Denise Brown v. State of New Jersey and John Steet , 442 N.J. Super. 406 ( 2015 )


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  •                  NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-4796-12T3
    DENISE BROWN,
    APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    September 11, 2015
    v.
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY and
    JOHN STEET, DETECTIVE (NJSP),
    both in his individual and
    official capacity as New Jersey
    State Police Detective,
    Defendants-Respondents,
    and
    RICK FUENTES COLONEL, both in his
    individual capacity and official
    capacity as Superintendent of New
    Jersey State Police, CHRISTIAN
    ESKRIDGE TROOPER (NJSP), both in his
    individual capacity and official
    capacity as Superintendent of New
    Jersey State Police, CITY OF VINELAND,
    TIMOTHY CODISPOTI, both in his
    individual and official capacity
    as Vineland Chief of Police,
    JOSEPH VALENTINE, both in his
    individual and official capacity
    as Vineland Police Sergeant, DAVID
    HENDERSCOTT OFFICER, both in his
    individual and official capacity
    as Vineland Police Officer, OFFICER
    SMITH, both in his individual and
    official capacity as Vineland Police
    Officer, and OFFICER SOTO, both in her
    individual and official capacity as
    Vineland Police Officer,
    Defendants.
    _____________________________________
    Submitted December 16, 2014 - Decided September 11, 2015
    Before Judges Nugent, Accurso and Manahan.
    On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Law Division, Cumberland County, Docket
    No. L-674-09.
    William A. Riback, attorney for appellant.
    William P. Flahive, attorney for
    respondents.
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    ACCURSO, J.A.D.
    Two members of the New Jersey State Police entered
    plaintiff Denise Brown's home without a warrant and without
    consent in order to "secure the apartment" while they sought a
    search warrant for the premises.    They were looking for evidence
    of a home invasion they believed had been committed by her
    boyfriend, and, specifically, for a stolen piece of jewelry they
    had reason to suspect he had given her.
    The officers were able to secure a warrant several hours
    after entering Brown's apartment.    A search, however, did not
    uncover the jewelry or any useful evidence.    Brown was not a
    suspect in the investigation and was never arrested or charged
    2                           A-4796-12T3
    with any crime.    The charges against Brown's boyfriend were
    dismissed before trial.
    Brown sued the State and New Jersey State Police detective
    John Steet1 for violating her state constitutional rights under
    the New Jersey Civil Rights Act, N.J.S.A. 10:6-2c.    A jury
    returned a verdict for defendants and the judge denied Brown's
    motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV) and for
    an injunction requiring the State Police to take all steps
    necessary to come into compliance with the warrant requirement.
    Brown appeals from the denial of her JNOV motion contending
    that she is entitled to judgment and an injunction "because it
    is indisputable the [State Police] seized and entered her
    residence absent a warrant, consent, or exigent circumstances
    according to policy and training."    We affirm the denial of the
    motion as to the State, as well as the denial of an injunction
    because the State is immune from suit under the Civil Rights
    Act.   We reverse the denial of the motion as to Steet and remand
    for a trial on damages because the troopers' testimony
    establishes, indisputably, that their entry into Brown's
    1
    Brown sued several others as well. The claims against all
    of the other defendants were dismissed on motion either before
    or after trial. Brown has not appealed from any of those
    orders.
    3                          A-4796-12T3
    residence before securing the warrant was unlawful as a matter
    of law.
    We review the denial of a JNOV motion using the same
    standard as the trial court and thus consider "'whether the
    evidence, together with the legitimate inferences therefrom,
    could sustain a judgment in . . . favor of the party opposing
    the motion.'"   Sons of Thunder, Inc. v. Borden, Inc., 
    148 N.J. 396
    , 415 (1997) (quoting Dolson v. Anastasia, 
    55 N.J. 2
    , 5-6
    (1969)).   To the extent the trial court's denial of Brown's
    motion was premised upon an interpretation of the law relating
    to warrantless searches, our review is de novo.   See Hitesman v.
    Bridgeway, Inc., 
    218 N.J. 8
    , 26 (2014).
    We take the facts from the trial testimony of the State
    Police detectives.   The detectives were investigating a home
    invasion that had happened about three weeks before the events
    at Brown's home.   Two men wielding revolvers had forced their
    way into a home in Dennis Township in Cape May County and made
    off with some jewelry.2   Witnesses saw two men, one carrying a
    2
    The home invasion was apparently a case of drug dealers
    stealing from drug dealers. The victim told police that the
    robbers had attempted to force her to open a safe in the
    basement belonging to her boyfriend, the target of a narcotics
    investigation by the Cumberland County Prosecutor's Office, who
    also resided in the home. When she was unable to open the safe,
    the robbers fled. The victim gave the officers consent to
    search her home. They recovered $20,000 cash in the safe, and
    (continued)
    4                          A-4796-12T3
    black drawstring, backpack-type bag, get into a blue BMW and
    drive away.    The detectives identified Brown's boyfriend as a
    suspect.    They also acquired information from two different but
    related sources that he had given Brown a locket stolen in the
    robbery.3
    Over a week later, Vineland police stopped a blue BMW
    matching the one witnesses saw in Dennis and arrested the three
    occupants.    The BMW belonged to Brown and was being driven by
    her boyfriend.    State Police impounded the car intending to get
    a search warrant for its contents.    The detectives waited over a
    week to apply for a warrant to search the car.    In the interim,
    one of the detectives, the lead investigator, spoke several
    times to Brown, who was anxious to recover her car.    Upon
    obtaining the warrant, the lead investigator called Brown to
    (continued)
    $1000 in the pocket of a jacket in the master bedroom as well as
    a quantity of marijuana.
    The victim's mother reported that her ex-boyfriend spoke
    frequently about robbing her daughter's boyfriend, and that she
    told him if he was going to do it, he should do it when her
    grandchildren were not home. She also told police that Brown's
    boyfriend committed the robbery for her ex-boyfriend.
    3
    The mother's ex-boyfriend was the source of the information
    that "the girl who owns the BMW" was wearing the stolen locket
    several days after the robbery. Although Cape May detectives
    reported to State Police that the victim's mother told them that
    Brown "was currently in possession" of the locket, they did not
    say whether the information came from her discussions with her
    ex-boyfriend, as had her other information, or whether she had
    some independent source of knowledge.
    5                            A-4796-12T3
    tell her they would be searching her car the next morning, and
    she could pick it up afterward.        When she said she was without a
    ride to Buena where the car was impounded, the investigator
    offered to pick her up and take her to her car.
    When the detectives searched Brown's car, they found crack
    cocaine, marijuana and heroin, as well as a holster for a small
    caliber gun, like the ones used in the robbery, and some
    jewelry.    They immediately decided that the next step in their
    investigation should be to search Brown's house for additional
    evidence.    As they were already scheduled to pick Brown up to
    take her to her car, they drove directly to her home to seek her
    consent for a search.
    The lead investigator and Detective Steet met with Brown
    just outside her apartment.    The lead investigator testified
    that Brown refused their request to search her home.       His
    counsel then asked:
    [Defendants' counsel:]
    Trooper, what are you trained to do in this
    situation, where you go to a place, you go
    to an apartment and you ask for consent,
    consent is denied, validly denied? What's
    your obligation in terms of the training
    you've received through the State Police?
    [Lead investigator:]
    We have to preserve the scene, to keep the
    integrity of possible evidence, and then we
    6                             A-4796-12T3
    have to make the application for the search
    warrant.
    The investigator explained in response to further questioning
    that State Police has "the right to maintain the scene," which
    includes "entering the residence" when the occupant has refused
    a request to search supported by probable cause.    The detectives
    testified they gave Brown two options.    "[W]e gave her choices
    to, she could leave.   Just lock up the property and give us a
    key so that when we get the search warrant, we can unlock it."
    "The other option is if she is insistent in going into her own
    home, then we would have to accompany her with that time that
    we're waiting for the search warrant."
    Detective Steet testified when Brown "was adamant to say,
    no I'm going into my own house," the officers followed her
    inside despite their clear understanding that Brown "didn't want
    us in that house."   The detectives accompanied Brown to the
    kitchen, telling her "to sit at the kitchen table until we get
    our search warrant."   The detectives remained in Brown's home
    for several hours, refusing her requests to use her own bathroom
    unless accompanied by a female officer.
    When asked by his counsel why the detectives did not want
    Brown back in her home alone, the lead investigator testified,
    "we didn't want her to destroy any evidence.   We didn't want her
    rummaging around the house."   When asked whether the detectives
    7                          A-4796-12T3
    had any specific concern that Brown would destroy evidence, the
    investigator replied, "if people are possessing things that are
    stolen, there's always a reason to believe that once they
    realize that they might be a suspect in possessing that stolen
    property, that they're going to destroy it or get rid of it."
    That led to the following exchange:
    [Plaintiff's counsel:]
    So anybody that you have reason to believe
    has evidence, you have reason to believe
    that they're destroying the evidence. Is
    that what your testimony is?
    [Lead investigator:]
    That's absolutely a possibility, yes.
    Detective Steet was even clearer about his conclusions.       He
    testified he had no concern about Brown destroying evidence
    until the detectives made her "aware of the existence of
    evidence in her home and she insisted in going into her home."
    The detective explained that in the course of asking Brown's
    consent to search her home, "[w]e explained exactly what we were
    looking for when it came to that necklace, the locket with
    diamonds. . . .   She knew we were aware of that existing and
    that our information was, we believed that she was in possession
    of it."   When asked what facts supported his belief that Brown
    would destroy evidence, Steet responded:
    8                          A-4796-12T3
    Her insistence – her – she insisted on
    going into that home without our presence.
    That mere fact, for any reasonable person to
    believe, once they know that that exists,
    that evidence is going to be gone.
    So what she wanted us to do was to just
    allow her to go into her home, have us leave
    and go get the search warrant.
    We're going to come back with the
    search warrant some hours later, do the
    search of the house and that evidence that
    she's specifically told about is not going
    to be there.
    The lead investigator also testified the detectives had no
    proof that Brown "was actively destroying evidence" at any time
    before they asked Brown for consent to search her home.    When
    Brown's counsel asked him whether he had any fear that by asking
    for consent he would be tipping off the witness, he replied,
    "No, because if they deny consent, we then are going to make
    application for the search warrant and now, we're going to
    maintain control of the integrity of the residence."    He further
    explained that exigent circumstances were not at issue in this
    case because "that deals with more serious crimes, where someone
    could possibly, at that very moment, be destroying evidence.
    Once you're at the house and you have it secured, it – exigent
    circumstances don't exist."
    The detectives' supervisor, the sergeant in charge of the
    criminal investigation office at the Woodbine station, testified
    9                           A-4796-12T3
    that the detectives had kept him apprised of the progress of
    their investigation, and that he was aware they would be seeking
    Brown's consent to search her home.   He testified that if the
    homeowner denies consent and refuses to "lock and leave," she is
    free to stay inside her home, but "[w]e stay too."    He explained
    that it was not only "his training and experience" that dictated
    that course "but logic.   We can't allow it to – we can't allow
    anything to jeopardize the integrity of what's going on inside,
    once we are now going to take steps to secure a warrant."
    When Brown's counsel asked whether it was his
    "understanding, if the consent is denied, that [State Police
    has] the right to seize the property," the supervisor replied:
    No, sir. It all depends on what that
    consent is based upon. If I'm going and
    asking you for a consent based upon RAS;
    reasonable, articulable suspicion, and you
    say no, I've got to walk away because I
    can't do anything other than ask
    and . . . hope to gain your permission.
    . . . .
    If I ask for consent based on probable
    cause, which is what [the detectives] did
    that day, and you say no, I have the benefit
    of having a very good plan B, which would be
    applying for a search warrant.
    When Brown's counsel asked why they had not considered
    applying for a telephonic warrant, the supervisor replied,
    "Because I would not have, nor would any other of the
    10                          A-4796-12T3
    investigating personnel, been able to articulate that we had a
    reasonable expectation that the evidence would be destroyed or
    lost."    When asked by his own counsel whether applying for a
    telephonic warrant would have been appropriate after the
    detectives found the holster and jewelry in the car, the
    supervisor said, "Absolutely not."    When counsel asked why, the
    supervisor explained, "Because there's no exigency there."
    Finally, in response to counsel's question about the reason for
    not applying for a telephonic warrant once the detectives
    secured the property, the supervisor said, "Because we took away
    the exigen[t] circumstances."    He agreed with his counsel's
    statement that "[o]nce that property is in the control of [the
    detectives], . . . there are no exigent circumstances in terms
    of worrying about the destruction of evidence."
    When the officers finally obtained the warrant and searched
    Brown's home, they did not find the locket they were looking
    for.   The only item listed on the search warrant return was a
    black Nike backpack similar to the one witnesses reported the
    robbers carried.    The lead investigator testified that although
    the bags were of the same type, none of the witnesses was able
    to say the bag found in Brown's closet was the one carried by
    the robbers.
    11                         A-4796-12T3
    Our view of this testimony is that it represents a profound
    misunderstanding of the "narrow scope of the exigent-
    circumstance exception" to the warrant requirement and
    establishes beyond any doubt that the detectives' entry into
    Brown's home violated her rights under Article I, paragraph 7 of
    the New Jersey Constitution of 1947.4   See State v. Lewis, 
    116 N.J. 477
    , 484 (1989).5
    4
    Plaintiff's original complaint alleged violations of her
    rights under the Fourth Amendment as well as under Article I,
    paragraph 7. Defendants removed that complaint to federal
    court. Plaintiff subsequently dismissed voluntarily her federal
    claims and the matter was remanded to state court where it has
    proceeded under an amended complaint solely under our state
    constitution.
    5
    Although the Supreme Court made clear it was deciding Lewis
    under the Fourth Amendment and not under Article I, paragraph 7
    on which we had 
    relied, 227 N.J. Super. at 594-95
    & n.1, the
    opinion did not criticize or overrule Judge King's state
    constitution 
    analysis. 116 N.J. at 489
    . Thus, we consider
    Lewis as representing the Court's view that as to the exigent
    circumstance exception justifying warrantless entry into a
    dwelling, the search and seizure safeguards of the federal and
    state constitutions are coterminous. See State v. Hunt, 
    91 N.J. 338
    , 344 (1982) (noting the "Court has seen fit to hold that the
    search and seizure provisions in the federal and New Jersey
    Constitutions are not always coterminous, despite the congruity
    of the language") (citations omitted). In no event could we
    interpret Article I, paragraph 7 to provide Brown less
    protection from unreasonable searches and seizures than that
    guaranteed her under the Fourth Amendment. See State v.
    Novembrino, 
    105 N.J. 95
    , 145 (1987) (noting that "although the
    language of article I, paragraph 7 of the New Jersey
    Constitution is virtually identical with that of the fourth
    amendment, we have held in other contexts that it affords our
    citizens greater protection against unreasonable searches and
    seizures than does the fourth amendment").
    12                         A-4796-12T3
    "[P]hysical entry of the home is the chief evil against
    which the wording of the Fourth Amendment is directed."   United
    States v. U.S. Dist. Court, 
    407 U.S. 297
    , 313, 
    92 S. Ct. 2125
    ,
    2134, 
    32 L. Ed. 2d 752
    , 764 (1972).   In State v. Hutchins, 
    116 N.J. 457
    , 463 (1989), decided over twenty-five years ago, the
    Court declared it was "well established that 'searches and
    seizures inside a home without a warrant are presumptively
    unreasonable,' Payton v. New York, 
    445 U.S. 573
    , 586, 
    100 S. Ct. 1371
    , 1380, 
    63 L. Ed. 2d 639
    , 651 (1980), and hence 'prohibited
    by the Fourth Amendment, absent probable cause and exigent
    circumstances.'   Welsh v. Wisconsin, 
    466 U.S. 740
    , 749, 
    104 S. Ct. 2091
    , 2097, 
    80 L. Ed. 2d 732
    , 743 (1984)."
    Although whether there was probable cause to search Brown's
    home is questionable,6 it is beyond doubt there were not exigent
    6
    Leaving aside the questionable reliability of the source
    of the information that Brown was wearing the stolen locket, and
    the likely "echo" of that source in the information provided by
    his ex-girlfriend, the victim's mother, the information on which
    the lead investigator relied to secure the search warrant of
    Brown's home, that the "search of the BMW revealed jewelry that
    belonged to the victim, minus the [locket]," was not true. The
    investigator testified at trial that although they "believed at
    the time" the jewelry found in Brown's car was stolen in the
    home invasion, "we showed them to the victim and she couldn't
    identify them." The detectives did not attempt to confirm the
    jewelry found in the car was stolen in the home invasion before
    deciding they needed to search Brown's house or swearing out an
    affidavit to that effect in order to secure a search warrant
    when Brown denied them entry. Because plaintiff stipulated that
    (continued)
    13                        A-4796-12T3
    circumstances to justify the detectives' warrantless entry, and
    that whatever exigency existed was solely of the detectives'
    making.   Although the term defies precise definition divorced
    from the facts of some specific case, "[g]enerally stated,
    circumstances are exigent when they 'preclude expenditure of the
    time necessary to obtain a warrant because of a probability that
    the suspect or the object of the search will disappear, or
    both.'"   State v. Deluca, 
    168 N.J. 626
    , 632 (2001) (quoting
    State v. Smith, 
    129 N.J. Super. 430
    , 435 (App. Div.), certif.
    denied, 
    66 N.J. 327
    (1974)).   The Court has recently reiterated
    that "'[e]xigent circumstances are present when law enforcement
    officers do not have sufficient time to obtain any form of
    warrant' because of the immediate and urgent circumstances
    confronting them."   State v. Hathaway, ___ N.J. ___ (2015)
    (quoting State v. Pena-Flores, 
    198 N.J. 6
    , 30 (2009)).
    When determining whether exigent circumstances exist,
    courts consider:
    the degree of urgency and the amount of time
    necessary to obtain a warrant; the
    reasonable belief that the evidence was
    about to be lost, destroyed, or removed from
    the scene; the severity or seriousness of
    the offense involved; the possibility that a
    suspect was armed or dangerous; and the
    (continued)
    the detectives had probable cause to search her home, we do not
    consider this issue further.
    14                        A-4796-12T3
    strength or weakness of the underlying
    probable cause determination.
    [State v. Walker, 
    213 N.J. 281
    , 292 (2013)
    (quoting 
    Deluca, supra
    , 168 N.J. at 632-
    33).]
    Applying those factors here, it is plain that exigent
    circumstances were absent as a matter of law.   These troopers
    were not confronted with any immediate and urgent circumstances,
    certainly none not of their own making.   The detectives had the
    information that Brown supposedly had the locket within days of
    the home invasion, well before her boyfriend was arrested
    driving her BMW.   After they were able to impound the car, the
    detectives waited over a week to apply for a warrant to search
    it.   The detectives testified they had no belief that Brown was
    destroying or removing evidence, or that she even knew she might
    possess evidence, until the detectives told her they were
    searching for the locket.    Although the offense the detectives
    were investigating was a serious one, Brown was not a suspect.
    And although Brown does not dispute the existence of probable
    cause, the facts to establish it were not strong.   The
    information that she had the locket came from an individual
    implicated in the crime and from his ex-girlfriend.    No details
    of any sort were provided.    The jewelry found in her car had no
    link to Brown or to the crime the detectives were investigating.
    15                         A-4796-12T3
    The detectives' testimony at trial makes clear that they
    developed their belief that Brown might try and remove or
    destroy evidence only after they told her of the locket, and she
    denied their request to search her home for it.   For Detective
    Steet it was Brown's "insistence . . . on going into that home
    without our presence.   That mere fact, for any reasonable person
    to believe, once they know that that exists, that evidence is
    going to be gone."   The Court, however, has been unequivocal
    that "[a] homeowner has a right under our federal and state
    constitutions to insist that a police officer obtain a warrant
    before entering and searching his house.   The assertion of that
    constitutional right, which protects the most basic privacy
    interests of our citizenry, is not probative of wrongdoing and
    cannot be the justification for the warrantless entry into a
    home."   State v. Frankel, 
    179 N.J. 586
    , 611, cert. denied, 
    543 U.S. 876
    , 
    125 S. Ct. 108
    , 
    160 L. Ed. 2d 128
    (2004), modified in
    part on other grounds by, State v. Edmonds, 
    211 N.J. 117
    , 131
    (2012) (citations omitted).
    As for the detectives' belief that without stopping Brown
    from entering her apartment without them, "that evidence that
    she's specifically told about is not going to be there," the law
    is clear that police-created exigent circumstances arising from
    unreasonable investigative conduct do not justify warrantless
    16                          A-4796-12T3
    entry into an individual's home.     
    Hutchins, supra
    , 116 N.J. at
    460, 474-76; State v. De La Paz, 
    337 N.J. Super. 181
    , 196-97
    (App. Div.), certif. denied, 
    168 N.J. 295
    (2001) (finding police
    should have obtained telephonic warrant before entering
    defendant's home "as there was no obvious urgency requiring
    their immediate response at the scene").
    The only reason the detectives offered for telling Brown
    about the locket in the course of seeking her consent was the
    hope she would turn it over voluntarily.    We find it hard to
    imagine a scenario more unreasonable than the police telling
    someone not suspected of any crime that the police wish to
    search her home for specific evidence and, when she declines,
    claiming their warrantless entry is justified by her possible
    destruction of the evidence they just revealed to her.     If that
    were the law, no citizen would enjoy "[t]he right of the people
    to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects,
    against unreasonable searches and seizures."    N.J. Const. art.
    I, ¶ 7.   That scenario would, as it obviously did for these
    troopers, make a citizen's mere assertion of her constitutional
    right to insist that a police officer get a warrant before
    entering her home probative of wrongdoing, an untenable result.
    See 
    Frankel, supra
    , 179 N.J. at 611.    Because the "exigent
    circumstances" the detectives offered as justification for
    17                          A-4796-12T3
    proceeding without a warrant were inadequate as a matter of law
    and were, in any event, impermissibly self-created, they cannot
    justify the warrantless entry into Brown's home.     See De La 
    Paz, supra
    , 337 N.J. Super. at 196-97.
    The State defendants assert on appeal, as they did at
    trial, that the detectives did not need exigent circumstances to
    enter Brown's home while they waited for a warrant.    Relying on
    Illinois v. McArthur, 
    531 U.S. 326
    , 
    121 S. Ct. 946
    , 
    148 L. Ed. 2d 838
    (2001), they insist that "plaintiff confuses the
    concepts of a search based on 'exigency' and simply maintaining
    the status quo while the warrant is obtained."     We do not find
    McArthur to be any refuge for the detectives here.
    In McArthur, the United States Supreme Court held that
    police officers did not violate the Fourth Amendment when they
    prevented a defendant from entering his home for about two hours
    while the officers obtained a search warrant for the 
    premises. 531 U.S. at 328
    , 121 S. Ct. at 
    948, 148 L. Ed. 2d at 846
    .     They
    did so after defendant's wife, whom the officers had accompanied
    to the trailer the couple shared "so that they could keep the
    peace while she removed her belongings," told the police on her
    way out that they should check the trailer because her husband
    "had dope in there" and she had seen him "slide some dope
    18                           A-4796-12T3
    underneath the couch."   
    Id. at 328-29,
    121 S. Ct. at 
    948-49, 148 L. Ed. 2d at 846
    .
    The Court declined to find "that the warrantless seizure
    was per se unreasonable" because (1) "the police had probable
    cause to believe that McArthur's home contained evidence of a
    crime and contraband, namely, unlawful drugs"; (2) it involved
    "a plausible claim of specially pressing or urgent law
    enforcement need, i.e., 'exigent circumstances'"; (3) "the
    restraint at issue was tailored to that need, being limited in
    time and scope"; and (4) the restraint that was imposed
    "avoid[ed] significant intrusion into the home itself."   
    Id. at 331-32,
    121 S. Ct. at 
    950, 148 L. Ed. 2d at 847-48
    .
    In our view, McArthur cannot fairly be read to eschew the
    requirement for exigent circumstances for a warrantless entry
    into a home.   We further find McArthur inapposite for several
    reasons: (1) the detectives here did not suspect Brown of
    engaging in any criminal activity; (2) the detectives did not
    have any reason to believe Brown would destroy evidence before
    they told her about the locket and no reason specific to Brown
    as to why she might try to destroy the locket even after they
    informed her of its provenance; (3) the restraint imposed on
    Brown was more severe, as the detectives remained in her home
    19                          A-4796-12T3
    for three and a half to four hours,7 making no attempt to obtain
    a telephonic warrant; and (4) the intrusion into her home was
    greater, there were always at least two officers present, and
    Brown was not allowed even to use the bathroom unaccompanied by
    an officer.
    A case decided by the Court a year after McArthur, Kirk v.
    Louisiana, 
    536 U.S. 635
    , 
    122 S. Ct. 2458
    , 
    153 L. Ed. 2d 599
    (2002), makes clear that the State's argument that police may
    make a warrantless entry into a home to "secure" it without a
    showing of exigent circumstances is simply incorrect.     In Kirk,
    police officers who observed the defendant conduct a suspected
    drug transaction entered his apartment and arrested him
    ostensibly to prevent the destruction of evidence while they
    obtained a search warrant for the premises.   
    Id. at 636,
    122
    S. Ct. at 
    2458, 153 L. Ed. 2d at 601
    .   The Louisiana Court of
    Appeal refused to consider Kirk's argument that the police had
    failed to prove exigent circumstances for their warrantless
    entry, finding the issue irrelevant because the police had
    probable cause to arrest Kirk and the charges against him were
    7
    The detectives testified that it took about six hours to
    obtain the warrant, despite that the detective's affidavit in
    support of the application was largely lifted from the affidavit
    used to secure the search warrant for the BMW. Brown had to
    leave for work about three and a half to four hours after the
    police arrived and thus was not present when the lead
    investigator returned with the warrant.
    20                           A-4796-12T3
    based on evidence found on his person, not in the apartment.
    State v. Kirk, 
    773 So. 2d 259
    (La. Ct. App. 2000), as amended,
    2002 La. App. LEXIS 3634 (La. Ct. App.), rev'd, 
    536 U.S. 635
    ,
    
    122 S. Ct. 2458
    , 
    153 L. Ed. 2d 599
    (2002).
    The Supreme Court reversed and remanded for a determination
    of whether there were exigent circumstances that would have
    justified the officers' entry into the apartment, holding that
    "[a]s Payton makes plain, police officers need either a warrant
    or probable cause plus exigent circumstances in order to make a
    lawful entry into a home.   The Court of Appeal's ruling to the
    contrary, and consequent failure to assess whether exigent
    circumstances were present in this case, violated Payton."
    
    Kirk, supra
    , 536 U.S. at 
    638, 122 S. Ct. at 2459
    , 153 L. Ed. 2d
    at 603.
    Cases decided by lower federal courts since McArthur and
    Kirk have routinely required a showing of probable cause and
    exigent circumstances for any warrantless entry into a home
    regardless of whether to search or simply secure.   See, e.g.,
    Harris v. O'Hare, 
    770 F.3d 224
    , 238 (2d Cir. 2014) ("Because
    police officers require 'either a warrant or probable cause plus
    exigent circumstances in order to make a lawful entry,' 
    Kirk, 536 U.S. at 638
    , 
    122 S. Ct. 2458
    , the invasion of Plaintiffs'
    curtilage without a warrant violated the Fourth Amendment.");
    21                        A-4796-12T3
    Rogers v. Apicella, 
    606 F. Supp. 2d 272
    , 287 (D. Conn. 2009)
    ("Whether regarded as a warrantless entry or a 'protective
    sweep,' this entry was unlawful absent exigent circumstances or
    consent."); United States v. Christie, 
    570 F. Supp. 2d 657
    , 667
    (D.N.J. 2008) (noting, "The McArthur Court ultimately held that
    exigent circumstances justified the warrantless seizure of the
    defendant's home, especially in light of the appropriately
    balanced privacy-related and law enforcement-related concerns"),
    aff'd, 
    624 F.3d 558
    (3d Cir. 2010), cert. denied, 
    562 U.S. 1236
    ,
    
    131 S. Ct. 1513
    , 
    179 L. Ed. 2d 335
    (2011).   Accord United States
    v. Watson, 
    703 F.3d 684
    , 693 (4th Cir. 2013) ("We are not aware
    of any Supreme Court case or federal appellate decision
    permitting a three-hour detention of an occupant of a building
    who lacks any specific connection to suspected criminal
    activity, while police obtain a warrant to search that
    building.").
    Although the State defendants contend "that no case decided
    on the basis of Art. I, Para. 7 presents the same factual
    setting" as this one, we think the Court's decision in Lewis,8
    8
    In Lewis, the police received information from an informant
    that he had seen drugs in the defendant's apartment, that
    defendant and others were packaging the drugs for immediate
    distribution and that one of the occupants had a 
    gun. 116 N.J. at 480
    . The defendant opened the apartment door when a police
    officer knocked but, seeing the officer's uniform, tried to slam
    (continued)
    22                           A-4796-12T3
    which involved the warrantless entry into a dwelling, more
    closely analogous to this case than State v. Young, 
    87 N.J. 132
    ,
    144 (1981), on which the State defendants rely in support of
    their argument that "the New Jersey Supreme Court has recognized
    law enforcement's ability to effect a temporary seizure of
    property while seeking a search warrant."   Young, however,
    involved a roadside search of a suitcase taken from the
    defendant's car, not a warrantless entry into his home.   Lewis,
    on the other hand, makes clear that warrantless entry into a
    (continued)
    it shut. 
    Ibid. The officer "stuck
    his foot in the door to keep
    it open" and, at that point, saw "on the kitchen table, a glass,
    a gold razor blade, and a clear bottle containing a white powder
    believed by the officer to be narcotics." 
    Ibid. The police went
    inside, arrested the defendant, and searched the apartment.
    
    Id. at 481.
         The Court held the officer's act of putting his foot in the
    door to prevent the defendant from closing it and retreating
    into his apartment was unlawful because the informant's report
    that people in the apartment "were 'getting ready to leave,'
    thus threatening removal of any narcotics on the premises," was
    not an exigent circumstance that would justify a warrantless
    entry, and that the police could have safely secured the
    apartment by surveilling it from the outside. 
    Id. at 487-88.
         Our courts have consistently required both probable cause
    and exigent circumstances to justify entry into a dwelling.
    See, e.g., State v. Lashley, 
    353 N.J. Super. 405
    , 412 (App. Div.
    2002) (noting "the warrantless entry of the dwelling was . . .
    unlawful in the absence of both probable cause and exigent
    circumstances"); State v. Holland, 
    328 N.J. Super. 1
    , 6 (App.
    Div. 2000) (noting that the two prongs of the test of the
    legality of a warrantless intrusion into a residence are
    probable cause and exigent circumstances), rev'd on other
    grounds, 
    176 N.J. 344
    (2003); State v. Ulrich, 
    265 N.J. Super. 569
    , 572-73 (App. Div. 1993) (same), certif. denied, 
    135 N.J. 304
    (1994).
    23                         A-4796-12T3
    home is illegal absent consent or probable cause and exigent
    circumstances.    As the Court has lately noted, "a private home
    is not like a package in transit."    State v. Wright, 
    221 N.J. 456
    , 476 (2015) (declining under Article I, paragraph 7 to apply
    the private search doctrine to private dwellings in light of
    their "preeminent position" under the federal and state
    constitutions).
    Accordingly, having reviewed the testimony in the light
    most favorable to defendants and having considered all of their
    arguments, we conclude the trial court erred in submitting this
    case to the jury because the detectives' own testimony makes
    clear beyond any doubt that their entry into Brown's residence
    before securing the warrant violated her rights under Article I,
    paragraph 7 as a matter of law.9
    9
    Because the State is immune from suit under the Civil Rights
    Act, the vast amount of testimony and argument directed to
    whether State Police has a "policy" of warrantless entry under
    similar circumstances is irrelevant. Any such "policy" would be
    relevant only to impose liability on the State for Steet's
    actions, a result barred by the State's immunity. See, e.g.,
    Stomel v. City of Camden, 
    192 N.J. 137
    , 145-46 (2007) (citing
    Monell v. Dep't of Soc. Servs., 
    436 U.S. 658
    , 690-91, 
    98 S. Ct. 2018
    , 2035-36, 
    56 L. Ed. 2d 611
    , 635-36 (1978), and Loigman v.
    Twp. Comm. of Middletown, 
    185 N.J. 566
    , 590 (2006)) (explaining
    the circumstances under which a municipality can be held liable
    for the civil rights violations of its employees).
    24                        A-4796-12T3
    That conclusion, however, does not end our inquiry.   Brown
    has sued under the Civil Rights Act, which provides in pertinent
    part:
    Any person who has been deprived of any
    substantive due process or equal protection
    rights, privileges or immunities secured by
    the Constitution or laws of the United
    States, or any substantive rights,
    privileges or immunities secured by the
    Constitution or laws of this State, or whose
    exercise or enjoyment of those substantive
    rights, privileges or immunities has been
    interfered with or attempted to be
    interfered with, by threats, intimidation or
    coercion by a person acting under color of
    law, may bring a civil action for damages
    and for injunctive or other appropriate
    relief.
    [N.J.S.A. 10:6-2c.]
    The Act was adopted in 2004 "for the broad purpose of
    assuring a state law cause of action for violations of state and
    federal constitutional rights and to fill any gaps in state
    statutory anti-discrimination protection."   Owens v. Feigin, 
    194 N.J. 607
    , 611 (2008).   The Court has noted that although the
    legislative history is sparse, it "tells us that our State Civil
    Rights Act is modeled off of the analogous Federal Civil Rights
    Act, 42 U.S.C.A. § 1983, and is intended to provide what Section
    1983 does not: a remedy for the violation of substantive rights
    found in our State Constitution and laws."   Tumpson v. Farina,
    
    218 N.J. 450
    , 474 (2014).   Given their similarity, our courts
    25                        A-4796-12T3
    apply § 1983 immunity doctrines to claims arising under the
    Civil Rights Act.   See Gormley v. Wood-El, 
    218 N.J. 72
    , 113-15
    (2014).
    Although not raised by the parties on appeal, the State
    defendants asserted they were immune from suit under the Civil
    Rights Act in their answer to the complaint.   Because the State
    can raise its sovereign immunity at any time and does not waive
    its immunity through litigation conduct, Royster v. N.J. State
    Police, 
    439 N.J. Super. 554
    , 567-68, 572 (App. Div. 2015), we
    consider whether it can be sued under the Civil Rights Act.
    New Jersey courts "have long recognized that an essential
    and fundamental aspect of sovereignty is freedom from suit by
    private citizens for money judgments absent the State's
    consent."    Allen v. Fauver, 
    167 N.J. 69
    , 73-74 (2001).   Our
    Supreme Court has held that "[c]onsent has required clear and
    unambiguous legislative expression."   
    Id. at 74.
      Unlike certain
    other remedial statutes such as the New Jersey Law Against
    Discrimination, N.J.S.A. 10:5-1 to -49, or the New Jersey
    Conscientious Employee Protection Act, N.J.S.A. 34:19-1 to -8,
    both of which include the State in their definitions of
    "employer," the Civil Rights Act does not on its face apply to
    the State.
    26                         A-4796-12T3
    That is perhaps not surprising in a statute modeled on
    § 1983, which the United States Supreme Court long ago
    determined did not apply to the states.    Will v. Mich. Dep't of
    State Police, 
    491 U.S. 58
    , 67, 71, 
    109 S. Ct. 2304
    , 2310, 2312,
    
    105 L. Ed. 2d 45
    , 55, 58 (1989) (holding that "in enacting
    § 1983, Congress did not intend to override well-established
    immunities or defenses under the common law," and, accordingly,
    "neither a State nor its officials acting in their official
    capacities are 'persons' under § 1983").    Given that the
    Legislature did not choose to include an express waiver of
    sovereign immunity in the Civil Rights Act and that the State
    enjoys immunity under the analogous § 1983, we conclude that the
    State is immune from a suit for damages under the Civil Rights
    Act.   The federal courts are in accord.   See, e.g., Didiano v.
    Balicki, 
    488 F. App'x 634
    , 638 (3d Cir. 2012) (rejecting
    plaintiff's argument that the word "person" should be
    interpreted differently under the Civil Rights Act than in
    § 1983).
    Likewise, because the State is not a "person" under the
    Civil Rights Act, it is equally immune from suits for damages as
    it is for suits seeking injunctions and other equitable relief.
    See, e.g., Kentucky v. Graham, 
    473 U.S. 159
    , 167 n.14, 105
    27                          A-4796-12T3
    S. Ct. 3099, 3106 n.14, 
    87 L. Ed. 2d 114
    , 122 n.14 (1985)
    (noting that "a State cannot be sued directly in its own name
    regardless of the relief sought" unless its sovereign immunity
    is affirmatively waived or validly abrogated by Congress).10
    Accordingly, because the State is immune from suit under
    the Civil Rights Act, we conclude that the trial court did not
    err in denying Brown's JNOV motion as to the State for damages
    and injunctive relief, notwithstanding the detectives' violation
    of Brown's rights under Article I, paragraph 7 as a matter of
    law.
    Finally, we consider whether Detective Steet is entitled to
    qualified immunity under the Civil Rights Act.       The Court has
    recently addressed the qualified immunity of police officers in
    Morillo v. Torres, ___ N.J. ___ (2015) N.J. LEXIS 661, *21, *38
    (July 13, 2015).    There the Court explained that
    [t]he doctrine of qualified immunity shields
    law enforcement officers from personal
    liability for civil rights violations when
    the officers are acting under color of law
    10
    Brown has not pursued an injunction remedy against the
    Superintendent of State Police in his individual capacity, see
    Ex parte Young, 
    209 U.S. 123
    , 154, 
    28 S. Ct. 441
    , 451, 
    52 L. Ed. 714
    , 728 (1908), as she dismissed her claims against him. Brown
    alleged in her complaint that Steet was "a policy making
    Defendant with respect to searches and seizures of citizens."
    There was, however, no testimony at trial to support that
    allegation. Steet testified he had been a trooper since 2003.
    He did not testify to having any supervisory or policy-making
    authority.
    28                           A-4796-12T3
    in the performance of official duties. This
    protection extends to suits brought under 42
    U.S.C.A. § 1983 and under New Jersey's
    analogue, the Civil Rights Act, N.J.S.A.
    10:6-1 to -2.
    [Id. at *10.]
    We apply a two-prong test in determining whether a police
    officer is entitled to qualified immunity.     
    Id. at *25-*26
    (citing Wood v. Moss,     U.S.        ,   , 
    134 S. Ct. 2056
    , 2066-
    67, 
    188 L. Ed. 2d 1039
    , 1051 (2014)).     "The first inquiry asks
    whether the facts alleged, '[t]aken in the light most favorable
    to the party asserting the injury,' show that the challenged
    conduct violated a statutory or constitutional right."     
    Id. at *26
    (quoting Saucier v. Katz, 
    533 U.S. 194
    , 201-02, 
    121 S. Ct. 2151
    , 2156, 
    150 L. Ed. 2d 272
    , 281 (2001), and 
    Wood, supra
    ,
    U.S. at    , 134 S. Ct. at 
    2067, 188 L. Ed. 2d at 1051
    ).
    "Second, the court must determine 'whether the right was clearly
    established.'"   
    Ibid. "Requiring the alleged
    violation of law to be 'clearly
    established' 'balances . . . the need to hold public officials
    accountable when they exercise power irresponsibly and the need
    to shield officials from harassment, distraction, and liability
    when they perform their duties reasonably.'"     
    Wood, supra
    , ___
    U.S. at ___, 134 S. Ct. at 
    2067, 188 L. Ed. 2d at 1051
    (quoting
    Pearson v. Callahan, 
    555 U.S. 223
    , 231, 
    129 S. Ct. 808
    , 815, 172
    29                         A-4796-12T3
    L. Ed. 2d 565, 573 (2009)).    Courts have noted that the
    "dispositive inquiry" on this issue "'is whether it would [have
    been] clear to a reasonable officer' in the agents' position
    'that [his] conduct was unlawful in the situation [he]
    confronted.'"   
    Ibid. (quoting Saucier, supra
    , 
    533 U.S. at 
    202, 121 S. Ct. at 2156
    , 150 L. Ed. 2d at 281).
    Applying that test here, we conclude that Steet is not
    entitled to qualified immunity.    The detective's own testimony
    establishes, unequivocally, that his warrantless entry into
    Brown's home without consent or exigent circumstances violated
    her rights under our State Constitution, satisfying the first
    prong.   As to the second prong, the law is well established that
    even when police have probable cause that a home contains
    evidence of a crime, they are not permitted to enter the home,
    or, indeed, put a foot in the door, without exigent
    circumstances not the product of unreasonable investigative
    conduct.   
    Kirk, supra
    , 536 U.S. at 
    638, 122 S. Ct. at 2459
    , 153
    L. Ed. 2d at 603; 
    Welsh, supra
    , 466 U.S. at 
    749, 104 S. Ct. at 2097
    , 80 L. Ed. 2d at 743; 
    Lewis, supra
    , 227 N.J. Super. at 594-
    95.   Accordingly, as to Detective Steet, we remand for a trial
    on damages.
    30                        A-4796-12T3
    Affirmed in part; reversed in part; and remanded for
    further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.    We do
    not retain jurisdiction.
    31                          A-4796-12T3