State v. Rafael Camey (080574)(Passaic County and Statewide) ( 2019 )


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  •                                        SYLLABUS
    This syllabus is not part of the Court’s opinion. 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
    Court. In the interest of brevity, portions of an opinion may not have been summarized.
    State v. Rafael Camey (A-73-17) (080574)
    Argued January 2, 2019 -- Decided August 1, 2019
    LaVECCHIA, J., writing for the Court.
    The Court reviews two key pre-trial determinations involving the DNA evidence
    from defendant Rafael Camey, who stands charged with murder. First, the trial court
    ruled the results of a buccal swab that had been excluded on the basis of invalid consent
    inadmissible under either of the State’s inevitable discovery arguments. Second, the trial
    court also applied an inevitable discovery analysis in rejecting the State’s application to
    take a second buccal swab from defendant. The second determination raises a novel
    question: Under what circumstances, if any, may the police apply to conduct a new
    search for immutable evidence like DNA? Is a suspect’s DNA off-limits to law
    enforcement for all time if an initial search was invalid? Or, are there situations in which
    law enforcement may seek a new buccal swab to examine a person’s DNA?
    On September 30, 2013, the Passaic Police Department received a 9-1-1 report of
    a brutally beaten body of a woman, later identified as “Katie,” in a wooded area near a
    river bank behind a ShopRite store. Sergeant Bordamonte, the lead detective in the
    matter, was familiar with “Tina,” a prostitute, who placed the 9-1-1 call. Bordamonte
    interviewed Tina, who said that Katie was “the new girl on the block” and that she saw
    Katie with a person she described as a “violent Mexican male” on the night before
    Katie’s death. Tina said that she had been choked by the same man during a paid sexual
    encounter. She also said that the man had assaulted another woman.
    Police obtained a statement from Katie’s husband, who stated that Katie was a
    prostitute and drug addict who would “disappear for days at times.” Later, Bordamonte
    learned that Katie’s husband had been arrested for aggravated sexual assault and
    kidnapping and that there had been a domestic violence incident between him and Katie.
    Over the next weeks, the police interviewed Tina again, as well as other people
    who knew Katie. The police also interviewed and took, with consent, buccal swabs from
    numerous individuals who were in the vicinity of where Katie’s body was found. On
    October 20, 2013, Tina called police to report that she saw the violent male. Police
    responded to her location, where Tina made an on-scene identification of defendant.
    1
    The next night, officers went to a bar that defendant frequented after his work shift
    and detained him. A detective advised defendant of his Miranda rights and interviewed
    him in Spanish, his native language, but presented him with a consent form for a buccal
    swab printed in English. After defendant signed the untranslated form, another detective
    took a buccal swab from defendant and released him. Several weeks later, Bordamonte
    sent defendant’s DNA sample, along with the approximately twenty other samples
    collected from local homeless individuals, to the State Police Laboratory for testing.
    On June 25, 2014, the State Police notified Bordamonte that DNA found on
    Katie’s body matched defendant’s DNA profile. That day, defendant was placed under
    arrest and charged with felony murder, murder, and aggravated sexual assault.
    During pre-trial applications, the trial court was required to evaluate defendant’s
    consent to the buccal swab. The court determined that the consent obtained from
    defendant was invalid and ordered suppression of the DNA test results from that swab,
    holding that the swab was the product of an illegal detention, the consent form presented
    to defendant was written in English and never translated for defendant into his native
    Spanish, and defendant was never informed of his right to refuse or that the DNA would
    be sent to a police lab for analysis in a criminal investigation.
    Thereafter, the trial court also rejected the State’s further argument that the swab’s
    results were admissible under the inevitable discovery exception to the exclusionary rule.
    The court followed the formulation of that doctrine adopted for use in New Jersey in
    State v. Sugar, 
    100 N.J. 214
     (1985) (Sugar II). The court determined that the State failed
    to show that proper, normal and specific investigative procedures would have been
    pursued. The court noted there was “little urgency” and “little use of legal process”
    throughout the investigation and referenced Bordamonte’s “infrequent use of the legal
    process,” throughout his career. The court further pointed to other investigatory failings
    or shortcomings, citing as “shocking” the failure to interview defendant’s roommates or
    co-workers regarding his whereabouts on the night of the murder, and the failure to seek
    a search warrant for the home of Katie’s husband, despite his criminal history, including
    his prior incident of domestic violence involving the victim.
    The court rebuffed the State’s argument that it would have inevitably obtained
    defendant’s DNA because police are statutorily required to take a DNA sample from
    persons arrested for certain enumerated violent crimes including sexual assault (with
    which defendant was charged here). Because defendant was arrested primarily based on
    the illegally obtained DNA sample, the court would not allow the State to rely on an
    arrest based on those DNA results to justify the taking of another swab. Moving on to the
    State’s application to compel defendant to provide a new buccal swab under Rule 3:5A,
    the trial court denied the motion. The court concluded that the application must also be
    evaluated under inevitable discovery and held that the doctrine’s application already had
    been rejected by the court.
    2
    The Appellate Division affirmed on interlocutory appeal, and the Court granted
    the State’s motion for leave to appeal. 
    234 N.J. 6
     (2018).
    HELD: The Court affirms the suppression of DNA evidence from the first buccal swab.
    The trial court’s thorough and detailed reasons for denying admission of this evidence,
    under either of the State’s two inevitable discovery arguments, are clearly sustainable on
    appeal. However, the State’s application for a second buccal swab calls for a remand for
    further proceedings consistent with this opinion and its new test, derived in part from
    aspects of the independent source doctrine: To apply for a new buccal swab for DNA
    evidence under Rule 3:5A, the State must demonstrate probable cause for the new search.
    That showing may include evidence that existed before the initial invalid search, but
    cannot be tainted by the results of the prior search. In addition, to deter wrongdoing by
    the police, the State must show by clear and convincing evidence that the initial
    impermissible search was not the result of flagrant police misconduct.
    1. A buccal swab is a common method to collect specimen material for DNA testing.
    But it is also a “search,” and must be obtained in a manner consistent with constitutional
    search and seizure principles for valid use in a criminal prosecution. To pass muster, a
    search must be conducted pursuant to a search warrant or must fall within an exception to
    the warrant requirement. Obtaining voluntary consent to conduct a buccal swab is one
    way to obtain a constitutionally valid swab without a search warrant. Another means for
    obtaining a swab is to utilize judicial authority to compel a suspect to submit to an
    investigative detention. Pursuant to Rule 3:5A-1, investigative detention orders can
    compel a defendant “to submit to non-testimonial identification procedures for the
    purpose of obtaining evidence of that person’s physical characteristics.” Rule 3:5A-4
    provides the substantive standards for issuance of such an order. (pp. 17-20)
    2. Whereas consent can serve as an exception to the warrant requirement, the inevitable
    discovery doctrine under Sugar II can preserve the admissibility of evidence obtained
    without a warrant or a valid exception to the warrant requirement. The Court agrees with
    the trial court’s determination that inevitable discovery was the correct prism through
    which to evaluate the State’s request to avoid exclusion of the DNA results from
    defendant’s illegal buccal swab. While no published New Jersey opinion has applied the
    inevitable discovery doctrine to immutable DNA evidence, many other states have. The
    Court rejects arguments that DNA identification evidence is exempt from an inevitable
    discovery analysis merely because it reveals uniquely identifying information about an
    individual’s identity. The trial court and Appellate Division here correctly determined
    that the doctrine could be used to evaluate DNA evidence. (pp. 21-27)
    3. The Court also agrees with the trial court’s application of the inevitable discovery
    standard to defendant’s buccal swab and has no difficulty affirming its findings, which
    were based on the determination that the State failed to meet the first prong of the Sugar
    II test by clear and convincing evidence. The State argues that police either would have
    3
    applied for a search warrant or an investigative detention to obtain a buccal swab from
    defendant or would have acted on its probable cause to arrest him. But the events of the
    actual investigation suggest otherwise, as the trial court found. (pp. 27-30)
    4. The trial court also used an inevitable discovery analysis to parse the State’s
    application under Rule 3:5A for an order to take a new buccal swab and rejected the
    request essentially for the reasons already given in its previous inevitable discovery
    ruling. The Court is unconvinced that an inevitable discovery framework is correct in
    these circumstances. The doctrine generally addresses completed searches that cannot be
    replicated. A key factor in the trial court’s decision here was its perception that the State
    was seeking to obtain through legal means the same evidence that it had earlier obtained
    unlawfully. But DNA is not an item like guns, drugs, or documents. A new DNA
    sample might provide the same information as the original sample, but each sample is
    evidence in its own right -- and the exclusionary rule bars the use of the same evidence
    that was illegally obtained or “poisoned fruit” evidence that would not have been
    discovered but for the initial, illegally obtained evidence. The State’s request to compel a
    new sample must therefore be viewed for what it truly is: a request to obtain a new
    buccal sample -- new evidence -- notwithstanding that it will lead to the same uniquely
    identifying information that DNA provides. A properly issued judicial order under Rule
    3:5A-4 should be available to law enforcement, on the right terms. (pp. 30-33)
    5. The Court fashions a standard tailored for the unique nature of DNA evidence and a
    fair assessment of whether a second buccal swab sample should be allowed. The test is
    derived in part from aspects of the independent source doctrine, as set forth in State v.
    Holland, 
    176 N.J. 344
    , 360-62 (2003). Noting that flagrancy is a high bar that requires
    active disregard of proper procedure, or overt attempts to undermine constitutional
    protections, the Court adopts the following test: First, the State must demonstrate that
    probable cause exists to conduct the new search. The court should look at the showing
    advanced by the State to demonstrate probable cause. The evidence may involve the
    same evidence that existed at the time of the illegal search. Thus, Tina’s statements and
    her identification of defendant are not off-limits. Second, the court should determine
    whether the State’s showing of probable cause is untainted by the results of the prior
    search. Here, that means that the probable cause must be independent of the information
    obtained through the results from the prior swab. Third, to deter wrongdoing by the
    police, the Court requires the State to show by clear and convincing evidence that the
    initial impermissible search was not the result of flagrant police misconduct. The Court
    notes that a buccal swab is minimally intrusive and stresses that it is considering only a
    Rule 3:5A application which addresses minimally intrusive identification procedures.
    The Court remands to allow the State to demonstrate whether it can meet the standard
    announced. Because the original judge made extensive credibility determinations about
    the witnesses before the court, as well as about Tina, who was not before the court, the
    Court refers this matter to the Assignment Judge for assignment. (pp. 33-36)
    4
    The judgment of the Appellate Division is AFFIRMED IN PART and
    REVERSED IN PART, and the matter is REMANDED for further proceedings.
    JUSTICE ALBIN, dissenting, expresses the view that there is no basis to reverse
    the trial court’s suppression order and to remand before a different judge, because the
    State cannot prove by clear and convincing evidence that the police officers did not
    engage in flagrant misconduct when they unlawfully detained Camey three times,
    unlawfully interrogated him, and unlawfully secured a buccal swab without his consent.
    Justice Albin notes that the trial court properly applied the inevitable discovery doctrine
    -- the theory presented by the State at the suppression hearing -- and that its factfindings
    must be accorded deference. Justice Albin also explains that the majority’s retreat from
    Holland’s rigorous independent source test -- the test for determining whether a “seizure
    of evidence was independent of, and untainted by, earlier illegal police misconduct” --
    diminishes the deterrent effect of the exclusionary rule. In Justice Albin’s view, allowing
    the State to rely on the same evidence to establish probable cause permits the police a do-
    over after a failure to adhere to constitutional dictates.
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER and JUSTICES PATTERSON, FERNANDEZ-VINA,
    SOLOMON, and TIMPONE join in JUSTICE LaVECCHIA’s opinion. JUSTICE
    ALBIN filed a dissent.
    5
    SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    A-73 September Term 2017
    080574
    State of New Jersey,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    Rafael Camey,
    Defendant-Respondent.
    On appeal from the Superior Court,
    Appellate Division .
    Argued                      Decided
    January 2, 2019               August 1, 2019
    Lila B. Leonard, Deputy Attorney General, argued the
    cause for appellant (Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney General,
    attorney; Lila B. Leonard, of counsel and on the brief,
    and Christopher W. Hsieh, Chief Assistant Passaic
    County Prosecutor, on the brief).
    Stefan Van Jura, Deputy Public Defender, argued the
    cause for respondent (Joseph E. Krakora, Public
    Defender, attorney; Stefan Van Jura, of counsel and on
    the brief, and Laura C. Sutnick, Designated Counsel, on
    the brief).
    Alexander Shalom argued the cause for amicus curiae
    American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey (American
    Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey Foundation,
    attorneys; Alexander Shalom, Tess Borden, Edward
    Barocas, and Jeanne LoCicero, on the brief).
    1
    JUSTICE LaVECCHIA delivered the opinion of the Court.
    In this case, defendant Rafael Camey stands charged with murder. The
    police discovered the victim’s lifeless body behind a supermarket in Passaic
    and swabbed it for DNA evidence. The victim had been brutally beaten and
    was partially disrobed; the cause of her death was blunt force trauma and
    drowning.
    The ensuing investigation led the police to search for a particular violent
    individual with whom the victim had been seen. To try to solve the crime, the
    police swabbed multiple individuals for DNA including defendant. His DNA
    profile matched the DNA found in the victim. In this interlocutory appeal, we
    review two key pre-trial determinations involving the DNA evidence from
    defendant.
    First, after the trial court granted defendant’s motion to suppress DNA
    results from a buccal swab obtained on the basis of invalid consent, which the
    State no longer contests, the State sought admission of the excluded DNA
    results on the basis of inevitable discovery. The State argued that it could
    have obtained a buccal swab from defendant under N.J.S.A. 53:1-20.20 or
    through an application for investigative detention under Rule 3:5A-4. The trial
    court agreed to employ an inevitable discovery analysis and ruled the results
    2
    from that buccal swab inadmissible under either inevitable discovery
    argument. The Appellate Division affirmed the suppression of the results from
    that swab.
    Second, the State filed a separate application under Rule 3:5A-4 to take
    a second buccal swab from defendant. The court again turned to the
    framework of an inevitable discovery analysis and rejected the application.
    The Appellate Division again affirmed.
    Like the trial court and the Appellate Division, we hold that the police
    violated the Fourth Amendment in the way they obtained defendant’s DNA.
    As a result, the results from that search cannot be used.
    DNA evidence, however, is immutable. It is unlike a completed search
    of a home in which the police already removed contraband -- a search that
    cannot be repeated. After a person is swabbed for DNA, of course, his DNA
    remains intact. It will be the same ten years from now as it was several years
    ago. The application for a second buccal swab from defendant calls into
    question the standard to which the State should be held when making an
    application for a judicially sanctioned swab as part of an investigative
    detention, see R. 3:5A-4, after the State’s previous swab -- secured through an
    unconstitutional search and seizure -- was excluded. Notwithstanding the
    immutability of DNA information, the second buccal swab does not lose its
    3
    character as a second search and seizure merely because the new buccal
    evidence will provide the same uniquely identifying information available
    from an individual’s DNA that the initial buccal evidence provided.
    The appeal thus raises a novel question: Under what circumstances, if
    any, may the police apply to conduct a new search for immutable evidence like
    DNA? Is a suspect’s DNA off-limits to law enforcement for all time if an
    initial search was invalid? Or, are there situations in which law enforcement
    may seek a new buccal swab to examine a person’s DNA?
    We conclude that a traditional inevitable discovery “look-back” analysis
    for alternative reasoning to support admission of already-seized evidence is a
    poor fit for the analysis needed in these circumstances. Instead, we draw from
    the independent source doctrine to analyze the question and frame an
    appropriate test. To apply for a new buccal swab for DNA evidence under
    Rule 3:5A, we conclude that the State must demonstrate probable cause for the
    new search. That showing may include evidence that existed before the initial
    invalid search, but the showing cannot be tainted by the results of the prior
    search. In addition, to deter wrongdoing by the police, the State must show by
    clear and convincing evidence that the initial impermissible search was not the
    result of flagrant police misconduct. The approach adopted protects a
    4
    suspect’s constitutional rights and recognizes the legitimate public interest in a
    fair assessment of whether a second buccal swab sample should be allowed.
    In sum, we affirm the suppression of DNA evidence from the first buccal
    swab. We hold that the trial court’s thorough and detailed reasons for denying
    admission of this evidence, under either of the State’s two inevitable discovery
    arguments, are clearly sustainable on appeal. However, the State’s application
    for a second buccal swab calls for a remand. We vacate the Appellate
    Division’s affirmance of the denial of the State’s application to take a new
    buccal swab from defendant and remand for further proceedings consistent
    with this opinion and the new test set forth herein.
    I.
    The pertinent facts from the pre-trial applications and related evidential
    proceedings involve the State’s investigation into the death of a woman whose
    body was discovered in a secluded area of Passaic and the narrowing of the
    investigation to defendant.
    A little after 6:00 p.m. on September 30, 2013, the Passaic Police
    Department received a 9-1-1 report of a body in a wooded area near a river
    bank behind a ShopRite store. Sergeant Bordamonte, the lead detective in the
    matter, testified that the deceased -- later determined to be a woman named
    5
    Katie1 -- had been “beaten very, very brutally” and was partially disrobed. An
    autopsy revealed that the cause of death was blunt force trauma and drowning.
    Bordamonte was familiar with Tina, the person who placed the 9-1-1
    call. The police knew she was a prostitute who frequented the area where
    Katie’s body was located and that she had provided useful information in other
    police investigations.
    Bordamonte interviewed Tina the day after Katie’s body was found.
    Tina told Bordamonte that Katie was “the new girl on the block” and that she
    saw Katie with a person she described as a “violent Mexican male” (the violent
    male) at about 11:00 p.m. on the night before Katie’s death. Tina said that she
    had been choked by the same man during a paid sexual encounter. She also
    said that the man had assaulted another woman, Ashley, and that a friend,
    Dennis, would be better able to describe this man because Dennis “definitely
    knows who he is.”2 Bordamonte showed Tina photographs from the police
    database and later drove her around in the hope that she might recognize the
    man she recalled seeing with Katie. Neither effort produced an identification,
    and Tina agreed to contact the police if she saw the man again. According to
    1
    We have assigned fictitious names to many individuals discussed herein,
    including the victim, her husband, and the informant.
    2
    Those statements were not borne out in independent interviews of Ashley
    and Dennis.
    6
    Bordamonte, Tina appeared to be under the influence of an intoxicating
    substance during this initial interview.
    Later that day, police obtained a statement from Katie’s husband,
    Martin. According to Martin, Katie was a prostitute and drug addict. He said
    that he had not seen her for one or two days and that it was not uncommon for
    her to “disappear for days at times.” Bordamonte later learned, through a
    criminal history search, that Martin had been arrested for aggravated sexual
    assault and kidnapping and that there had been a domestic violence incident
    between him and Katie.
    Three days after finding Katie’s body, Bordamonte conducted a second
    interview with Tina in which she repeated that she last saw Katie with the
    violent male the night before her body was found. During this interview, Tina
    again appeared to Bordamonte to be under the influence of drugs.
    That same day, police officers conducted on-scene interviews with
    approximately sixteen homeless individuals who were in the vicinity of where
    Katie’s body was found and from whom the police received consent to take
    buccal swabs. None of the individuals whom the police interviewed and
    swabbed were able to provide information related to Katie’s death.
    Beforehand, police had administered buccal swabs to at least four other
    homeless individuals who were in the area near where Katie’s body was found.
    7
    On October 8, 2013, police interviewed a friend of Katie’s, Penny, who
    reported that Katie and Martin were having “marital problems.” Penny also
    stated that, on the night before Katie’s body was found, she saw her with a
    man named Richard and she believed Richard was involved in the murder
    because he had not been back since that night. Richard was subsequently
    interviewed, and he confirmed that he saw Katie the night before her body was
    found. Others interviewed by Bordamonte included a woman who reported
    that she had acted as a lookout for Katie while Katie had a sexual encounter
    with a Polish man the day she was killed. According to this report, Katie and
    that man were alone for a long time.
    On October 18, 2013, Tina was interviewed for a third time. She
    reiterated that she last saw Katie walking away from others toward a more
    secluded area with the so-called violent male and added that the “rumor in the
    street” was that someone called “Blaze” killed Katie.3 Two days after this
    interview, Tina called police to report that she saw the violent male about
    whom she had been telling them. Police responded to her location, where Tina
    made an on-scene identification of defendant by pointing him out.
    3
    At the suppression hearing, Bordamonte could not confidently confirm that
    Tina was under the influence of drugs during the October 18 interview , unlike
    his observations from earlier interviews, but he stated that her behavior that
    day suggested that she may have been.
    8
    Thus, despite the investigation leading in various directions, by October
    21, 2013, defendant was a person of interest in the investigation into Katie’s
    murder. That night, officers went to a bar that defendant frequented after his
    work shift and detained him. Detective Alex Flores advised defendant of his
    Miranda4 rights and interviewed him in Spanish, his native language. Flores
    also presented defendant with a consent form for a buccal swab printed in
    English. After defendant signed the untranslated form, another detective took
    a buccal swab from defendant and released him.
    Several weeks later, on January 13, 2014, Bordamonte sent defendant’s
    DNA sample, along with the approximately twenty other samples that the
    police had collected from local homeless individuals, to the State Police
    Laboratory for testing. Bordamonte testified that he waited so he could submit
    the samples in a single group, conceding that the submission “was a touch
    delayed.”
    On March 18, 2014, Tina provided police with another formal statement,
    this time shortly after her incarceration, during which she was drug-free. This
    statement was consistent with her previous statements regarding Katie and the
    violent male. Also, after viewing photographs depicting eighteen of the
    twenty individuals who had either consented to buccal swabs or been
    4
    Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
     (1966).
    9
    interviewed as part of the investigation, Tina picked out defendant as the
    violent male she had described.
    On April 8, 2014, police brought defendant in for a second interview .
    Detective Reinaldo Arroyo read defendant his Miranda rights in Spanish and
    repeated them, upon defendant’s request, before conducting the interview.
    Defendant was released at the end of that interview.
    On June 25, 2014, the State Police notified Bordamonte that DNA found
    on Katie’s body matched defendant’s DNA profile. That day, defendant was
    brought to police headquarters, was read his Miranda rights in Spanish, and
    spoke with police for several hours. He was placed under arrest at the
    conclusion of that interview and charged with felony murder, N.J.S.A. 2C:11-
    3(a)(3); murder, N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3(a)(1); and aggravated sexual assault,
    N.J.S.A. 2C:14-2(a)(6).
    II.
    During pre-trial applications, the trial court was required to evaluate
    defendant’s consent to the buccal swab. The court already had ordered the
    suppression of defendant’s three statements, which the State does not contest
    on appeal. With respect to the buccal swab, the court determined that the
    consent obtained from defendant was invalid and ordered suppression of the
    DNA test results from that swab. The court held that the swab was the product
    10
    of an illegal detention, the consent form presented to defendant was written in
    English and never translated for defendant into his native Spanish, and
    defendant was never informed of his right to refuse or that the DNA would be
    sent to a police lab for analysis in a criminal investigation.
    Thereafter, the trial court also rejected the State’s further argument that
    the swab’s results were admissible under the inevitable discovery exception to
    the exclusionary rule. The court followed the formulation of that doctrine
    adopted for use in this State in State v. Sugar, 
    100 N.J. 214
     (1985) (Sugar II),
    which has a three-pronged test that the State must satisfy by clear and
    convincing evidence.
    The court determined that the State failed to show that proper, normal
    and specific investigative procedures would have been pursued, rejecting, in
    particular, the State’s assertion that Bordamonte would have applied for a
    search warrant for defendant’s DNA had defendant denied consent. In
    reaching that conclusion, the court reasoned that although Bordamonte
    collected DNA samples from twenty “homeless males” and several other
    people by the time detectives obtained defendant’s DNA on October 21, 2013,
    the swabs were not taken to the lab until January 13, 2014. The court noted
    there was “little urgency” and “little use of legal process” throughout the
    investigation and referenced Bordamonte’s “infrequent use of the legal
    11
    process,” throughout his career.5 The court further pointed to other
    investigatory failings or shortcomings as reinforcing the conclusion that police
    would not have obtained a warrant for DNA. For example, the court cited as
    “shocking” the failure to interview defendant’s roommates or co-workers
    regarding his whereabouts on the night of the murder, and the failure to seek a
    search warrant for the home of Katie’s husband, Martin, despite his criminal
    history, including his prior incident of domestic violence involving the victim.
    The court added that, even if Bordamonte had applied for a warrant or a
    Rule 3:5A investigative detention order when taking the buccal swab from
    defendant, the court “would have been very concerned as to whether the
    application met the standard required.” Among other things, the court cited
    credibility concerns attributed to Tina’s criminal history and her substantial
    narcotics impairment at the time of two of her statements relied on by the
    State.
    To the extent that the State argued that it would have inevitably obtained
    defendant’s DNA because police are statutorily required to take a DNA sample
    from persons arrested for certain enumerated violent crimes under N.J.S.A.
    53:1-20.20, including sexual assault (with which defendant was charged here),
    the court rebuffed the argument. Explaining that defendant was arrested
    5
    The court also relied on a past internal investigation involving Bordamonte.
    12
    primarily based on the illegally obtained DNA sample, the court would not
    allow the State to rely on an arrest based on those DNA results or his
    suppressed statements to justify the taking of the swab sample. The court also
    questioned whether Tina, who had not appeared in court, had sufficient
    credibility to support an arrest based on her claim that she had been assaulted
    by defendant in the past.
    Moving on to the State’s application to compel defendant to provide a
    new buccal swab under Rule 3:5A, the trial court denied the motion. The court
    concluded that the application must also be evaluated under inevitable
    discovery and held that the doctrine’s application already had been rejected by
    the court.
    The State filed an interlocutory appeal from both rulings, which the
    Appellate Division granted. The Appellate Division stated that the trial court’s
    “detailed and well-reasoned oral decision” was consistent with Sugar II and
    properly considered whether Bordamonte would have obtained a search
    warrant, rather than whether he could have. Noting that an appellate court is
    not at liberty to supplant the trial court’s credibility determinations with its
    own “merely because [it] might have reached a different conclusion,” the
    appellate court affirmed the trial court. The Appellate Division held that, “in
    light of the record and the judge’s detailed conclusions,” the trial court did not
    13
    abuse its discretion in suppressing the results of the first buccal swab, denying
    the State’s motion to admit the evidence under inevitable discovery, and
    denying the motion to compel a second buccal swab also under an inevitable
    discovery analysis.
    The State moved for leave to appeal. We granted the State’s motion.
    
    234 N.J. 6
     (2018). We also granted leave to appear as amicus curiae to the
    American Civil Liberties Union -- New Jersey (ACLU).
    III.
    The State maintains before this Court that it has shown by clear and
    convincing evidence that the evidence from the first buccal swab would have
    been inevitably discovered under the three-prong test set forth in Sugar II.
    With regard to the denial of its application under Rule 3:5A to take a
    second buccal swab, the State argues that it has probable cause to collect
    defendant’s DNA today “based [in part] on the robust investigation the police
    conducted” before obtaining defendant’s DNA sample on October 21, 2013.
    Regardless of any alleged constitutional violation in connection with obtaining
    the first swab, the State argues that defendant should not be permitted to
    “suppress his identity.”
    Defendant maintains that the State failed to satisfy the Sugar test and
    largely relies on the trial court’s findings and reasoning. Defendant also
    14
    disputes that the State could have obtained defendant’s DNA pursuant to
    N.J.S.A. 53:1-20.20. And, in response to the State’s argument that defendant
    cannot “suppress his identity” in connection with an application for a second
    buccal swab under Rule 3:5A and otherwise, defendant reasons that DNA is
    “something of evidentiary value” and, as “identity-related evidence,” it can be
    suppressed just like other evidence.
    The ACLU emphasizes that the State established only that it was
    plausible -- not that it was inevitable, as required under Sugar -- that
    Bordamonte would have applied for a warrant to search defendant had police
    not performed an invalid consent search. It urges that we not disturb the trial
    court’s determinations about Bordamonte’s credibility as a witness or second
    guess the evidence the court considered in making the determination about
    what he would have done. More fundamentally, the ACLU challenges the use
    of inevitable discovery in this setting. It contends police officers would have
    no incentive to seek warrants even when they have probable cause to search if
    they could simply argue inevitable discovery later.
    The ACLU also argues that the leading inevitable discovery cases
    require an inevitable discovery despite -- not simply in the absence of -- the
    unlawful behavior. In this case, the ACLU maintains that the application for a
    judicial warrant to take a second buccal swab would not have occurred despite
    15
    the unlawful buccal swab. The ACLU reasons that, because the lawful process
    that “would have” resulted in inevitable discovery was not independent from
    the unlawful process that actually was pursued, any use of the inevitable
    discovery doctrine in this matter should be invalid.
    IV.
    A.
    The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Article I,
    Paragraph 7 of the New Jersey Constitution protect individuals from
    unreasonable searches and seizures. State v. Gathers, 
    234 N.J. 208
    , 219
    (2018). “Those provisions impose a standard of reasonableness on the
    exercise of discretion by government officials to protect persons against
    arbitrary invasions.” State v. Chisum, 
    236 N.J. 530
    , 544-45 (2019) (quoting
    State v. Maristany, 
    133 N.J. 299
    , 304 (1993)). In balancing an intrusion
    against the promotion of legitimate governmental interests when performing a
    reasonableness analysis, the balance generally is struck “in favor of the
    procedures described by the Warrant Clause of the Fourth Amendment.” State
    v. O’Hagen, 
    189 N.J. 140
    , 149 (2007) (quoting Skinner v. Ry. Labor Execs.’
    Ass’n, 
    489 U.S. 602
    , 619 (1989)).
    The warrant requirement interposes a neutral magistrate between the
    police officer and the person against whom the search is directed, unless the
    16
    search falls within a recognized exception to the warrant requirement. See
    State v. Sullivan, 
    169 N.J. 204
    , 210 (2001). Evidence that is seized in
    violation of the warrant requirement, and any recognized exception to it, is
    excluded as a general rule. 
    Ibid.
    Those very basic principles provide the starting point to our analysis.
    B.
    This appeal concerns the taking of a buccal swab from defendant, which
    produced nontestimonial DNA identification information about defendant.
    This is a unique category of evidence.
    DNA evidence is extremely useful for identification purposes in criminal
    prosecutions as well as for exonerations. See Dist. Attorney’s Office for the
    Third Judicial Dist. v. Osborne, 
    557 U.S. 52
    , 55 (2009) (“DNA [evidence] has
    an unparalleled ability both to exonerate the wrongly convicted and to identify
    the guilty. It has the potential to significantly improve both the criminal
    justice system and police investigative practices.”). The United States
    Supreme Court has stated that the difference between using DNA analysis and
    fingerprint databases to identify a suspect “is the unparalleled accuracy DNA
    provides.” Maryland v. King, 
    569 U.S. 435
    , 451 (2013). As a result, “the
    utility of DNA identification in the criminal justice system [has become]
    17
    undisputed.” Id. at 442. Our own case law recognizes as much. See State v.
    Sterling, 
    215 N.J. 65
    , 103-04 (2013); see also O’Hagen, 
    189 N.J. at 163
    .
    Presently, all fifty states require the collection of DNA for certain -- if
    not all -- felony convictions. King, 569 U.S. at 445; see, e.g., 
    34 U.S.C. § 12592
     (creating federal index to facilitate law enforcement exchange of DNA
    identification information); N.J.S.A. 53:1-20.20 (requiring collection of DNA
    upon conviction of certain crimes and upon arrest for a limited set of
    enumerated offenses). Thus, in New Jersey, and other jurisdictions, law
    enforcement uses the collection of DNA as an important tool in identification.
    A buccal swab is a common method of law enforcement collection of
    specimen material for DNA testing. But, it is also beyond dispute that the
    taking of a buccal swab “for the purposes of obtaining a DNA sample is a
    ‘search.’” O’Hagen, 
    189 N.J. at
    149 (citing Skinner, 
    489 U.S. at 616-17
    );
    accord Gathers, 234 N.J. at 221. And because a buccal swab constitutes a
    search, it must be obtained in a manner consistent with constitutional search
    and seizure principles for valid use in a criminal prosecution.
    To pass constitutional muster, a search must be conducted pursuant to a
    search warrant or must fall within an exception to the warrant requirement.
    See Sullivan, 
    169 N.J. at 210
    . “One well-recognized exception to the warrant
    requirement is consent.” State v. Cushing, 
    226 N.J. 187
    , 199 (2016) (citing
    18
    Schneckloth v. Bustamonte, 
    412 U.S. 218
    , 219 (1973)). Obtaining voluntary
    consent to conduct a buccal swab is one way to obtain a constitutionally valid
    swab without a search warrant. To ensure validity, warnings given to an
    individual informing about the right to refuse consent help the State later carry
    its burden to demonstrate that the consent was truly a voluntary, knowing, and
    intelligent waiver of the right to be free of such an intrusion. See State v.
    Johnson, 
    68 N.J. 349
    , 354 (1975).
    Another means for obtaining a swab is to utilize judicial authority to
    compel a suspect to submit to an investigative detention, which is the
    functional equivalent of an application for issuance of a search warrant. See
    State v. Hall, 
    93 N.J. 552
    , 557-59 (1983) (recognizing judicial authority to
    authorize investigative detentions founded on the Judiciary’s constitutional
    authority governing search and seizure). Taking a lead from the United States
    Supreme Court in Davis v. Mississippi, 
    394 U.S. 721
    , 727-28 (1969), our
    Court concluded that for certain detentions, which are minimally intrusive,
    produce reliable evidence, and can be effected “without abuse, coercion or
    intimidation,” the proofs required for an investigative detention order need not
    rise to probable cause. Hall, 
    93 N.J. at 561-62
    ; accord In re Alleged
    Aggravated Sexual Assault of A.S., 
    366 N.J. Super. 402
    , 409-10 (App. Div.
    2004).
    19
    Court rules now formalize the guidelines for issuance of an order for
    investigative detention to compel lineups, fingerprinting, and other minimally
    intrusive identification procedures. See State v. Rolle, 
    265 N.J. Super. 482
    ,
    486 (App. Div. 1993). Pursuant to Rule 3:5A-1, investigative detention orders
    can compel a defendant “to submit to non-testimonial identification procedures
    for the purpose of obtaining evidence of that person’s physical characteristics.”
    Rule 3:5A-4 provides the substantive standards for issuance of such an order:
    An order for an investigative detention shall be issued
    only if the judge concludes from the application that:
    (a) a crime has been committed and is under
    active investigation, and
    (b) there is a reasonable and well-grounded basis
    from which to believe that the person sought may
    have committed the crime, and
    (c) the results of the physical characteristics
    obtained during the detention will significantly
    advance the investigation and determine whether
    or not the individual probably committed the
    crime, and
    (d) the physical characteristics sought cannot
    otherwise practicably be obtained.
    [R. 3:5A-4.]
    20
    C.
    Our analysis in this matter begins from the vantage point of the trial
    court’s foundational finding that defendant’s initial buccal swab was taken
    through invalid consent -- a finding that the State does not dispute. Rather, the
    State claims the results of that swab should be admitted on the basis of
    inevitable discovery.
    Whereas consent can serve as an exception to the warrant requirement,
    the inevitable discovery doctrine can preserve -- if certain conditions are
    satisfied -- the admissibility of evidence obtained without a warrant or a valid
    exception to the warrant requirement. Specifically, the inevitable discovery
    doctrine allows for the admission of evidence obtained through law
    enforcement’s unconstitutional conduct if that evidence would have been
    discovered in the absence of that unlawful conduct. See Nix v. Williams, 
    467 U.S. 431
    , 444-48 (1984). Inevitable discovery tempers the “social costs
    associated with the exclusionary rule” by placing “police in the same position
    that they would have been in had no police misconduct occurred.” Sugar II,
    
    100 N.J. at 237
    .
    The doctrine is rooted in the deterrent goal of the exclusionary rule. To
    promote that objective, the exclusionary rule prevents the prosecution from
    being in a better position than if the illegal conduct had not taken place; it is
    21
    not meant to punish the prosecution by putting it in a worse place. 
    Id.
     at 236-
    37. Considered a narrow exception to the exclusionary rule, our standard for
    allowing evidence on the basis of inevitable discovery requires the State to
    demonstrate, by clear and convincing evidence, 
    id. at 240
    , that
    (1) proper, normal and specific investigatory
    procedures would have been pursued in order to
    complete the investigation of the case; (2) under all of
    the surrounding relevant circumstances the pursuit of
    those procedures would have inevitably resulted in the
    discovery of the evidence; and (3) the discovery of the
    evidence through the use of such procedures would
    have occurred wholly independently of the discovery of
    such evidence by unlawful means.
    [Id. at 238.]
    Our standard for inevitable discovery does not require “the State [to]
    demonstrate the exact circumstances of the evidence’s discovery.” State v.
    Maltese, 
    222 N.J. 525
    , 552 (2015) (quoting State v. Sugar, 
    108 N.J. 151
    , 158
    (1987) (Sugar III)). Rather, “[t]he State need only present facts or elements --
    proving each such fact or element by a preponderance of the evidence -- that in
    combination clearly and convincingly establish the ultimate fact and lead to
    the conclusion that the evidence would be inevitably discovered.” Sugar III,
    
    108 N.J. at 159
    . That said, the doctrine cannot be used to elide the warrant
    requirement. Sugar II specifically warned against that. 
    100 N.J. at
    240 n.3
    (stating that when illegal conduct “consists simply of the failure to obtain a
    22
    search warrant, the exception should not be applied to circumvent the warrant
    requirement . . . or to defeat the deterrent purposes espoused in the
    exclusionary rule” (citing Nix, 
    467 U.S. 431
    ; United States v. Griffin, 
    502 F.2d 959
     (6th Cir. 1974); Commonwealth v. Benoit, 
    415 N.E.2d 818
     (Mass.
    1981))).
    V.
    With that general background in mind, we review first the trial court’s
    use of the inevitable discovery doctrine to evaluate the State’s request to avoid
    exclusion of the DNA results from defendant’s illegal buccal swab.
    We agree with the trial court’s determination that inevitable discovery
    was the correct prism through which to analyze the unique immutable
    nontestimonial identification evidence that was obtained in this case. The
    immutable nature of the evidence does not exempt it from the analytic
    framework that controls for inevitable discovery. First, nothing about our
    decisions in Sugar or any other related case suggests that the exclusionary rule
    and its exceptions do not apply with equal force to evidence based on mutable
    and immutable characteristics. Indeed, the Supreme Court’s decision in Davis
    indicates that the exclusionary rule applies to both forms of evidence. 
    394 U.S. at 724
     (discussing fingerprint evidence). And, no decision -- federal or
    23
    state -- has ruled that an inevitable discovery analysis may not be used with
    respect to such evidence.
    While no published New Jersey opinion has applied the inevitable
    discovery doctrine to DNA evidence -- an immutable characteristic -- many
    other states have engaged in such an analysis using the standard.
    For example, in People v. Diaz, police obtained blood and hair samples
    from the defendant -- who was accused of sexual assault -- without a search
    warrant even after he refused to voluntarily provide the samples. 
    53 P.3d 1171
    , 1173 (Colo. 2002) (en banc). After determining that taking the samples
    without a warrant was an illegal search and did not meet any exception to the
    warrant requirement, the Supreme Court of Colorado undertook an inevitable
    discovery analysis and held that the evidence was not admissible under the
    doctrine because the prosecution failed to show “that an independent police
    investigation was being conducted, or that the police would have inevitably
    discovered the evidence through such an investigation despite their
    misconduct.” Id. at 1175-76.
    Similarly, in the Louisiana decision State v. Lee, police obtained a
    subpoena duces tecum authorizing the taking of a buccal swab from the
    defendant in the course of an investigation into the serial rape and killing of
    multiple women. 
    976 So. 2d 109
    , 120-21 (La. 2008). The Supreme Court of
    24
    Louisiana determined that a subpoena duces tecum was insufficient to obtain
    the sample legally and concluded that the buccal swab taken from the
    defendant was an illegal warrantless search. 
    Id. at 124-27
    . Nonetheless, the
    court undertook an inevitable discovery analysis and determined that the swab
    was admissible. 
    Id. at 131
    .
    The extensive police investigation in Lee demonstrated to the Supreme
    Court of Louisiana that “the State satisfied its burden of showing by a
    preponderance of the evidence there was a parallel and independent
    investigation unrelated to the illegal search that would have inevitably and
    legally yielded defendant’s DNA.” 
    Ibid.
     The court described the multiple
    leads that the investigating police department had, independent of the illegal
    buccal swab, that would have inevitably led them to legally obtain a buccal
    swab from the defendant. 
    Id. at 128-31
    . The court pointed to facts that
    showed that the police and other investigating agencies were diligently
    pursuing multiple independent leads based on DNA found at the crime scenes,
    a composite sketch which bore a striking resemblance to the defendant, a
    description of a car seen at one of the crime scenes belonging to the
    perpetrator, and multiple telephone tips. 
    Ibid.
     The court explained that the
    police were actively working with the other agencies such as crime lab experts
    and a serial killer task force to solve the murders prior to receiving the results
    25
    of the defendant’s buccal swab. 
    Ibid.
     For those reasons, the court’s evaluation
    led it to conclude that the necessary proofs for inevitable discovery were
    present. 
    Id. at 131
    . The Supreme Court of Florida reached a similar result
    with respect to a blood sample obtained from the person last seen with a
    murder victim on the ground that, even if, as the defendant argued, the initial
    sample had been illegally obtained through coerced consent, the independent
    and preexisting investigation into the defendant would inevitably have led to a
    sample being legally taken. Fitzpatrick v. State, 
    900 So. 2d 495
    , 514 (Fla.
    2005).
    Diaz and Lee are illustrative of the universe of cases that demonstrate
    that courts have been using an inevitable discovery framework to consider
    otherwise excluded immutable evidence as a matter of course. 6 We reject the
    arguments advanced before us that DNA identification evidence is exempt
    from an inevitable discovery analysis merely because it reveals uniquely
    identifying information about an individual’s identity. The trial court and
    6
    See, e.g., United States v. Cherry, 
    759 F.2d 1196
    , 1207 (5th Cir. 1985)
    (applying inevitable discovery to illegally obtained fingerprints because law
    enforcement had uncovered, independent of the prior misconduct, sufficient
    incriminating evidence against the defendant to give rise to probable cause for
    his arrest, upon which the police would have eventually acted and thus
    lawfully obtained the defendant’s fingerprints).
    26
    Appellate Division here correctly determined that the doctrine could be used to
    evaluate DNA evidence.
    As for the trial court’s application of the inevitable discovery standard to
    defendant’s buccal swab, we agree with that also.
    We have no difficulty affirming the trial court’s detailed findings, which
    were based on the determination that the State failed to meet the first prong of
    the Sugar II test by clear and convincing evidence. The State argues that
    police either would have applied for a search warrant or a Rule 3:5A
    investigative detention to obtain a buccal swab from defendant or would have
    acted on its probable cause to arrest him. But the events of the actual
    investigation suggest otherwise, as the trial court found. Once Bordamonte
    and the other officers involved illegally obtained defendant’s buccal swab, the
    investigation slowed to a virtual halt. The State concedes that the police had
    zeroed in on defendant as a primary suspect and that they were fully aware that
    DNA evidence would be the lynchpin of this case. Yet, Bordamonte testified
    that he did not send defendant’s DNA to the lab for almost three months,
    during which time officers received no new information or investigative leads.
    Even after Bordamonte sent defendant’s DNA to the lab, investigators
    failed to question defendant’s co-workers and roommates to ascertain his
    whereabouts on the night of Katie’s murder or to corroborate Tina’s story.
    27
    They also never sought to obtain a search warrant for Katie’s husband’s home,
    despite learning about his past criminal history and domestic violence against
    Katie.
    The trial court found particularly troubling for the State’s inevitable
    discovery analysis Bordamonte’s failure to utilize legal processes to lawfully
    obtain critical information. Although the police could have applied for the
    investigative detention of defendant under Rule 3:5A or a search warrant, the
    test under Sugar II is whether the police would have made the applications.
    We will not disturb the trial court’s findings; in an appeal, we defer to findings
    that are supported in the record and find roots in credibility assessments by the
    trial court. State v. Locurto, 
    157 N.J. 463
    , 471-72 (1999). Here, Bordamonte
    took no affirmative steps to secure legal process, making this case unlike State
    v. Johnson, 
    120 N.J. 263
    , 290 (1990).7 See also State v. Premone, 
    348 N.J. 7
      In Johnson, the Court held that the fruits of a search conducted on the basis
    of illegal consent were admissible under the inevitable discovery doctrine. 
    120 N.J. at 290
    . There, a detective was preparing a search warrant for the
    defendant’s bedroom at the same time as interrogating officers obtained an
    illegal confession and consent from the defendant to search the bedroom. 
    Id. at 289
    . At that time, the detective had typed one-and-a-half pages of the
    affidavit for the warrant and suspended his typing efforts only after the
    defendant consented to the search. 
    Ibid.
     On that record, the Court determined
    that had the interrogating officers not illegally obtained the defendant’s
    consent for a search, the detective would have completed the search warrant he
    was in the process of preparing, that the application would have been granted,
    and that the officers would have inevitably exercised the warrant and found the
    evidence. 
    Id. at 290
    .
    28
    Super. 505, 510, 515 (App. Div. 2002) (refusing to apply inevitable discovery
    where the State argued it could have obtained the information through a search
    warrant but had not taken steps in that direction).
    Nor can the State prevail on its argument that it would have obtained a
    buccal swab by relying on probable cause to arrest defendant for the assault on
    Tina and allegedly other women, according to her. Again, the State did not
    take any steps during the weeks it was waiting for the DNA testing to come
    back from the lab to respond to Tina’s claims that defendant was dangerous.
    Our standard of proof requires that the State carry its burden by clear and
    convincing evidence in order for otherwise excluded evidence to be allowed in
    through inevitable discovery. Sugar II, 
    100 N.J. at 240
    . We are unpersuaded
    by the State’s arguments that it has met that high standard. 8 In sum, for the
    reasons stated, there is no basis for disturbing the findings and conclusion of
    the trial court, affirmed by the Appellate Division, that the State has not
    8
    The State relies on the Seventh Circuit case Sutton v. Pfister to support its
    contention that N.J.S.A. 53:1-20.20 -- which requires arrestees for certain
    offenses to provide DNA -- is sufficient to satisfy the inevitable discovery
    doctrine in this case. 
    834 F.3d 816
    , 822 (7th Cir. 2016). We find the State’s
    analogy unpersuasive as the Seventh Circuit follows the federal inevitable
    discovery standard, which imposes a preponderance of the evidence burden on
    the State. Id. at 821. The New Jersey standard, as set out in Sugar II, requires
    the State to overcome a higher, clear and convincing burden of proof. 
    100 N.J. at 240
    .
    29
    proven that the results of defendant’s buccal swab should be allowed in
    through inevitable discovery.
    VI.
    A.
    Finally, we turn to the State’s application under Rule 3:5A for an order
    to take a new buccal swab. The trial court used an inevitable discovery
    analysis to parse this request, commenting in so doing that the request was
    coming very late in the investigatory proceedings -- approximately three and
    one-half years after the discovery of Katie’s body. We observe that the State
    did not argue for the application of any other test. And, as noted, the court
    rejected the request essentially for the reasons already given in its previous
    inevitable discovery ruling.
    We are unconvinced that an inevitable discovery framework is correct in
    these circumstances. The doctrine generally addresses completed searches that
    cannot be replicated.
    A key factor in the trial court’s decision here was its perception that the
    State was seeking to obtain through legal means the same evidence that it had
    earlier obtained unlawfully. That “look-back” logic would, for example, bar a
    belated application for a search warrant that would allow the police to lawfully
    recover a murder weapon it had discovered only through an initial illegal
    30
    search, and rightly so -- the exclusionary rule would have little meaning if it
    could be sidestepped by using the fruits of unlawful conduct to secure legal
    means through which to obtain the same evidence. The exclusionary rule
    would be stripped of its deterrent value and reduced to a procedural speed
    bump if such were the case.
    But DNA is not an item like guns, drugs, or documents. DNA is
    different in that immutable evidence lives on. Always. And the breadth of it
    extends beyond the swab. A new DNA sample might provide the same
    information as the original sample, but each sample is evidence in its own
    right -- and the exclusionary rule bars the use of the same evidence that was
    illegally obtained or “poisoned fruit” evidence that would not have been
    discovered but for the initial, illegally obtained evidence. The State’s request
    to compel a new sample must therefore be viewed for what it truly is: a
    request to obtain a new buccal sample -- new evidence -- notwithstanding that
    it will lead to the same uniquely identifying information that DNA provides.
    That one’s identity does not change and is revealed through DNA does not
    alter the fact that it is still a new sample.
    An easy-to-imagine example illustrates this point. Defendant’s buccal
    swab has been found inadmissible because it was illegally obtained. But there
    are other ways to obtain a sample of defendant’s DNA. If, for example, he
    31
    were to be seen in a public place drinking from a paper cup, one could not
    reasonably argue that the State would be precluded from retrieving the cup and
    testing the DNA sample left on it by defendant. The same reasoning leads to
    the logical conclusion that if law enforcement has a basis for obtaining a
    lawful buccal sample, defendant cannot shield his DNA-revealed
    nontestimonial identifying information because it once was obtained illegally.
    There is simply no basis to distinguish a subsequent, lawful buccal swab from
    the lawful collection of DNA from other sources. Both are new evidence.
    Rule 3:5A provides law enforcement with an avenue for making a lawful
    request for a new sample. A properly issued judicial order under Rule 3:5A-4
    should be available to law enforcement, on the right terms. Other courts have
    recognized as much. In the Diaz case from Colorado discussed above, the
    Colorado Supreme Court took a similar step. 53 P.3d at 1175-78. Despite its
    holding that the original blood and hair samples must be suppressed, the court
    determined that under the Colorado Rules of Criminal Procedure, “an illegal
    seizure of previous identification samples from the defendant by the police
    does not foreclose the prosecution from obtaining identity evidence through
    proper means after filing of the case.”9 Id. at 1177. The court reasoned that in
    9
    Under the Colorado Rules of Criminal Procedure, “[n]otwithstanding the
    initiation of judicial proceedings, and subject to constitutional limitations,
    upon request of the prosecuting attorney, the court may require the accused to
    32
    seeking the new nontestimonial identification evidence, “the prosecution d[id]
    not rely on information or evidence the police obtained by means of an illegal
    search and seizure.” Ibid.
    So the important question to be decided is by what standard the State
    may obtain a judicial order for the taking of a new buccal swab through a Rule
    3:5A application after a prior buccal sample has been suppressed.
    B.
    Because the look-back approach that undergirds inevitable discovery
    seems a poor fit for these circumstances -- where, again, the State seeks not the
    admission of previously obtained evidence but rather new evidence that will
    provide the same information as the suppressed evidence -- we fashion a test
    better tailored for the unique nature of DNA evidence and a fair assessment of
    whether a second buccal swab sample should be allowed.
    The test we envision is derived in part from aspects of the independent
    source doctrine. Generally, the independent source doctrine allows for the
    introduction of evidence tainted by unlawful police conduct if the information
    give any nontestimonial identification.” Colo. R. Crim. P. 16(II)(a)(1).
    Nontestimonial identification “includes, but is not limited to, identification by
    fingerprints, palm prints, footprints, measurements, blood specimens, urine
    specimens, saliva samples, hair samples, specimens of material under
    fingernails, or other reasonable physical or medical examination, handwriting
    exemplars, voice samples, photographs, appearing in lineups, and trying on
    articles of clothing.” Colo. R. Crim. P. 41.1(h)(2).
    33
    leading to discovery of the evidence is independent of the previous unlawful
    conduct. See Nix, 
    467 U.S. at 443
    . Similar to the inevitable discovery
    doctrine, the State bears the burden of proving that the independent source
    doctrine should apply by clear and convincing evidence. State v. Holland, 
    176 N.J. 344
    , 362 (2003). Under New Jersey law, the State must show 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 must demonstrate . . . 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,
    prosecutors must demonstrate by the same enhanced
    standard that the initial impermissible search was not
    the product of flagrant police misconduct.
    [Id. at 360-61.]
    Flagrancy is a high bar, requiring active disregard of proper procedure, or
    overt attempts to undermine constitutional protections. See State v. Smith,
    
    212 N.J. 365
    , 398 (2012) (distinguishing, in the context of a search warrant
    affidavit, the omission of details that would undermine a finding of probable
    cause from affirmative misstatements for purposes of a flagrant misconduct
    analysis); see also State v. Chaney, 
    318 N.J. Super. 217
    , 226-27 (App. Div.
    34
    1999) (finding that the initial unlawful entry by police into a motel room
    where they discovered contraband was not flagrant misconduct because the
    “arrest warrants for a person with the same name as defendant, whose last
    known address was the motel in which defendant was registered,” gave police
    an objectively reasonable basis to believe they were authorized to enter the
    room).
    The test we now tailor for an application under Rule 3:5A for a new
    buccal swab for DNA, when the previously obtained sample was declared
    invalid and suppressed, is as follows. First, the State must demonstrate that
    probable cause exists to conduct the new search. The court should look at the
    showing advanced by the State to demonstrate probable cause. The evidence
    may involve the same evidence that existed at the time of the illegal search.
    We do not exclude its consideration. We permit but do not require new
    evidence. Thus, Tina’s statements and her identification of defendant are not
    off-limits. Second, the court should determine whether the State’s showing of
    probable cause is untainted by the results of the prior search. Here, we mean
    that the probable cause must be independent of the information obtained
    through the results from the prior swab. 10 Third, to deter wrongdoing by the
    10
    The dissent appears to misapprehend our test. Post at ___ (slip op. at 13).
    The salient point of Holland’s second prong is encompassed in the first and
    second parts of our test.
    35
    police, we track the third prong of the independent source doctrine and require
    the State to show by clear and convincing evidence that the initial
    impermissible search was not the result of flagrant police misconduct.
    Finally, because of the privacy interest involved, we consider the degree
    of the intrusion posed by the State’s second search. A buccal swab is
    minimally intrusive. King, 569 U.S. at 463. We note that we are considering
    only a Rule 3:5A application which addresses minimally intrusive
    identification procedures. See Rolle, 
    265 N.J. Super. at 486
    .
    We do not attempt to apply this new test on this record. Rather, a
    remand is in order to allow the State an opportunity to demonstrate whether it
    can meet the standard announced. There may be additional witnesses and
    other evidence that it seeks to put before a factfinder. We follow normal
    procedures and send this back for the trial courts to handle. Because the
    original judge made extensive credibility determinations about the witnesses
    before the court, as well as about Tina, who was not before the court, we refer
    this matter to the Assignment Judge for assignment.
    VII.
    We affirm in part and reverse in part the judgment of the Appellate
    Division. We remand this matter to the Superior Court, Law Division for
    further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    36
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER and JUSTICES PATTERSON, FERNANDEZ-
    VINA, SOLOMON, and TIMPONE join in JUSTICE LaVECCHIA’s opinion.
    JUSTICE ALBIN filed a dissent.
    37
    State of New Jersey,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    Rafael Camey,
    Defendant-Respondent.
    JUSTICE ALBIN, dissenting.
    The fundamental rights afforded to a suspect by our Federal and State
    Constitutions cannot be cut and trimmed to fit the investigatory objectives of
    law enforcement. Even those under investigation for heinous offenses are
    entitled to the full protection of the law.
    The trial court determined that the police unlawfully secured a buccal
    swab from defendant Rafael Camey by unconstitutionally detaining him and
    having him sign a consent form in a language he did not understand and
    without informing him of his right to refuse. The court found that the police
    three times unlawfully detained Camey and three times unlawfully interrogated
    him.
    At the conclusion of a testimonial hearing, the court suppressed evidence
    of the buccal swab and the DNA test results of that swab. The court held that
    the inevitable discovery doctrine did not allow the taking of a second buccal
    1
    swab from Camey because the State had not presented credible evidence that
    the investigating detective would have secured a warrant through lawful
    means.
    The Appellate Division concluded that the trial court -- based on its
    detailed factual findings -- did not abuse its discretion in suppressing the
    buccal swab and forbidding the taking of a second one.
    Despite the trial court’s proper application of the inevitable discovery
    doctrine -- the theory presented by the State at the suppression hearing -- the
    majority reverses. The majority does so based on its newly created and
    weakened version of the independent source doctrine set forth in State v.
    Holland, 
    176 N.J. 344
    , 360-61 (2003) -- a new test crafted specifically for
    immutable evidence, such as DNA evidence. The majority, however, retains
    an important feature of the Holland test -- barring a second search if the initial
    impermissible search was “the result of flagrant police misconduct.” Ante at
    ___ (slip op. at 36).
    In light of that still operable flagrancy factor, the majority’s remand for
    a new suppression hearing before a different judge is not justifiable. The trial
    court’s factfindings were sustained by the Appellate Division and, by any
    measure, detail police officers engaging in flagrant misconduct in violation of
    Camey’s constitutional rights. On the record before us, given the deference
    2
    that must be accorded the trial court’s factfindings, see State v. Elders, 
    192 N.J. 224
    , 244 (2007), the State cannot prove by clear and convincing evidence
    that the police officers did not engage in flagrant misconduct when they
    unlawfully detained Camey, unlawfully interrogated him, and unlawfully
    secured a buccal swab without his consent. Thus, even under the new test, the
    taking of a second buccal sample is barred.
    I dissent because there is no basis to reverse the trial court’s suppression
    order and to remand before a different judge. I also dissent because the
    majority’s retreat from the rigorous Holland test -- the test for determining
    whether a “seizure of evidence was independent of, and untainted by, earlier
    illegal police misconduct” -- diminishes the deterrent effect of the
    exclusionary rule. See 
    176 N.J. at 360
    .
    I.
    A.
    The trial court conducted a several day suppression hearing, taking
    testimony and making credibility determinations. The trial court’s detailed
    factual findings are the starting point of our discussion. Those detailed
    findings about police misconduct remain valid despite the State’s change of
    legal theory for the admission of a second buccal swab.
    The trial court made the following findings.
    3
    While investigating the brutal murder of a woman named Katie,1 an
    alleged sex worker, the Passaic Police Department secured “consent” to take
    buccal swabs from at least a dozen homeless people who resided in the area of
    the murder. Sergeant Roy Bordamonte was the lead investigator. Camey
    became a “person of interest” during the investigation. The police “grabbed”
    Camey in a bar, detained him without probable cause, and transported him to
    headquarters, where he was not free to leave. According to the court, the
    police engaged in “a blatantly illegal detention.”
    At headquarters, Detective Alex Flores -- a Spanish-speaking officer --
    read Camey his Miranda2 warnings, but made no “effort to have him
    understand them.” When Camey said, “I don’t understand and I don’t know,”
    the police did not address his lack of comprehension. Camey spoke virtually
    no English, had only a second-grade education, and had no prior experience in
    the criminal justice system. The court concluded that “the State ha[d] not
    proven beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant understood and
    knowingly and voluntarily waived his Miranda rights,” and suppressed the
    statement he made.
    1
    Katie is a fictitious name assigned to the victim by the majority.
    2
    Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
     (1966).
    4
    The police secured a buccal swab from the unlawfully detained Camey
    for DNA testing -- not by consent but by unlawful means, according to the
    court. Before taking the buccal swab, the police never translated the English-
    worded consent form given to the Spanish-speaking Camey, never advised him
    that he had a right to refuse to consent to the taking of the swab, and never told
    him that the swab would be sent to a police lab for DNA testing as part of a
    criminal investigation. While acknowledging “that the police were
    investigating a terrible crime,” the court nevertheless concluded that the police
    committed “egregious constitutional violations.” The police did not arrest
    Camey, and he was released.
    The police unlawfully detained Camey a second time -- without a
    warrant or probable cause. Camey was “grabbed” while doing his laundry and
    transported to headquarters for questioning. The trial court described this as a
    “blatantly illegal detention.” According to the court, the police did not ensure
    that Camey knowingly and voluntarily waived his Miranda rights, and
    although the statement elicited was “exculpatory,” it nonetheless was not the
    product of a “free will.” The court found the police conduct “offensive to
    [Camey’s] due process” rights. Again, Camey was released.
    The police unlawfully detained Camey a third time and transported him
    to headquarters for another round of questioning. Once more, the police failed
    5
    to obtain from Camey a valid waiver of his Miranda rights. During a six-and-
    one-half-hour interrogation, the police did not offer Camey food, although he
    stated he was “dying of hunger,” and did not offer him a bathroom break.
    During the interrogation, Sergeant Bordamonte verbally abused Camey, calling
    him a “little freak,” a “motherf***ing liar,” and a “tutti-frutti.” Sergeant
    Bordamonte threatened Camey that if he persisted in his denials that he would
    be deprived of water. The court referred to this detention, as it did to the
    previous two, as “a blatantly illegal detention” during which the police
    extracted a “legally involuntary” statement.
    The police conduct in this case was so shocking to the court that it
    remarked:
    I have rarely seen such blatant disregard for the most
    basic of constitutional safeguards. The cited case law
    talks about techniques that are offensive to due process.
    The procedures here were beyond offensive. They not
    only were unfair to the defendant, they were unfair to
    the victim, since the evidence that was illegally
    gathered has been suppressed.
    B.
    The trial court addressed the legal theories presented by the parties. The
    State argued that, despite the constitutional violations, the police inevitably
    would have sought a buccal swab from Camey that linked his DNA to the
    victim. The court, relying on State v. Sugar, 
    100 N.J. 214
    , 238 (1985),
    6
    rejected the State’s inevitable discovery argument because it concluded that
    Sergeant Bordamonte would not have secured a warrant by lawful means for
    the buccal swab through ordinary investigative means. The court came to that
    conclusion based on the entirety of the police conduct toward Camey -- the
    failure to secure lawful consent for the buccal swab, and the three illegal
    detentions and three illegal interrogations. The Appellate Division sustained
    the trial court’s factfindings.
    The trial court further came to that conclusion because of Bordamonte’s
    infrequent recourse to the warrant procedure during his law enforcement
    career. For example, in this case, Sergeant Bordamonte did not apply for a
    warrant to search Camey’s home. Nor did Bordamonte apply for a warrant to
    search the home of the victim’s husband, who allegedly had been having
    “problems” with his wife and who had been arrested for an alleged act of
    domestic violence against her. In addition, the husband had a previous arrest
    for aggravated sexual assault and had been fired from his job for showing
    naked pictures of himself to co-workers just one day before his wife was last
    seen alive.
    Having determined that the State failed to prove by clear and convincing
    evidence that the police would have proceeded by lawful means to secure a
    7
    warrant for the taking of a buccal swab, the court suppressed the DNA results
    from the first buccal swab and barred the taking of a second one.
    C.
    The State did not argue the applicability of the independent source
    doctrine before the trial court or the Appellate Division. That doctrine became
    the focus of attention for the first time during oral argument before our Court
    and now has become the doctrinal basis for the majority’s new standard as it
    applies to immutable identification evidence. That new standard is a retreat
    from the independent source doctrine as articulated in Holland, 
    176 N.J. at 360-61
    .
    In Holland, this Court determined that when the State procures evidence
    by unconstitutional means, the State bears the burden of demonstrating that a
    later “seizure of evidence was independent of, and untainted by, earlier illegal
    police conduct.” 
    176 N.J. at 360
    . Under Holland, to establish an independent
    source for the procuring of evidence untainted by the initial unconstitutional
    seizure of evidence, the State must satisfy three prongs. 
    Id. at 360-61
    . First,
    the State must demonstrate that it relied on “factors wholly independent from
    the knowledge, evidence, or other information acquired as a result of the prior
    illegal search” to prove “that probable cause existed to conduct the challenged
    search.” 
    Ibid.
     Second, it must establish, “by clear and convincing evidence,
    8
    that the police would have sought a warrant without the tainted knowledge or
    evidence that they previously had acquired or viewed.” 
    Id. at 361
    . Third, it
    must clearly and convincingly show that “regardless of the strength of their
    proofs under the first and second prongs, . . . that the initial impermissible
    search was not the product of flagrant police misconduct.” 
    Ibid.
    When the initial impermissible search is the product of flagrant
    misconduct, the independent source doctrine cannot be invoked to justify a
    subsequent search relating to the initial search. See 
    ibid.
     In other
    circumstances, the focus of the Holland test is whether the subsequent search
    is actually tainted by the “earlier illegal police conduct.” See 
    id. at 360
    .
    Understanding the potential for the independent source doctrine to undermine
    the deterrent effect of the exclusionary rule, our Court cautioned:
    Only by rigorously applying the rule’s three prongs can
    we be satisfied that an error of the State’s making does
    not subvert the warrant requirement under Article I,
    paragraph 7 [of the New Jersey Constitution].
    ....
    We stress that courts must apply scrupulously each part
    of the test, and that the government’s failure to satisfy
    any one prong of the standard will result in suppression
    of the challenged evidence.
    [Id. at 362-63.]
    9
    “The jurisdiction of appellate courts rightly is bounded by the proofs and
    objections critically explored on the record before the trial court by the parties
    themselves.” State v. Robinson, 
    200 N.J. 1
    , 19 (2009). The majority has
    declined to limit itself to the arguments advanced before the trial court and
    Appellate Division, and in the State’s brief for leave to appeal to this Court --
    the applicability of the inevitable discovery doctrine. Having decided to look
    for another doctrinal basis to review a subsequent search for immutable
    evidence, the majority does not adhere to our well-established jurisprudence
    on the independent source doctrine.
    Here is how the majority has reconfigured the independent source
    doctrine for immutable evidence. Under the majority’s new standard, after an
    unconstitutional seizure of immutable evidence, (1) the “State must
    demonstrate that probable cause exists to conduct the new search” and that
    showing may be based on “the same evidence that existed at the time of the
    illegal search”; (2) “the court should determine whether the State’s showing of
    probable cause is untainted by the results of the prior search”; and (3) “the
    State must show by clear and convincing evidence that the initial
    impermissible search was not the result of flagrant police misconduct.” Ante
    at ___ (slip op. at 35-36).
    10
    The majority’s test, like the traditional Holland test, bars a subsequent
    search when the initial impermissible search was the product of flagrant police
    misconduct. On that basis alone, this Court should affirm the Appellate
    Division, which determined that the trial court’s factfindings were supported
    by sufficient credible evidence in the record. The trial court never used the
    term “flagrant police misconduct” because the independent source doctrine had
    not been invoked by the State. But the court’s detailed factfindings referred to
    what can only be described as flagrant misconduct. The taking of the buccal
    swab occurred after the police “grabbed” Camey from a bar without a warrant
    or probable cause and subjected him to a “blatantly illegal detention.” The
    police then interrogated Camey while running roughshod over his Miranda
    rights -- questioning him even though he did not comprehend his rights. On
    that same day that the police unlawfully detained Camey and violated his
    Miranda rights, the police secured Camey’s “consent” to a buccal swab by
    giving him an English-worded consent form that he could not understand and
    by not advising him that he had a right to refuse to consent to the s earch.
    Based on the totality of the circumstances, the trial court concluded that the
    police had engaged in “egregious constitutional violations.”
    It can hardly be disputed that the trial court, in functionally equivalent
    language, found that the initial taking of the buccal swab was “the result of
    11
    flagrant police misconduct.” See ante at ___ (slip op. at 36). The majority
    states that a finding of flagrancy “requir[es] active disregard of proper
    procedure, or overt attempts to undermine constitutional protections.” Ante at
    ___ (slip op. at 34). The record is replete with factfindings that satisfy the
    majority’s definition of flagrancy. Based on the deferential standard accorded
    to a trial court’s factfindings, Elders, 
    192 N.J. at 244
    , a finding that the police
    engaged in flagrant misconduct is inescapable.
    Because flagrancy is determinative even under the majority’s test, a
    remand is pointless. No further witness-credibility factfindings are required on
    that issue and therefore a remand to a different trial judge cannot be justified.
    The trial court thoughtfully and deliberately considered and weighed the
    testimony and understood the consequences of suppressing evidence that might
    make it difficult for the State to prosecute Camey for a heinous crime.
    Suppressing evidence -- evidence secured illegally -- will not receive public
    adulation, even when our case law demands the result. Despite that reality, the
    court fulfilled a core judicial function by adhering to the dictates of the
    Constitution and upholding fundamental rights. The court’s well-reasoned
    decision to suppress the buccal swab evidence and bar the taking of a second
    buccal swab should be affirmed.
    12
    II.
    Last, the majority needlessly abandons Holland’s rigorous independent
    source test in cases of unconstitutional seizure of immutable evidence and
    therefore diminishes the deterrent effect of the exclusionary rule when the
    police violate a person’s constitutional rights. The majority has discarded
    Holland’s second prong that requires the State to establish that “the police
    would have sought a warrant without the tainted knowledge or evidence that
    they previously had acquired or viewed.” 
    176 N.J. at 361
    . The majority has
    replaced that meaningful prong with one that places little burden on the State
    for a previous unconstitutional search or seizure.
    The majority requires that the State “demonstrate that probable cause
    exists to conduct the new search,” a showing that the majority permits to be
    based on “the same evidence that existed at the time of the illegal search.”
    Ante at ___ (slip op. at 35). The police, however, must always establish
    probable cause to conduct a search, whether it is the first or the last one.
    Additionally, allowing the State to rely on the same evidence to establish
    probable cause merely permits the police a do-over after a failure to adhere to
    constitutional dictates. Police officers will have a lesser incentive to get a
    warrant for the taking of a buccal swab when suppression leads to the police
    using the same probable-cause evidence to secure a proper search warrant.
    13
    Defense attorneys will soon see the futility of filing suppression motions,
    leading to police practices that are indifferent to the Constitution’s warrant
    requirement. The majority articulates no good reason for jettisoning Holland’s
    insistence that the State prove that “the police would have sought a warrant
    without the tainted knowledge” from the evidence acquired from an
    unconstitutional search. See Holland, 
    176 N.J. at 361
    .
    III.
    For the reasons expressed, I respectfully dissent.
    14