STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. DEVON KING (16-06-0794, HUDSON COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2018 )


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  •                         NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court."
    Although it is posted on the internet, this opinion is binding only on the
    parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-3531-16T3
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    DEVON KING,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ___________________________________
    Argued May 24, 2018 – Decided June 8, 2018
    Before Judges Haas and Rothstadt.
    On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Law Division, Hudson County, Indictment No.
    16-06-0794.
    Rochelle Watson, Assistant Deputy Public
    Defender, argued the cause for appellant
    (Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney;
    Rochelle Watson, of counsel and on the brief).
    Jennifer E. Kmieciak, Deputy Attorney General,
    argued the cause for respondent (Gubir S.
    Grewal, Attorney General, attorney; Jennifer
    E. Kmieciak, of counsel and on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    After the trial judge denied his motion to suppress thirty
    small bags of crack cocaine found in a magnetic key holder that
    was attached to the wheel well of his car, defendant pled guilty
    to third-degree possession of a controlled dangerous substance
    (CDS).   The judge sentenced defendant to two years of probation.
    On appeal, defendant raises the following contentions:
    THE EVIDENCE RECOVERED FROM THE MAGNETIC KEY
    HOLDER MUST BE SUPPRESSED BECAUSE IT IS THE
    FRUIT OF AN UNLAWFUL INVESTIGATORY STOP.
    ALTERNATIVELY, THE SEARCH OF THE WHEEL WELL
    OF DEFENDANT'S CAR WITHOUT PROBABLE CAUSE
    VIOLATED   BOTH   THE   STATE  AND   FEDERAL
    CONSTITUTIONS.
    A.   The Investigatory Stop Was Not Supported
    By Reasonable Suspicion.
    B.   Under Both State and Federal Law, The
    Police   Effected   an Unconstitutional
    Search    When    They  Intruded   Into
    Defendant's Wheel Well to Detach the
    Magnetic Key Holder.
    C.   The Opening Of The Magnetic Key Holder
    Constituted   An   Independent   Fourth
    Amendment Search That Was Not Supported
    By Probable Cause.
    After reviewing the record in light of the arguments advanced on
    appeal, we affirm, but for reasons other than those expressed by
    the trial judge.1
    In lieu of presenting testimony at the suppression hearing,
    the parties stipulated to the facts set forth in the relevant
    1
    See State v. Heisler, 
    422 N.J. Super. 399
    , 416 (App. Div. 2011)
    (stating that an appellate court is "free to affirm the trial
    court's decision on grounds different from those relied upon by
    the trial court").
    2                          A-3531-16T3
    police report, which the judge read into the record.               On January
    14, 2006, three police officers were among a group of officers
    assigned to conduct a surveillance of a street because there had
    been "several citizen complaints of narcotics activity in that
    area[.]"    At approximately 12:30 p.m., the officers saw defendant,
    who was "a known drug dealer," getting in and out of a silver
    Lexus that was parked on the street.          There were two other men in
    the car.
    As they continued to watch defendant, the officers saw an
    older   man   approach    the    car   with   "currency    in    his   hand[.]"
    Defendant got out of the car and spoke to the man.              Defendant then
    went to the driver's side front tire, "reached down and appeared
    to be looking for something near the tire."                 Based upon the
    officers'     "training    and    experience     with     CDS    arrests     and
    investigations, [they] believed the males were engaged in a CDS
    transaction."
    Defendant spotted the officers as they began to approach him.
    Defendant told the older man "to walk away" and then moved to the
    rear of his car.     The officers stopped defendant and the other
    man, and directed the other two males to get out of the car.
    One of the officers went to the front of the car and "looked
    in the area where [defendant] was looking and recovered a magnetic
    key hold[er] attached to the vehicle's wheel well."                The report
    3                                A-3531-16T3
    explained that a key holder like the one found in the wheel well
    was "a common tool used by . . . drug dealers to hide their
    narcotics."   An officer opened the container and found thirty
    small bags of crack cocaine.      According to the report, the key
    holder had to have been placed in the wheel well "when the vehicle
    was stopped or it would have fallen . . . while [the car was] in
    motion."   The officers then arrested defendant, his suspected
    customer, and the two men in the car.
    Under the totality of these circumstances, the judge found
    that the police had a reasonable suspicion that defendant was
    engaged in a drug transaction and, therefore, they conducted an
    appropriate investigatory stop.       Drawing an analogy between the
    facts of this case and those involved in our decision in State v.
    Jessup, 
    441 N.J. Super. 386
    , 388-89 (App. Div. 2015),2 the judge
    found that defendant did not have "a reasonable expectation of
    privacy" in the key holder because anyone present near the car
    could see defendant placing it in, and removing it from, the area
    near his front tire, suspect it might contain contraband, and then
    easily take it from the wheel well if defendant left the scene.
    2
    In Jessup, we upheld the validity of a search for, and seizure
    of, a zip-lock bag after the police observed the defendant removing
    it from the top of a car's rear tire, taking items from the bag,
    and returning the bag to the top of the tire. Id. at 388. The
    defendant then gave the items to another man in exchange for money.
    Ibid.
    4                          A-3531-16T3
    Thus, the judge concluded the police properly seized and opened
    the key holder without a warrant.
    Although raised by the State in its brief in opposition to
    defendant's suppression motion, the judge did not address whether
    the search was proper under the "automobile exception" to the
    warrant requirement as set forth in the Supreme Court's then-
    recent decision in State v. Witt, 
    223 N.J. 409
     (2015), decided
    less than four months prior to the January 14, 2016 investigatory
    stop in this case.
    In Witt, the Court abandoned the "pure exigent-circumstances
    requirement" it had added to the constitutional standard to justify
    an automobile search and returned to the standard set forth in
    State v. Alston, 
    88 N.J. 211
     (1981).      Witt, 223 N.J. at 414.      Thus,
    the Court held "that a warrantless search of an automobile was
    constitutionally     permissible,   provided    that   the   police    had
    probable cause to search the vehicle and that the police action
    was prompted by the 'unforeseeability and spontaneity of the
    circumstances giving rise to probable case.'"            Ibid. (quoting
    Alston, 
    88 N.J. at 233
    ).
    The Court made clear that the Witt standard was to be "given
    prospective application from the date of [its] opinion[,]" and,
    therefore, it was in effect at the time of both the January 14,
    2016   investigatory   stop   and   the   judge's   September   12,   2016
    5                             A-3531-16T3
    decision.     Because the reestablished automobile exception to the
    warrant requirement plainly justified the police officers' actions
    in this case, we need not address the trial judge's determination
    that defendant lacked a reasonable expectation of privacy in the
    key holder.
    On    appeal,   defendant   argues   that   investigatory   stop   was
    improper because the police did not have a reasonable suspicion
    that defendant was engaged in criminal activity.         We disagree.
    Our review of a trial judge's decision on a motion to
    suppress is limited.      State v. Robinson, 
    200 N.J. 1
    , 15 (2009).
    In reviewing a motion to suppress evidence, we must uphold the
    judge's factual findings, "so long as those findings are supported
    by sufficient credible evidence in the record." State v. Rockford,
    
    213 N.J. 424
    , 440 (2013) (quoting Robinson, 
    200 N.J. at 15
    ).             We
    do not, however, defer to a trial judge's legal conclusions, which
    we review de novo.     
    Ibid.
    It is well settled that the police may lawfully stop a motor
    vehicle and detain the motorists in order to investigate suspicious
    conduct.    State v. Stovall, 
    170 N.J. 346
    , 356 (2002).           Such an
    "investigatory stop," also known as a Terry stop, is characterized
    by a detention in which the person approached by a police officer
    would not reasonably feel free to leave, even though the encounter
    6                             A-3531-16T3
    falls short of a formal arrest.      
    Id. at 355-56
    ; see also Terry v.
    Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
    , 19 (1968).
    During a Terry motor vehicle stop, a police officer may detain
    individuals   for   a   brief   period,   if   the   stop   was   "based    on
    reasonable and articulable suspicion that an offense . . . has
    been or is being committed."       State v. Bacome, 
    228 N.J. 94
    , 103
    (2017) (quoting State v. Carty, 
    170 N.J. 632
    , 639-40 (2002)).
    Whether a reasonable and articulable suspicion exists depends upon
    the totality of the circumstances.        State v. Pineiro, 
    181 N.J. 13
    ,
    22 (2004).
    In evaluating the totality of the circumstances surrounding
    a Terry stop, a reviewing court must balance "the State's interest
    in effective law enforcement against the individual's right to be
    protected from unwarranted and/or overbearing police intrusions."
    State v. Davis, 
    104 N.J. 490
    , 504 (1986).            As the Supreme Court
    observed in Davis:
    Such encounters are justified only if the
    evidence, when interpreted in an objectively
    reasonable manner, shows that the encounter
    was preceded by activity that would lead a
    reasonable   police   officer    to  have   an
    articulable suspicion that criminal activity
    had occurred or would shortly occur.        No
    mathematical formula exists for deciding
    whether the totality of circumstances provided
    the   officer    with   an    articulable   or
    particularized suspicion that the individual
    in question was involved in criminal activity.
    Such a determination can be made only through
    7                                A-3531-16T3
    a sensitive appraisal of the circumstances in
    each case.
    [Davis, 
    104 N.J. at 505
    .]
    In reviewing the "totality of the circumstances," we are also
    required   to   "give   weight   to       'the   officer's   knowledge   and
    experience' as well as 'rational inferences that could be drawn
    from the facts objectively and reasonably viewed in light of the
    officer's expertise.'"     State v. Citarella, 
    154 N.J. 272
    , 279
    (1998) (quoting State v. Arthur, 
    149 N.J. 1
    , 10-11 (1997)).              "The
    fact that purely innocent connotations can be ascribed to a
    person's actions does not mean that an officer cannot base a
    finding of reasonable suspicion on those actions as long as 'a
    reasonable person would find the actions are consistent with
    guilt.'"   Id. at 279-80 (quoting Arthur, 
    149 N.J. at 11
    ).
    Applying these principles, we discern no basis for disturbing
    the trial judge's determination that based upon the totality of
    the circumstances presented to them, the officers had a reasonable
    suspicion that defendant and the older man were engaged in a drug
    transaction.    As detailed above, the police were in the area
    because of citizen complaints of narcotics activity.           During their
    surveillance, the officers saw defendant, a known drug dealer,
    speak to the man, who was already holding money in his hand.
    Defendant then went to the wheel well of his car, which the
    8                             A-3531-16T3
    officers knew from their experience was a place that dealers stored
    their drugs in key holders.       As the officers moved in, defendant
    told the other man to leave the area.
    Viewed through the prism of the officers' experience in
    conducting   drug   trafficking    investigations,    it   was    entirely
    appropriate for the police to reasonably suspect that defendant
    was engaging in a narcotics transaction with the other man.
    Therefore, the Terry stop of defendant and his vehicle was clearly
    appropriate.
    Under Witt, the State must next demonstrate the officers had
    probable cause to believe the vehicle contained contraband.             223
    N.J. at 414.      Defendant contends the State failed to meet that
    burden but again, we disagree.
    In order to establish probable cause to conduct a search, the
    State must show from the totality of the circumstances that there
    is "a fair probability that contraband or evidence of a crime will
    be found in a particular place."        State v. Chippero, 
    201 N.J. 14
    ,
    28 (2009) (quoting United States v. Jones, 
    994 F.2d 1051
    , 1056 (3d
    Cir. 1993)). The standard was clearly met here. Again, the police
    observed defendant looking for something near the tire of his car
    after speaking to the man who had approached him with money in his
    hand.     Based     on   the   officers'    experience     in    narcotics
    investigations, they reasonably believed that defendant, a known
    9                              A-3531-16T3
    drug dealer, had stored his drugs in the wheel well area of his
    car and was retrieving them to complete the sale.   Thus, there was
    more than "a fair probability" that defendant's stash was located
    near the front tire of defendant's car, and the police therefore
    had probable cause to search there for the suspected contraband.
    
    Ibid.
    As required by Witt, the officers' probable cause arose from
    unforeseeable and spontaneous circumstances,   223 N.J. at 414, and
    defendant does not contend otherwise.   The police were conducting
    a surveillance of the street because they had received citizen
    complaints of drug dealing in the area. They were not specifically
    looking for either defendant or his car at the time they saw him
    engaged in a suspected drug transaction.    Therefore, the search
    was fully justified by the automobile exception reestablished in
    Witt.
    Finally, defendant argues that even assuming that the police
    were permitted to look into the wheel well and take out the key
    holder, they were not permitted to open it without a warrant. This
    argument also lacks merit.   Indeed, it is well settled "that once
    probable cause exists to search . . . a motor vehicle, the police
    may search every part of the vehicle, including containers, in
    which there is probable cause to believe that the object of the
    search may be found."    State v. Esteves, 
    93 N.J. 498
    , 508 n.3
    10                          A-3531-16T3
    (1983) (citing United States v. Ross, 
    456 U.S. 798
    , 824 (1982));
    see also State v. Probasco, 
    220 N.J. Super. 355
    , 359 (App. Div.
    1987) (citations omitted).   As noted above, the officers stated
    in their report that key holders are frequently used by drug
    dealers as storage containers for their narcotics, and the key
    holder was found in the same area of the car where defendant had
    been looking in response to his conversation with his suspected
    customer.   Therefore, the officers did not need a warrant to open
    the key holder, where they found thirty small bags of crack
    cocaine.
    Affirmed.
    11                         A-3531-16T3