” search
    for drugs on the corner of Third Street, which was a busy
    thoroughfare of pedestrian and vehicular traffic.      In Detective
    Valladares’s view, such a search on a public street would have
    been “undignified.”
    Detective Valladares and another detective returned to the
    apartment with the keys and made a peaceable entry.       In the
    meantime, defendant was handcuffed for officer safety and
    5
    transported back to his apartment in an unmarked police vehicle.
    Upon arriving in front of the apartment, defendant exited the
    vehicle.   As he walked toward a marked patrol car under police
    escort, defendant shook his leg, and from his pants fell four
    bundles of heroin.1   Six minutes had elapsed from the moment of
    defendant’s detention to the discovery of the drugs.     The search
    of defendant’s apartment uncovered no drugs or related
    paraphernalia.
    B.
    In an oral opinion, the trial court granted defendant’s
    motion to suppress.   The court concluded that the police could
    not lawfully conduct successive searches of defendant based on
    the same search warrant.   The court stated that the police had
    “a right to search [defendant],” but after the initial search
    failed to uncover contraband, the continued detention of
    defendant in handcuffs in the hope of finding drugs on him
    violated the Constitution.   The court’s position was that the
    police had one shot to conduct the search correctly.     According
    to the court, the police “could have searched him one time by
    1 Detective Valladares did not observe firsthand the recovery of
    the heroin. Before giving his testimony, he reviewed the
    videotape of the incident, which showed a police captain and
    sergeant walking behind defendant. One of those officers
    advised Detective Valladares that the heroin dropped from the
    leg of defendant’s pants. The surveillance videotape shows a
    police officer walking behind defendant, picking up an item, and
    showing it to a fellow officer.
    6
    bringing him back to the home immediately” or one time at the
    scene where “[t]hey opted to search him.”     In the court’s view,
    the police were at fault for the initial “incompetent search”
    that uncovered no contraband.     The court maintained that after
    the initial street search, the police “had no right to detain
    him further” and “no right to put him in a squad car and bring
    him back to the scene.”   The court held that the contraband
    later found by police during defendant’s detention violated his
    constitutional rights and the United States Supreme Court’s
    decision in Bailey v. United States, __ U.S. __, 
    133 S. Ct. 1031
    , 
    185 L. Ed. 2d 19
    (2013).2
    II.
    The Appellate Division granted the State’s motion for leave
    to appeal and affirmed the trial court in an unpublished
    opinion.   The appellate panel agreed with the trial court that
    the warrant authorizing the search of defendant’s person
    “permitted the police to search [him] when they stopped him,
    even though he was no longer in or adjacent to his apartment.”
    However, after the initial search did not uncover contraband,
    the panel -- like the trial court -- discerned “no satisfactory
    2 The court also pointedly noted that, based on the record,
    including the surveillance videotape, it could not be determined
    from what part of defendant’s clothing the bundles of heroin
    fell because no one from “the take-down group” was called to
    testify.
    7
    explanation” for the need for a second search.       It maintained
    that once the police exhausted the warrant authorizing the
    search of defendant’s person outside the liquor store, the
    search warrant for the residence did not permit a later
    warrantless search of defendant in accordance with Bailey.       The
    panel described Bailey as a case involving “the warrantless
    search of an individual incident to the execution of a search
    warrant” of premises where the individual had recently left.
    According to the panel, none of the Bailey factors justified a
    warrantless search of defendant:       defendant was not armed and
    thus not a danger to the officers searching the apartment; he
    was not in a position to hide or destroy evidence in the
    apartment; and, last, because no contraband was found on
    defendant’s person or later in his apartment, law enforcement’s
    interest in preventing flight was not an issue.       
    Bailey, supra
    ,
    __ U.S. at __, 133 S. Ct. at 
    1038-41, 185 L. Ed. 2d at 29-32
    .
    The panel noted that the “terms of the search warrant” permitted
    “a search rather than multiple searches.”       Finally, the panel
    concluded that the judge’s fact findings were entitled to
    deference.   For those reasons, the panel upheld the judge’s
    order suppressing the evidence.
    We granted the State’s motion for leave to appeal.
    III.
    8
    The State submits that the warrant to search defendant did
    not require “the police to search defendant’s person once and
    thoroughly in the place where he was first detained” -- a busy,
    public sidewalk in the City of Elizabeth.    Instead, the State
    argues that the police acted in an objectively reasonable manner
    by frisking defendant for weapons, securing the apartment keys,
    and transporting him “to a more suitable private location for a
    complete search.”    The State maintains that Bailey is
    inapplicable because the justification for defendant’s detention
    was the warrant to search his person, not the warrant to search
    his premises.   The State urges the reversal of the order
    suppressing the evidence on the ground that the police acted in
    strict conformity with the Federal and State Constitutions.
    Defendant urges that we affirm the Appellate Division.        He
    contends that the panel correctly deferred to the trial court’s
    factual findings at the suppression hearing.    According to
    defendant, the trial court did not accept Detective Valladares’s
    testimony about defendant’s encounter with the police.      Instead,
    defendant insists that the court found that “the police
    conducted a full search when they first detained [him], not just
    a pat-down, and that the second search was, indeed, a search,”
    not an abandonment of drugs.     Defendant submits that a second or
    new search of defendant at 224 Third Street was not authorized
    by the warrant.     Moreover, defendant claims that the search of
    9
    his person cannot be justified under Bailey because he did not
    pose a threat to the search of the premises.
    IV.
    The question before us is whether defendant was the subject
    of an unreasonable seizure and search after the police conducted
    the initial search outside the liquor store where defendant was
    first detained.
    The Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution and
    Article I, Paragraph 7 of the New Jersey Constitution protect
    against “unreasonable searches and seizures” by government
    officials.3   Our constitutional jurisprudence expresses a decided
    preference that government officials first secure a warrant
    before conducting a search of a home or a person.   See State v.
    Edmonds, 
    211 N.J. 117
    , 129 (2012) (citing State v. Frankel, 
    179 N.J. 586
    , 597-98, cert. denied, 
    543 U.S. 876
    , 
    125 S. Ct. 108
    ,
    
    160 L. Ed. 2d 128
    (2004)).   Police officers are relieved of the
    3 The Fourth Amendment and Article I, Paragraph 7 use virtually
    identical language. The Fourth Amendment provides:
    The right of the people to be secure in their
    persons, houses, papers, and effects, against
    unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not
    be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but
    upon probable cause, supported by Oath or
    affirmation, and particularly describing the
    place to be searched, and the persons or
    things to be seized.
    [U.S. Const. amend. IV; see also N.J. Const.
    art. I, ¶ 7.]
    10
    constitutional obligation to secure a warrant only if the search
    falls within “one of the . . . ‘well-delineated exceptions to
    the warrant requirement.’”   
    Id. at 130
    (internal quotation mark
    omitted) (quoting 
    Frankel, supra
    , 179 N.J. at 598).    A search
    executed pursuant to a warrant is presumptively valid, and “a
    defendant challenging its validity has the burden to prove ‘that
    there was no probable cause supporting the issuance of the
    warrant or that the search was otherwise unreasonable.’”     State
    v. Keyes, 
    184 N.J. 541
    , 554 (2005) (quoting State v. Jones, 
    179 N.J. 377
    , 388 (2004)).
    Defendant does not challenge the validity of the warrant to
    search his person or apartment.    He does not dispute that the
    search warrant, issued by a Superior Court judge, was based on a
    finding of probable cause to believe that he was dealing drugs.
    Rather, he claims that the search warrant for his person was
    fully executed outside the liquor store and that the police had
    no basis to continue holding him after failing to find
    contraband on him.   Thus, the narrow issue is whether the police
    acted in an objectively reasonable manner in detaining defendant
    after the initial search.
    “The touchstone of the Fourth Amendment and Article I,
    [P]aragraph 7 of the New Jersey Constitution is reasonableness.”
    State v. Hathaway, 
    222 N.J. 453
    , 476 (2015) (alteration in
    original) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also United
    11
    States v. Knights, 
    534 U.S. 112
    , 118-19, 
    122 S. Ct. 587
    , 591,
    
    151 L. Ed. 2d 497
    , 505 (2001).   In assessing the reasonableness
    of police conduct, we must consider the circumstances facing the
    officers who had to make on-the-spot decisions in a fluid
    situation.   See State v. Bruzesse, 
    94 N.J. 210
    , 228 (1983)
    (“There are numerous situations that arise in law enforcement
    that are unique and call for a special response.”), cert.
    denied, 
    465 U.S. 1030
    , 
    104 S. Ct. 1295
    , 
    79 L. Ed. 2d 695
    (1984).
    Under the Fourth Amendment and Article I, Paragraph 7 of the New
    Jersey Constitution, “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.”   
    Id. at 219.
      The test is not whether
    there were other reasonable or even better ways to execute the
    search, for hindsight and considered reflection often permit
    more inspired after-the-fact decision-making.   
    Hathaway, supra
    ,
    222 N.J. at 469 (“[T]hose who must act in the heat of the moment
    do so without the luxury of time for calm reflection or
    sustained deliberation.” (quoting 
    Frankel, supra
    , 179 N.J. at
    599)).   For purposes of our Federal and State Constitutions, it
    is enough that the police officers, in performing their duties,
    acted in an objectively reasonable fashion.
    A warrant for the search of a person carries with it
    implicit authority to detain that person for a reasonable period
    12
    to complete the objective of the search.    See Florida v. Royer,
    
    460 U.S. 491
    , 500, 
    103 S. Ct. 1319
    , 1325, 
    75 L. Ed. 2d 229
    , 238
    (1983) (plurality opinion) (stating that in case of warrantless
    search, “[t]he scope of the detention must be carefully tailored
    to its underlying justification.”).    The period of the
    detention, however, must directly correspond to the purpose of
    the search and may not extend beyond that time.   See 
    ibid. A warrant authorizing
    the search of a person for drugs and
    related paraphernalia allows the police to search for such
    evidence wherever it may normally be secreted, such as in
    clothes, boots, or on the body.    See United States v. Ross, 
    456 U.S. 798
    , 820, 
    102 S. Ct. 2157
    , 2170, 
    72 L. Ed. 2d 572
    , 591
    (1982) (“A lawful search of fixed premises generally extends to
    the entire area in which the object of the search may be found .
    . . .”); State v. Colin, 
    809 P.2d 228
    , 229 (Wash. Ct. App. 1991)
    (denying suppression of drugs discovered during execution of
    warrant to search defendant, who was made to remove his
    clothes).   Reason suggests that a place where a person is
    detained pursuant to a search warrant may not always be suitable
    for conducting an intrusive search.    A public street corner may
    not be the appropriate place to conduct a search for drugs that
    may be hidden in a person’s clothes or on his body.
    In such a scenario, neither the Federal nor State
    Constitution forbids the police from moving the individual to a
    13
    secure and private setting where the search can be conducted
    without exposing the person to public degradation and the police
    to potential dangers.   See Illinois v. Lafayette, 
    462 U.S. 640
    ,
    645, 
    103 S. Ct. 2605
    , 2609, 
    77 L. Ed. 2d 65
    , 71 (1983) (“Police
    conduct that would be impractical or unreasonable -- or
    embarrassingly intrusive -- on the street can more readily --
    and privately -- be performed at the station.”).     Carrying out
    an intrusive search on a crowded street corner might be
    misunderstood by uninformed members of the public, or the
    person’s friends or family, and spark a combustible incident.
    Public safety permits the police to take reasonable, commonsense
    measures to avoid interference with a search.
    V.
    A.
    We now apply those principles to the facts before us.
    In doing so, we begin with our standard of review.    We are bound
    to uphold a trial court’s factual findings in a motion to
    suppress provided those “findings are ‘supported by sufficient
    credible evidence in the record.’”   State v. Elders, 
    192 N.J. 224
    , 243-44 (2007) (quoting State v. Elders, 
    386 N.J. Super. 208
    , 228 (App. Div. 2006)).   Deference to those findings is
    particularly appropriate when the trial court has the
    “‘opportunity to hear and see the witnesses and to have the feel
    of the case, which a reviewing court cannot enjoy.’”     
    Id. at 244
    14
    (quoting State v. Johnson, 
    42 N.J. 146
    , 161 (1964)).
    Nevertheless, we are not required to accept findings that are
    “clearly mistaken” based on our independent review of the
    record.   
    Ibid. Moreover, we need
    not defer “to a trial or
    appellate court’s interpretation of the law” because “[l]egal
    issues are reviewed de novo.”    State v. Vargas, 
    213 N.J. 301
    ,
    327 (2013).
    B.
    It bears emphasizing that the police had a warrant
    authorizing not only a no-knock entry and search of defendant’s
    apartment, but also a search of defendant’s person.    The trial
    court did not second-guess the police strategy of waiting until
    defendant left his apartment to execute the warrant.    Seizing
    defendant outside the apartment and securing the apartment keys
    allowed for a peaceable entry and minimized the potential for
    violence and damage to property.
    The police detained defendant after he left a liquor store
    on a busy Elizabeth street corner where there was pedestrian and
    vehicular traffic.    Defendant was wearing a hooded sweatshirt, a
    shirt, jeans, and boots.    Drugs or paraphernalia could have been
    secreted in his clothes or on his body.   The police made an
    objectively reasonable decision that compelling defendant to
    disrobe, partially or completely, in that public setting could
    cause public humiliation to defendant.    Such an intrusive search
    15
    at that location might also have posed potential dangers to the
    police.
    However, the court ruled that the police had one of two
    choices:   search defendant where he was detained or return him
    to the apartment or some other location and search him there.
    The court did not allow for a more nuanced approach consistent
    with constitutional jurisprudence and the notion of
    reasonableness.   We reject, as a matter of law, the trial
    court’s all-or-nothing approach.
    The police decided to conduct a thorough search of
    defendant at another location.     Before placing him in a police
    vehicle, the officers had a right to pat him down to ensure that
    he was not armed with a weapon.    Cf. State v. Gibson, 
    218 N.J. 277
    , 299 (2014) (“[O]nce an officer lawfully arrests a suspect,
    he has the right and duty to search him for weapons and
    contraband before placing him in a patrol car.” (citing Chimel
    v. California, 
    395 U.S. 752
    , 762-63, 
    89 S. Ct. 2034
    , 2040, 23 L.
    Ed. 2d 685, 694 (1969))).     Further, given that the police had a
    warrant for a no-knock entry into defendant’s residence, it was
    objectively reasonable to secure the apartment keys from
    defendant to avoid having to break down the door or alert other
    occupants in the apartment.    The fundamental purpose of the no-
    knock warrant was to give the police the benefit of the element
    16
    of surprise.   Possession of the apartment keys advanced that
    goal.
    To be sure, what occurred on the corner of Magnolia Avenue
    and Third Street constituted a search under both the Fourth
    Amendment and Article I, Paragraph 7 of our State Constitution.
    But it was an incidental search preliminary to fulfilling the
    main objective of the warrant -- a search of defendant for the
    presence of drugs and related paraphernalia.    We cannot conclude
    that the limited search outside the liquor store triggered a
    constitutional requirement that the police conduct an intrusive
    search at the same location.   As noted earlier, the touchstone
    of the Fourth Amendment and Article I, Paragraph 7 of our State
    Constitution is reasonableness.    The warrant permitted the
    police to reasonably continue the search in a secure setting.
    See State v. Hai Kim Nguyen, 
    419 N.J. Super. 413
    , 426-27 (App.
    Div. 2011), (stating that warrant authorized reasonable
    continuation of search of car, which remained in continuous
    police custody), certif. denied, 
    108 N.J. 339
    (2011).
    We do not take issue with the trial court’s factual
    findings but rather with its legal conclusions.    Detective
    Valladares testified to the limited nature of the initial search
    -- a search for weapons and the apartment keys.    Defendant was
    not ordered to remove articles of clothing, a natural step in
    conducting a search for drugs pursuant to the warrant.    The
    17
    trial court never found, as defendant contends, that the police
    conducted a complete search of defendant at the corner of
    Magnolia Avenue and Third Street.     Rather, the court determined
    that the police conducted an “incompetent search” at that
    location, a premise based on the court’s mistaken understanding
    that once the search began, even for the limited purpose of
    frisking for weapons and seizing the apartment keys, an
    intrusive search for drugs had to continue in a public place to
    its inevitable conclusion.    The court maintained that because
    the police officers did not find contraband on defendant during
    the initial search, they were obliged to release him.
    We disagree with the trial court and the Appellate
    Division, which affirmed the suppression order.     The police did
    not have to proceed in some formulaic or mechanistic manner.
    See 
    Bruzzese, supra
    , 94 N.J. at 228.     Discretion and judgment
    must play a role in such matters.     In deciding to search
    defendant at another location, the police were permitted to pat
    him down for weapons before transporting him in a vehicle.     We
    must view the police actions against the standard of objective
    reasonableness.   By that standard, the police did not act
    unreasonably by delaying completion of the search and returning
    defendant to the apartment.   Defendant was not
    unconstitutionally detained when the four bundles of heroin fell
    from the leg of his pants after he exited from the unmarked
    18
    police car in front of his apartment.4    Only six minutes passed
    from defendant’s detention until discovery of the drugs.    That
    was not an unreasonable period to hold defendant for the purpose
    of completing the search of his person.    To the extent a search
    occurred, it was not a second search but the reasonable
    continuation of a search that had not been completed outside the
    liquor store.
    C.
    Because we have determined that defendant was lawfully
    detained pursuant to a warrant to search his person when the
    drugs were discovered, we need not reach the issue addressed in
    
    Bailey, supra
    , __ U.S. __, 
    133 S. Ct. 1031
    , 
    185 L. Ed. 2d 19
    .
    There, the United States Supreme Court held that a warrant to
    search a residence does not authorize the police to detain an
    occupant who is not in “the immediate vicinity of [the] premises
    to be searched.”   Id. at __, 133 S. Ct. at 
    1043, 185 L. Ed. 2d at 34
    .   Unlike the present case, in Bailey, the police had a
    warrant to search only the residence, not the defendant-
    4 We note that the State failed to call to the stand the police
    officer or officers who witnessed the discovery of the four
    bundles of heroin. Although hearsay is permissible in
    suppression hearings, subject to N.J.R.E. 104(a), the trial
    court is the arbiter of the weight to be given to such evidence
    when the state forgoes presenting available firsthand testimony
    concerning the discovery of contraband. The issue in this case,
    however, concerned not so much discovery of the heroin, but the
    legality of defendant’s continued detention after the initial
    search.
    19
    occupant.   Id. at __, 133 S. Ct. at 
    1036, 185 L. Ed. 2d at 26
    -
    27.   The defendant-occupant in Bailey was stopped approximately
    one mile from his apartment after the search commenced.     
    Ibid. The Supreme Court
    declared that, under the circumstances, the
    search warrant for the premises could not justify the detention
    of the defendant-occupant.    Id. at __, 133 S. Ct. at 
    1042-43, 185 L. Ed. 2d at 33-34
    .
    Bailey does not apply to a case involving a search warrant
    for a person.   Therefore, the discussions of Bailey by the trial
    court and Appellate Division were not necessary to decide the
    suppression motion.
    VI.
    For the reasons expressed, we find that the trial court
    erred in suppressing the evidence.     We therefore reverse the
    judgment of the Appellate Division affirming the trial court’s
    suppression order.    We remand to the trial court for proceedings
    consistent with this opinion.
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER and JUSTICES LaVECCHIA, PATTERSON, and
    SOLOMON join in JUSTICE ALBIN’s opinion. JUSTICE FERNANDEZ-VINA
    and JUDGE CUFF (temporarily assigned) did not participate.
    20
    SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    NO.       A-21                                     SEPTEMBER TERM 2014
    ON APPEAL FROM               Appellate Division, Superior Court
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    ANTOINE D. WATTS,
    Defendant-Respondent.
    DECIDED                 December 2, 2015
    Chief Justice Rabner                       PRESIDING
    OPINION BY            Justice Albin
    CONCURRING/DISSENTING OPINION BY
    DISSENTING OPINION BY
    REVERSE AND
    CHECKLIST
    REMAND
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER                         X
    JUSTICE LaVECCHIA                            X
    JUSTICE ALBIN                                X
    JUSTICE PATTERSON                            X
    JUSTICE FERNANDEZ-VINA              --------------------
    JUSTICE SOLOMON                              X
    JUDGE CUFF (t/a)                    --------------------
    TOTALS                                       5