STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. TIMOTHY M. LEWIS (14-08-0975 and 14-08-0976, MIDDLESEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2021 )


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  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-4037-18
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    TIMOTHY M. LEWIS, a/k/a
    DERIAN J. PICKERING,
    and TIMMY LEWIS,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    __________________________
    Submitted September 16, 2021 – Decided October 20, 2021
    Before Judges Fuentes and Gummer.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Middlesex County, Indictment Nos. 14-08-
    0975 and 14-08-0976.
    Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney for
    appellant (David J. Reich, Designated Counsel, on the
    brief).
    Yolanda Ciccone, Middlesex County Prosecutor,
    attorney for respondent (Patrick F. Galdieri, II,
    Assistant Prosecutor, of counsel and on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    After the trial court denied defendant's motions to suppress his statement
    to police detectives and physical evidence police had obtained after stopping a
    taxicab in which he was a passenger, defendant Timothy M. Lewis pleaded
    guilty to one count of first-degree robbery, N.J.S.A. 2C:15-1, and one count of
    second-degree being a certain person not permitted to possess weapons, N.J.S.A.
    2C:39-7(b).    The trial court sentenced defendant to a ten-year term of
    imprisonment with a period of parole ineligibility on the robbery charge and a
    five-year term of imprisonment on the certain-person charge, with the sentences
    to run concurrently.    Because the trial court did not err in denying the
    suppression motions, we affirm.
    I.
    We glean the following facts from the record of the suppression hearings.
    At 9:40 p.m. on January 10, 2014, North Brunswick Police Officer Keri Shutz
    responded to a police dispatch about a gas-station robbery on Georges Road.
    After interviewing the gas-station attendant, Shutz relayed over police radio the
    attendant's description of the suspects: two black men, both wearing black
    clothing with their faces partially covered and moving towards First Avenue,
    one armed with a shotgun. Shutz also reviewed a surveillance video, which
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    showed two black males entering the gas station. The unarmed suspect was
    wearing black sweatpants with the white lining of his pockets visible, gray
    sneakers, and a black jacket, under which he wore a black hooded sweatshirt.
    Shutz described the suspects over the police radio.
    A.
    When the initial dispatch about the gas-station robbery was made, another
    North Brunswick Police Officer, Ernest Hanrahan, drove to the vicinity of the
    gas station, looking for the suspects. After he had parked his car near the
    intersection of Georges Road and Second Avenue, Hanrahan noticed a taxicab
    turn and make a U-turn on Second Avenue, "looking for something." He drove
    towards the taxicab and held his hand out of his window to flag the taxicab down
    to find out "who was in the area to pick up." The driver told him he was picking
    up a customer on Second Avenue for a trip to New Brunswick. He advised the
    driver to be careful because a robbery had occurred in the area and passed on to
    him the description of the suspects he had heard over the police radio. Hanrahan
    asked the driver, if he picked up someone matching the descriptions, to turn his
    hazard lights on and off. He told the driver he would then stop the taxicab to
    investigate.
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    The taxicab driver testified he remembered Hanrahan telling him to be
    careful because of the robbery. He both denied and said he did not remember
    that Hanrahan had described the suspects or had given him instructions about
    his hazard lights.   He did not remember "actively assisting" in the police
    investigation.
    After Hanrahan saw the driver flash his lights and drive away with the
    lights off, Hanrahan caught up with the taxicab and, with his emergency lights
    on, stopped it. He exited his vehicle, approached the driver's side of the taxicab,
    and saw sitting in the back seat a black male, who appeared to be wearing some
    clothing matching the description of clothing worn by one of the suspects. The
    passenger was later identified as defendant. Hanrahan told defendant why he
    had stopped the cab and questioned him about where he was going and where
    he was coming from. Hanrahan asked Shutz to come to his location so she could
    observe defendant and determine if she could identify him as one of the suspects.
    Shutz went to Hanrahan's location and saw in the backseat a black male wearing
    black sweatpants with white pocket lining, matching what she had seen the
    unarmed suspect wearing in the surveillance video. She also noticed a backpack
    next to defendant.
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    Another police officer, John Strzykalski, arrived on the scene, confirmed
    with defendant he owned the backpack, and asked him if he would "mind"
    opening it. Defendant opened his backpack and took out a black scarf, a black
    hooded sweatshirt, a black hooded jacket, and gray sneakers. Shutz recognized
    those items from the surveillance video as having been worn by the unarmed
    suspect. After a warrant search showed defendant had several outstanding
    warrants, Strzykalski placed defendant in handcuffs and arrested him. Hanrahan
    conducted a pat-down search of defendant and found a large amount of cash in
    small bills in defendant's pocket.
    After the officers transported defendant to police headquarters, his
    backpack was searched. It contained, among the items, shotgun shells, duct
    tape, masking tape, a hammer, a flashlight, and rubber gloves.
    B.
    Detectives Seeta Jones and Michael Braun interrogated defendant on
    video hours after his arrest, just before 2:00 a.m. on January 11, 2014. Before
    beginning the interrogation, Jones read defendant his Miranda rights, Miranda
    v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
     (1966); defendant acknowledged understanding his
    rights and signed the Miranda waiver form. In this first statement, defendant
    denied knowing anything about the gas-station robbery. He told the detectives
    A-4037-18
    5
    he had been at his girlfriend's New Brunswick house earlier in the evening, had
    left to take a shower at a friend's house in North Brunswick, and then had taken
    a cab to return to his girlfriend's house. Defendant claimed someone – he did
    not know whom – had packed the backpack while he showered at his friend's
    house and he was unaware of its contents.         The first statement concluded
    sometime after defendant indicated he wanted to speak with his lawyer.
    Later that day, the police arrested a second suspect, Darien Pickering, and
    placed him in a holding cell visible to defendant from his cell. Defendant heard
    Pickering talking to "the officers." As Jones was walking in the cell area
    intending to question Pickering, defendant said to Jones, "I need to speak with
    you." Jones took defendant to an interview room.
    Defendant testified he had called Jones over and asked her about getting
    something to eat or drink or to make a telephone call to his family. According
    to defendant, after he asked Jones for something to eat or drink or for a telephone
    call and before he gave his second statement, Detective Michael Sauvigne told
    him "[y]our man, D.P., he's like – he just told me everything that happened" and
    told defendant Pickering had "sold" him out. Defendant asserted Jones then
    showed him the surveillance video. The trial court found incredible defendant's
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    testimony about the discussions he purportedly had with Jones and Sauvigne
    before his second statement.
    Defendant's second videorecorded interrogation began at 3:20 p.m., more
    than twelve hours after the first interrogation had ended. At the beginning of
    the interrogation, Sauvigne gave defendant a bottle of water and introduced
    himself.
    Defendant did not correct Sauvigne or in any way indicate they had met
    previously. In response to questions from Jones, defendant acknowledged he
    was giving a statement "of [his] own freewill and accord" and "[w]ithout force,
    fear, threat, duress or promise of reward, immunity and leniency." Jones asked
    Sauvigne if he wanted to read defendant his rights. Sauvigne stated "[y]ep, you
    already spoke to us right, so you can – or spoke to Detective Jones." Sauvigne
    then read defendant his Miranda rights.      Defendant verbally confirmed he
    understood those rights, initialed next to each on the Miranda waiver form, and
    signed the waiver. In the colloquy that followed, Jones confirmed defendant
    wanted to provide her with new information:
    [DETECTIVE JONES:] Now, I sat and spoke with you
    this morning regarding this – this case and this is going
    to be for the robbery of Citgo gas station, do you
    remember that conversation this morning?
    [DEFENDANT:] Yeah.
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    [DETECTIVE JONES:] Okay, um I'm coming to you
    again because you wanna tell me some new
    information, correct?
    [DEFENDANT:] Yeah (inaudible).
    [DETECTIVE JONES:] Okay so why don't you tell me
    what you - what you wanna say?
    [DEFENDANT:] I wanna know if ya'll can help me
    first. That's what I wanna know.
    [DETECTIVE JONES:] You gotta help yourself. I
    cannot promise you - -
    [DETECTIVE SAUVIGNE:] We told you we can't
    promise you anything.
    [DEFENDANT:] Okay.
    [SAUVIGNE:] That's for a Prosecutor's Office to do
    (inaudible).
    [DETECTIVE JONES:] You gotta start here.
    [DETECTIVE SAUVIGNE:] (inaudible) case.
    [DETECTIVE JONES:] You have to start here. I have
    - I have all the information I need it's not gonna help
    you to sit here and lie and say you don't know and that’s
    not your clothing and you don't know about a gun . . .
    it's not gonna help you. I have everything, I have
    evidence I have it - I have it all.
    [DETECTIVE SAUVIGNE:]              So, this is your
    opportunity to talk if you wanna talk to us, that's great
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    8
    if you don't then that's fine with us also. So, balls in
    your court.
    [DEFENDANT:] There's nothing to talk about we caught.
    Defendant then confessed to his involvement in the gas-station robbery.
    C.
    After a grand jury indicted defendant and Pickering with several robbery,
    aggravated-assault, and weapons-related offenses, defendant moved to suppress
    evidence obtained from the backpack search. The trial court conducted an
    evidentiary hearing and denied the motion. Finding Hanrahan's testimony about
    their discussion more credible than the taxicab driver's testimony, the trial court
    concluded the flashing hazard lights created a reasonable and particularized
    suspicion of criminal activity that supported Hanrahan's stop of the taxicab. The
    court also noted defendant had matched the description of the unarmed suspect.
    The court held "there was no search of the backpack" because defendant
    voluntarily had exposed its contents.
    Defendant next moved to suppress a sawed-off shotgun recovered during
    a warrantless search of co-defendant Pickering's residence and the two
    A-4037-18
    9
    statements he had made after his arrest 1 and moved for reconsideration of the
    denial of his first suppression motion. The court denied the reconsideration and
    shotgun motions. Defendant subsequently moved for reconsideration of and for
    an evidentiary hearing regarding the shotgun motion. The trial court granted
    that motion, conducted an evidentiary hearing, and denied the motion to
    suppress the shotgun.     Defendant does not challenge any of the shotgun -
    suppression orders in this appeal.
    Regarding the motion to suppress his statements, the trial court conducted
    an evidentiary hearing, during which Jones and defendant testified. The trial
    court granted the motion as to defendant's first statement and denied it as to his
    second statement. With respect to the second statement, the trial court found
    defendant had "reinitiated the conversation" with the detectives, the detectives
    had properly advised defendant of his Miranda rights, and defendant had
    voluntarily and knowingly waived his Miranda rights and made the statement
    confessing to his involvement in the robbery.
    Defendant moved again to suppress the backpack's contents. Defendant
    pleaded guilty before the trial court decided that motion.
    1
    Defendant's counsel and defendant pro se filed suppression motions on both
    subjects.
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    10
    In this appeal, defendant argues:
    POINT I
    THE TRIAL COURT'S DETERMINATION THAT
    THE POLICE OFFICER HAD A VALID BASIS TO
    STOP THE TAXICAB IN WHICH LEWIS WAS A
    PASSENGER WAS BASED ON A FAULTY LEGAL
    ANALYSIS.
    POINT II
    THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN FINDING NO
    MIRANDA VIOLATION WITH RESPECT TO
    LEWIS' SECOND STATEMENT AFTER LEWIS
    HAD MADE CLEAR DURING HIS FIRST
    STATEMENT THAT HE DID NOT WANT TO BE
    INTERROGATED WITHOUT COUNSEL PRESENT.
    POINT III
    THE FRUITS OF THE UNCONSTITUTIONAL STOP
    MUST BE SUPPRESSED.
    POINT IV
    THE  INVENTORY   SEARCH   OF   LEWIS'
    BACKPACK WAS UNCONSTITUTIONAL.
    II.
    Defendant's appeal boils down to arguments about credibility and what
    inferences the trial court should have drawn from the evidence presented.
    Defendant's disagreement with the trial court's credibility determinations and
    A-4037-18
    11
    factual inferences is not a basis for reversal when the trial court's findings are
    supported by credible evidence in the record. Accordingly, we affirm.
    Generally, we uphold a trial court's factual findings made in connection
    with a motion to suppress when "those findings are supported by sufficient
    credible evidence in the record." State v. Gamble, 
    218 N.J. 412
    , 424 (2014).
    We defer to a trial court's factual findings because they are "informed by [the
    court's] first-hand assessment of the credibility of the witnesses." State v. Lentz,
    
    463 N.J. Super. 54
    , 67 (App. Div. 2020); see also State v. S.S., 
    229 N.J. 360
    ,
    380 (2017) (noting criminal-part trial judges routinely hear and decide
    suppression motions and "have ongoing experience and expertise in fulfilling
    the role of factfinder").    "[A] trial court's factual findings should not be
    overturned merely because an appellate court disagrees with the inferences
    drawn and the evidence accepted by the trial court," S.S., 229 N.J. at 374, but
    only if the findings are "so clearly mistaken that the interests of justice demand
    intervention and correction," Gamble, 218 N.J. at 425 (quoting State v. Elders,
    
    192 N.J. 224
    , 244 (2007)). We review a trial court's conclusions of law de novo.
    S.S., 229 N.J. at 380.
    A-4037-18
    12
    A.
    The United States Constitution and New Jersey Constitution forbid law
    enforcement from conducting unreasonable searches and seizures.            State v.
    Terry, 
    232 N.J. 218
    , 231 (2018). Reasonableness is determined "by assessing
    . . . the degree to which [the search] intrudes on an individual's privacy and . . .
    the degree to which it is needed for the promotion of legitimate government
    interests." State v. Davila, 
    203 N.J. 97
    , 111 (2010) (quoting United States v.
    Knights, 
    534 U.S. 112
    , 118-19 (2001)); see also State v. Davis, 
    104 N.J. 490
    ,
    504 (1986) (holding a court, in determining the lawfulness of a seizure, must
    "balanc[e] the State's interest in effective law enforcement against the
    individual's right to be protected from unwarranted and/or overbearing police
    intrusions").
    A motor-vehicle stop is a seizure under the Fourth Amendment. State v.
    Atwood, 
    232 N.J. 433
    , 444 (2018). A motor-vehicle stop is justified and lawful,
    even absent probable cause, "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." Davis, 
    104 N.J. at 505
    ;
    see also Atwood, 232 N.J. at 444 (law-enforcement official must have a
    A-4037-18
    13
    reasonable and articulable suspicion "a criminal or motor vehicle viol ation has
    occurred").
    In determining whether a reasonable and articulable suspicion exists, a
    court must consider all the circumstances in their totality rather than "looking at
    each fact in isolation." State v. Nelson, 
    237 N.J. 540
    , 554-55 (2019). The law
    enforcement officer's perspective is a factor in assessing whether a reasonable,
    articulable suspicion is established. State v. Nishina, 
    175 N.J. 502
    , 511 (2003).
    A court also may consider the background and training of the law-enforcement
    officers, recognizing officers "draw on their own experience and specialized
    training to make inferences from and deductions about the cumulative
    information available to them that 'might well elude an untrained person.'"
    Nelson, 237 N.J. at 555 (quoting United States v. Arvizu, 
    534 U.S. 266
    , 273
    (2002)). However, "raw, inchoate suspicion grounded in speculation cannot be
    the basis for a valid stop." State v. Scriven, 
    226 N.J. 20
    , 34 (2016). In sum, a
    court considers whether the totality of the circumstances known to the officer,
    in light of his or her experience and knowledge, "taken together with rational
    inferences drawn from those facts," justifies the limited restriction on an
    individual's liberty during an investigatory stop. Davis, 
    104 N.J. at 504
    ; see also
    State v. Robinson, 
    228 N.J. 529
    , 544 (2017).
    A-4037-18
    14
    Applying that standard, the trial court correctly determined Police Officer
    Hanrahan had a reasonable and articulable suspicion to stop the taxicab and the
    stop was lawful. Like the trial court, we see nothing "nefarious . . . in enlisting
    the help of the cab driver." See State v. Hathaway, 
    222 N.J. 453
    , 471 (2015)
    (finding an ordinary citizen providing information to a police officer is
    presumed not to have suspect motives). The trial court's factual findings –
    Hanrahan was in the neighborhood where the robbery took place, he witnessed
    a taxicab "looking for something," and after he gave the driver instructions to
    turn his hazard lights off if he picked up someone matching the suspects'
    descriptions, he saw the cab drive away with the lights off – were supported by
    Hanrahan's testimony, which the trial court found to be "completely credible and
    believable."
    The court explained why it found the taxicab driver's testimony less
    credible: the driver was "nervous and upset," and "didn't want to be in th[e]
    courtroom"; "his memory was not all that good"; and his testimony was
    inconsistent in that "first he might have denied [receiving instructions about
    using his hazard lights], then he didn't remember" anything about using his
    hazard lights. The trial court also found Hanrahan had confirmed defendant and
    his clothing matched the description of the unarmed suspect and his clothing and
    A-4037-18
    15
    found credible Strzykalski's testimony about defendant voluntarily opening his
    backpack. We see no basis to overturn those credibility or factual findings or
    the legal conclusions the trial court made based on those findings.
    Having found the taxicab stop to be lawful, we need not address
    defendant's argument that the additional contents of the backpack discovered at
    police headquarters, evidence from the search of Pickering's residence, and
    defendant's statements were "fruits" of an unconstitutional stop.
    B.
    "[T]he right to counsel is fundamental." State v. McCloskey, 
    90 N.J. 18
    ,
    26 n.1 (1982); see also State v. Dorff, ___ N.J. Super. ___, ___ (App. Div. 2021)
    (slip op. at 15). The failure to honor the invocation of the right to speak to an
    attorney generally requires the suppression of any resulting admission.
    Miranda, 
    384 U.S. at 465
    . A suspect who invokes his right to counsel during a
    custodial interrogation is "not subject to further interrogation by the authorities
    until counsel has been made available to him, unless the accused himself
    initiates further communication, exchanges, or conversations with the police."
    Edwards v. Arizona, 
    451 U.S. 477
    , 484-85 (1981); see also State v. Wint, 
    236 N.J. 174
    , 194 (2018); State v. Alston, 
    204 N.J. 614
    , 620 (2011) (noting that after
    a suspect has requested counsel, "an interrogation may not continue until either
    A-4037-18
    16
    counsel is made available or the suspect initiates further communication
    sufficient to waive the right to counsel").
    A suspect is considered to have initiated further communication if he or
    she invites "discussion of the crimes for which he [or she] was being held." State
    v. Chew, 
    150 N.J. 30
    , 64 (1997) (quoting State v. Fuller, 
    118 N.J. 75
    , 82 (1990)).
    The State must establish it was the accused, rather than the police, who initiated
    any further questioning after the accused has invoked his right to counsel. State
    v. Wright, 
    97 N.J. 113
    , 122-23 (1984). Yet, "[i]f an accused does initiate a
    conversation after invoking his rights, that conversation may be admissible if
    the initiation constitutes a knowing, intelligent, and voluntary waiver of the
    accused's rights." Chew, 
    150 N.J. at 61
     (citing Miranda, 
    384 U.S. at 444
    ).
    The record supports the trial court's determination that defendant
    unequivocally initiated further communication with detectives before his second
    statement. The trial court concluded, after defendant had seen his co-defendant
    talking with police officers – something which, as the trial court found, "may
    have ignited an idea in the defendant's mind that [he] better speak to the police
    and give them [his] version before Pickering gives his version" – he told Jones
    he wanted to speak with her again. The trial court found Jones to be "very
    credible" and explained why it found defendant's testimony about the purported
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    17
    pre-interview conversations with the detectives incredible, including: defendant
    did not correct Sauvigne when Sauvigne said they had not met before, Sauvigne
    would not have referred to Pickering as "D.P.," defendant confirmed in his
    testimony he wanted to tell Jones new information, and defendant's demeanor in
    talking about the crime. Defendant was read his Miranda rights, knowingly
    waived them verbally without asking for counsel, signed the Miranda waiver
    form, and provided a videorecorded statement detailing his involvement with
    the robbery – all of which supports the trial court's conclusion defendant
    knowingly and voluntarily waived his rights and gave the second statement.
    The trial court rejected defendant's other complaints about the second
    statement, finding incredible defendant's testimony about being deprived of food
    and sleep and about being under the influence of NyQuil. The trial court found
    defendant would have been fed pursuant to usual procedures, a significant time
    period had lapsed between when defendant had taken NyQuil and had given his
    statement, and in his videotaped statement defendant had not appeared to be
    distressed, had not complained about being hungry or tired, and had testified he
    had slept.   We see no basis to disturb those findings.      Defendant's other
    arguments about being given water instead of coffee and not being able to call
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    18
    his girlfriend are not legally or factually significant and do not to rise to the level
    of a constitutional violation.
    C.
    We find insufficient merit in defendant's Point IV to warrant discussion
    in a written opinion. R. 2:11-3(e)(2).
    Affirmed.
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