NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-2878-15T1
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
RAYMOND C. GRAVATT, JR.,
Defendant-Appellant.
__________________________________
Argued May 24, 2017 – Decided July 13, 2017
Before Judges Accurso and Lisa.
On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
Law Division, Ocean County, Accusation No. 13-
01-00146.
Thomas Cannavo, argued the cause for appellant
(The Hernandez Law Firm, P.C., attorneys; Mr.
Cannavo, of counsel and on the brief).
John C. Tassini, Assistant Prosecutor, argued
the cause for respondent (Joseph D. Coronato,
Ocean County Prosecutor, attorney; Samuel
Marzarella, Chief Appellate Attorney, of
counsel; Mr. Tassini, on the brief).
PER CURIAM
Defendant, Raymond C. Gravatt, Jr., was the driver of a
vehicle involved in a two-car accident at 12:11 a.m. on May 7,
2011. Defendant was seriously injured, as were the three occupants
of the other vehicle. Defendant was charged with driving while
intoxicated (DWI), N.J.S.A. 39:4-50. He was also charged in an
accusation with three counts of third-degree assault by auto by
recklessly driving a vehicle in violation of N.J.S.A. 39:4-50 and
causing serious bodily injury to each of the three occupants in
the other vehicle. N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1c(2).
Following the accident, defendant was taken to a hospital for
medical treatment. The police obtained a blood draw from him
without his consent and without the issuance of a search warrant.
Evidence of defendant's blood alcohol content (BAC) derived from
this blood draw was used as evidence against him. Defendant does
not dispute that probable cause existed for a blood draw or that
the blood was drawn in a medically reasonable manner and within a
reasonable time after his operation of the vehicle.
Defendant moved to suppress evidence of his BAC derived from
the warrantless blood draw. He contended the State failed to
prove that sufficient exigent circumstances existed to allow the
blood draw to be conducted without the prior issuance of a warrant.
After an evidentiary hearing on December 4, 2013, Judge James M.
2 A-2878-15T1
Blaney issued a written decision on December 5, 2013, denying
defendant's motion.
In denying the motion, the judge applied the principles
enunciated by the United States Supreme Court in Missouri v.
McNeely, ____ U.S. ____, 133 S. Ct. 1552, 185 L. Ed. 2d 696
(2013), which had been decided on April 17, 2013. In that
decision, the Court made clear that probable cause that a driver
had consumed alcohol and may have been driving while intoxicated,
and the resulting natural metabolism of alcohol in the bloodstream,
standing alone, does not constitute a per se exigent circumstances
exception to the warrant requirement; instead, it is a factor to
be considered in a totality of circumstances test. Id. at ____,
133 S. Ct. at 1568, 185 L. Ed. 2d at 715.
On May 4, 2015, the New Jersey Supreme Court decided State
v. Adkins, 221 N.J. 300 (2015), in which it held that McNeely must
be followed in New Jersey under the Supremacy Clause of the United
States Constitution, and it should be given pipeline retroactivity
to cases such as this one, where the blood draw was conducted
prior to McNeely and the case is still under direct review. Id.
at 313. The Court also set forth guidelines to be followed by
courts considering suppression motions in these pipeline cases.
Id. at 317.
3 A-2878-15T1
On June 4, 2015, defendant moved for reconsideration of the
denial of his suppression motion based upon the guidelines set
forth in Adkins. The parties appeared before Judge Blaney on July
7, 2015. Both counsel advised the court that they did not wish
to produce any further testimony or other evidence to supplement
the record that had already been established in the evidentiary
hearing initially conducted on the suppression motion. After
hearing oral argument, the judge denied the reconsideration
motion. In a brief supplemental oral opinion, he stated that in
his prior decision he had applied all of the factors required by
McNeely and, even though the New Jersey Supreme Court had not yet
decided Adkins at that time, his analysis complied with the
guidelines which Adkins later prescribed.
On December 1, 2015, defendant pled guilty to all of the
charges. He was sentenced on February 19, 2016, to three years'
probation on the three indictable offenses, together with
forfeiture of his employment as a corrections officer, a $500
fine, and all mandatory assessments and penalties. For DWI,
defendant received a three-month driver's license suspension and
was ordered to pay all mandatory fines and penalties.
Defendant now appeals the denial of his suppression motion
and reconsideration motion. He argues:
4 A-2878-15T1
THE LAW DIVISION ERRED IN DENYING THE
RECONSIDERATION MOTION AND FINDING EXIGENT
CIRCUMSTANCES TO JUSTIFY A WARRANTLESS SEARCH
OF DEFENDANT'S BLOOD PURSUANT TO MISSOURI V.
McNEELY AND STATE V. ADKINS.
We reject defendant's argument and affirm.
The accident happened in a rural area on Route 539 in Little
Egg Harbor Township (LEH). The State's sole witness at the
suppression hearing was Sergeant Scott A. Nino, a twenty-one-year
veteran of the LEH Police Department. Nino served as the traffic
safety investigator and traffic safety sergeant in the department.
He was not on duty when the accident happened. At the time of the
accident, only four LEH officers were on duty. An off-duty member
of the department, Sergeant Wallace, came upon the accident scene
by happenstance as he was driving home, and called 911. The
recorded call-in time was 12:11 a.m.
Nino received a call at home at about 12:24. He immediately
got dressed and proceeded to the accident scene, arriving there
at about 12:33. By that time, six other officers had responded,
including Wallace, who, as we have stated, was the first person
to come upon the accident scene while he was driving home. Two
other on-duty LEH officers responded, as well as two officers from
nearby Stafford Township and one from nearby Barnegat Township.
This was a very serious accident resulting from a head-on
collision. Initial reports indicated that there was one fatality,
5 A-2878-15T1
which turned out not to be the case. However, all four occupants
of the two vehicles were seriously injured.
Some of the responding officers immediately set up and staffed
detours on Route 539. Others went to assist in setting up a
landing area for medical helicopters. At the time of Nino's
arrival, all four injured parties had already been removed from
the scene by ambulances. One was transported by ambulance directly
to a hospital. The other three, including defendant, were flown
by helicopters to different hospitals in the region. Defendant
was flown to Atlantic City Medical Center Trauma Unit.
When Nino arrived at the crash site, he was advised that
emergency medical personnel informed officers that they detected
an odor of alcohol emanating from defendant's breath while they
were treating and transporting him. It was stipulated by the
parties that this advice was given to the police at about 12:20.
Based upon this information, Nino determined that an officer
should take a blood kit and drive to Atlantic City Medical Center
and obtain a blood draw from defendant. That medical facility was
about a thirty-five minute drive from the accident scene. Nino
had a blood kit in his car and provided it to Officer McNally, who
left the scene at about 12:35.
With respect to defendant's injuries, personnel at the scene
informed Nino "that [defendant's] ankle -- foot was hanging off
6 A-2878-15T1
of his leg" and "that he may have had some chest or head injuries."
It was also believed that defendant was awaiting surgery at the
hospital.
Police records contained an entry reflecting that McNally was
still en route to the Atlantic City Medical Center at 1:16. His
exact time of arrival there is not disclosed in the record.
However, it is documented that the blood was ultimately drawn at
2:05.
Without going through all of the details reflected in the
testimony and documentary evidence presented in the evidentiary
hearing, we summarize the activities that were taking place at the
accident scene. In addition to the detour on Route 539, personnel
at the scene also detoured traffic from Route 554. They also shut
down traffic on Stafford Forge Road.
Calls unrelated to this accident were also coming in. Two
LEH officers had to leave the accident scene at 1:37 to respond
to a CPR first aid call. Another first aid call came in, but the
decision was made not to send anyone "because everyone was tied
up." When the two officers returned from the CPR call, they were
sent to respond to another call, regarding loud music, at 2:06.
Officers at the scene placed a call to the Fatal Accident
Support Team (FAST), an entity composed of members of local
departments and the county prosecutor's office, which assists
7 A-2878-15T1
local departments with serious crashes involving death or serious
bodily injury. Repeated calls were made to other off-duty officers
in an effort to obtain additional assistance needed to direct
traffic, respond to unrelated calls, and assist with the accident
scene. Some of these efforts were unsuccessful; in some cases
officers said they would come as soon as possible. At some point,
the officers who had come in from Barnegat Township and Stafford
Township had to return to their home jurisdictions, where they
were needed. The FAST unit did not promptly respond. A second
call was made to that unit at 1:10 to ascertain the status of
their expected arrival. At 2:03, Nino received a call from a
representative of the county prosecutor's office advising that the
FAST unit was on its way. At 1:17, Nino called the Criminal
Investigation Unit (CIU) to come to the scene to take photographs
and look at the scene.
An officer was sent to Southern Ocean County Hospital with a
blood kit for the purpose of obtaining a blood draw from the driver
of the other vehicle. Records reflect that he was en route to
that medical facility at 1:17. Records further reflect that he
had arrived there by 1:51.
Needless to say, the LEH police spent the time immediately
following this accident in a diligent and persistent effort to do
the things that were required following such a serious accident
8 A-2878-15T1
causing serious injuries to four individuals. This included
tending to the injured, arranging for their emergency medical care
and transport to appropriate medical facilities, securing the
accident scene, conducting a thorough investigation of the
accident and recording the results, detouring traffic, calling in
outside units and agencies to assist with their specialized
expertise, and seeking to preserve critical evidence, including
obtaining blood draws from both drivers.
They performed these tasks while severely understaffed. The
outside units did not arrive promptly, most notably the FAST unit
which would include representatives from the county prosecutor's
office who might have been of assistance in dealing with legal
matters such as advice regarding a need for a search warrant to
obtain blood draws. Additionally, officers were required to
respond to unrelated calls occurring within their jurisdiction.
Nino provided the following testimony, explaining why neither
he nor other supervising officers at the scene sought a search
warrant before obtaining a blood draw from defendant:
Q Now, was any request made by you or
any other individual, to your knowledge,
telephonically, in person or otherwise to any
judge for a warrant to withdraw the blood from
the defendant?
A No, Sir.
Q Based on everything going on that
night, did you -- in looking back in
retrospect sitting here now, did you have the
9 A-2878-15T1
ability to sit down, prepare an affidavit, get
the --
A No, Sir.
Q -- number of the judge, contact an
assistant prosecutor, get all that information
done --
A No.
Q -- present it to a judge, get a
warrant done ahead of time?
A No, sir.
Q As a practical matter, was that the
procedure in place back then --
A No, it was not.
Q -- in May of 2011?
A No, sir.
Q Okay. You know that's in place now,
correct?
A Yes, I do.
Q And that's since May of this year
when the McNeely case came out?
A That's correct.
Q But that wasn't done back in May of
2011?
A Not in May of 2011. No, sir.
Q But even if it were, given
everything that was going on here and the
timing involved that you just told the judge
about, do you feel there was an appropriate
amount of time to ask for a telephonic warrant
or any other type of warrant?
A No, sir, I do not.
Under cross-examination, Nino confirmed that there was no
procedure in place in 2011 in the traffic unit for seeking
telephonic warrants. When asked how many warrants he had applied
for in 2011, he answered, "Zero." When asked about the prior
year, he answered, "None." Nino said he didn't know if the
detective division had a procedure set up, "but as far as my
protocol, no. I had nothing set up." He explained that the
10 A-2878-15T1
detective division is separate from his traffic unit, and that he
was not aware of what the detective division does in terms of
their warrants.
In his written decision, Judge Blaney summarized the evidence
and made his factual findings. As we previously stated, defendant
does not dispute that the police had probable cause to request a
blood draw. The sole issue before us, as it was before Judge
Blaney, is whether sufficient exigent circumstances had been
proven to justify a blood draw without a warrant under the exigent
circumstances exception to the warrant requirement.
After discussing the facts, Judge Blaney discussed the
relevant criteria for establishing exigent circumstances, with
particular reference to Schmerber v. California, 384 U.S. 757, 86
S. Ct. 1826, 16 L. Ed. 2d 908 (1966), and McNeely. As we have
stated, at the time of his decision, the New Jersey Supreme Court
had not yet decided Adkins.
The judge prefaced his ultimate conclusions by stating that
McNeely made clear that there is no per se exception resulting
from the natural dissipation of alcohol in an individual's blood
in cases such as these, and that the totality of the circumstances
must be assessed. The judge therefore implicitly acknowledged
that one of the circumstances, indeed the central one, was that
obtaining a blood draw promptly was necessary to preserve evidence.
11 A-2878-15T1
He then listed the totality of the factual circumstances which,
in addition to the inherent dissipation of alcohol in the blood,
supported his conclusion that sufficient exigent circumstances
existed to justify a warrantless blood draw:
1. This case involved life threatening and
serious public safety issues. Four seriously
injured motorists were involved. Three had
to be airlifted by helicopters to area
hospitals. Traffic had to be rerouted, and
the accident scene had to be investigated,
protected, and secured for evidence.
2. There was clearly a shortage of police
manpower because of the time of the accident,
the extent of the injuries and the complicated
logistics.
3. Defendant himself had been airlifted to a
hospital in another county. He was to have
surgery performed and an officer had to be
dispatched to the hospital that was
approximately thirty-five minutes away from
the accident by car.
4. The blood test was taken within a
reasonable time under all of the conditions.
5. This accident occurred in May of 2011 and
no procedure existed in the Little Egg Harbor
Police Department for obtaining a telephonic
warrant.
When the matter again came before Judge Blaney on July 7,
2015, after our Supreme Court's May 4, 2015 decision in Adkins,
the judge denied defendant's reconsideration motion in light of
that case. As we previously stated, neither counsel wished to
supplement the record with additional evidence. Therefore, the
12 A-2878-15T1
judge reconsidered his earlier decision based on that record and
the holding in Adkins and the guidance it provided for analyzing
McNeely pipeline cases.
The judge was satisfied that his prior written decision
fully complied with the further principles set forth in Adkins
because he had analyzed the requirements under McNeely. He stated:
"And I find that I have considered without having had the benefit
of the Adkins decision those standards enumerated and proffered
by the Supreme Court at the present time in Adkins."
Our review of a trial court's decision on a suppression motion
is circumscribed. We must defer to the trial court's factual
findings as long as those findings are supported by sufficient
credible evidence in the record. State v. Elders, 192 N.J. 224,
243 (2007). A reviewing court should especially "give deference
to those findings of the trial judge which are substantially
influenced by his opportunity to hear and see the witnesses and
to have the 'feel' of the case, which a reviewing court cannot
enjoy." Id. at 244 (quoting State v. Johnson, 42 N.J. 146, 161
(1964)). Those findings should only be disregarded when they are
clearly mistaken. State v. Hubbard, 222 N.J. 249, 262 (2015)
(citing Johnson, supra, 42 N.J. at 162). "A trial court's findings
should not be disturbed simply because an appellate court 'might
have reached a different conclusion were it the trial tribunal.'"
13 A-2878-15T1
State v. Handy, 206 N.J. 39, 44-45 (2011) (quoting Johnson, supra,
42 N.J. at 162). However, a reviewing court owes no deference to
the trial court's legal conclusions or interpretation of the legal
consequences flowing from established facts. State v. Watts, 223
N.J. 503, 516 (2015).
Applying these principles, it is clear to us that Judge
Blaney's factual findings are more than amply supported by the
record, and we defer to them. Although we owe no deference to the
judge's legal conclusion that the totality of the circumstances
made it impractical for the police to obtain a warrant before
obtaining a blood draw from defendant, we do agree with that
conclusion.
In McNeely, the United States Supreme Court made clear the
rationale it had applied forty-seven years earlier in Schmerber:
Our decision in Schmerber applied this
totality of the circumstances approach. In
that case, the petitioner had suffered
injuries in an automobile accident and was
taken to the hospital. While he was there
receiving treatment, a police officer arrested
the petitioner for driving while under the
influence of alcohol and ordered a blood test
over his objection. After explaining that the
warrant requirement applied generally to
searches that intrude into the human body, we
concluded that the warrantless blood test "in
the present case" was nonetheless permissible
because the officer "might reasonably have
believed that he was confronted with an
emergency, in which the delay necessary to
14 A-2878-15T1
obtain a warrant, under the circumstances,
threatened 'the destruction of evidence.'"
In support of that conclusion, we
observed that evidence could have been lost
because "the percentage of alcohol in the
blood begins to diminish shortly after
drinking stops, as the body functions to
eliminate it from the system." We added that
"[p]articularly in a case such as this, where
time had to be taken to bring the accused to
a hospital and to investigate the scene of the
accident, there was no time to seek out a
magistrate and secure a warrant." "Given these
special facts," we found that it was
appropriate for the police to act without a
warrant.
[McNeely, supra, ___ U.S. at ___, 133 S. Ct.
at 1559-60, 185 L. Ed. 2d at 705-06.
(citations omitted) (alteration in
original).]
Notably, the Schmerber Court did not elaborate on the "special
facts" upon which it rested its decision, saying nothing more than
the McNeely Court set forth in the passage quoted above.
In McNeely, the Court discussed why there should be no per
se exception, but instead an analysis of the totality of the
circumstances, and commented: "We do not doubt that some
circumstances will make obtaining a warrant impractical such that
the dissipation of alcohol from the bloodstream will support an
exigency justifying a properly conducted warrantless blood test."
Id. at ____, 133 S. Ct. at 1561, 185 L. Ed. 2d at 707. The Court
provided an example to illustrate why a per se exception should
15 A-2878-15T1
not be adopted, even in cases where an accident causes injury to
the suspected drunk driver, namely "a situation in which the
warrant process will not significantly increase the delay before
the blood test is conducted because an officer can take steps to
secure a warrant while the suspect is being transported to a
medical facility by another officer." Id. at ____, 133 S. Ct. at
1561, 185 L. Ed. 2d at 708.
The Court also acknowledged the significant advances that had
transpired in the decades since Schmerber was decided allowing for
the more expeditious processing of warrant applications through
telephonic or other reliable electronic means. Id. at ____, 133
S. Ct. at 1561-63, 185 L. Ed. 2d at 708-09. Along these lines,
New Jersey has adopted a Rule authorizing telephonic warrants upon
compliance with a set of specific procedures. R. 3:5-3(b).
However, the Court went on to acknowledge that the
availability of a telephonic warrant procedure does not create a
panacea eliminating the need for warrantless searches when time
is of the essence to preserve evidence, in cases like this one:
We by no means claim that
telecommunications innovations have, will, or
should eliminate all delay from the warrant-
application process. Warrants inevitably take
some time for police officers or prosecutors
to complete and for magistrate judges to
review. Telephonic and electronic warrants
may still require officers to follow time-
consuming formalities designed to create an
16 A-2878-15T1
adequate record, such as preparing a duplicate
warrant before calling the magistrate judge.
See Fed. Rule Crim. Proc. 4:1(b)(3). And
improvements in communications technology do
not guarantee that a magistrate judge will be
available when an officer needs a warrant
after making a late-night arrest.
[Id. at ____, 133 S. Ct. at 1562, 185 L. Ed.
2d at 709.]
The Court went on to note that although the facts in the
McNeely case might be categorized as a "routine DWI case," even
in such a case that
does not involve "special facts," such as the
need for the police to attend to a car
accident, does not mean a warrant is required.
Other factors present in an ordinary traffic
stop, such as the procedures in place for
obtaining a warrant or the availability of a
magistrate judge, may affect whether the
police can obtain a warrant in an expeditious
way and therefore may establish an exigency
that permits a warrantless search.
[Id. at ____, 133 S. Ct. at 1568, 185 L. Ed.
2d at 714 (citation omitted).]
Thus, McNeely instructs that there is no per se exception,
that additional special facts must be present, and those additional
special facts, combined with the fact of inherent dissipation,
must make it impractical for the police to have time to obtain a
warrant to avoid the destruction or compromise of the evidence
sought, namely a blood draw to determine the BAC of a driver as
close in time as possible to the time of operation. These special
17 A-2878-15T1
facts may include procedures in place for obtaining a warrant,
which we take to mean the time required to comply with those
procedures or, by implication, the absence of such procedures.
In Adkins, the New Jersey Supreme Court held that pipeline
retroactivity must be applied to McNeely for blood draws that
occurred before McNeely was decided in cases that were still active
in the trial court or on direct appeal. Adkins, supra, 221 N.J.
at 313. In McNeely, the United States Supreme Court noted a broad
split of opinion among the states as to whether Schmerber had
authorized a per se exception. McNeely, supra, ___ U.S. at ____,
133 S. Ct. at 1558, 185 L. Ed. 2d at 703-04. Although New Jersey
courts never expressly announced that Schmerber authorized a per
se exception, significant New Jersey "case law contains language
that provides a basis for such a belief." Adkins, supra, 221 N.J.
at 316. The Adkins Court provided a number of examples. Ibid.
Accordingly, the Court "accept[ed] that our case law played a
leading role in dissuading police from believing that they needed
to seek, or explaining why they did not seek, a warrant before
obtaining an involuntary blood draw from a suspected drunk driver."
Id. at 317.
In light of that background, the Court laid down some
guidelines to be applied in the totality-of-the-circumstances
analysis in these pipeline cases. Ibid. Among these are that
18 A-2878-15T1
"the exigency in these circumstances should be assessed in a manner
that permits the court to ascribe substantial weight to the
perceived dissipation that an officer reasonably faced." Ibid.
Further, reviewing courts should "focus on the objective exigency
of the circumstances that the officer faced," recognizing that the
"police may have believed that they did not have to evaluate
whether a warrant could be obtained, based on prior guidance from
our Court that did not dwell on such an obligation." Ibid.
Applying the principles enunciated in McNeely and Adkins, we
are firmly convinced that the additional "special facts" in this
case, combined with the inherent fact of natural dissipation of
alcohol in an individual's blood, provided a totality of
circumstances justifying a warrantless search. The police here
were grossly understaffed in dealing with this very serious
accident. They acted reasonably and expeditiously in trying to
bring in additional manpower to assist in doing all that needed
to be done. Defendant had been promptly flown from the scene to
a suitable medical facility, where he was awaiting surgery for his
very serious injuries. The police could not wait until his surgery
was completed, both because of time and because his BAC might have
been distorted through the surgical process.
Unlike the example the United States Supreme Court provided
in McNeely, there was no "other" officer available who could simply
19 A-2878-15T1
obtain a telephonic warrant while McNally was driving to Atlantic
City to obtain the blood draw. All officers were tasked beyond
their capacities in dealing with the accident scene and other
required police work.
Further, no procedures were in place for the traffic unit in
the LEH Police Department to seek telephonic warrants. This was
recognized as a justifiable consideration in McNeely, as well as
in Adkins. Our acknowledgment of this circumstance does not
constitute application, in whole or in part, explicitly or
implicitly, of a good faith exception, which our Supreme Court has
rejected. See State v. Novembrino, 105 N.J. 95 (1987). However,
the absence of procedures in 2011 is a fact, and it is appropriate
to consider it as one of the "special facts" in the totality of
the circumstances calculus.
Further, the diligent efforts of the local police to bring
in specialized units were met with delays. Notably, the FAST unit
would have included representatives of the county prosecutor's
office, who would have been equipped to provide legal guidance on
the potential need for a search warrant. Their absence until
after the blood draw was actually performed is another fact to be
considered, the fault for which cannot not be laid at the feet of
the local police.
20 A-2878-15T1
Finally, of course, is the substantial weight that should be
ascribed to the perceived dissipation faced by Nino and the other
LEH officers in this case. This is particularly significant
because of the very serious nature of the case, involving very
serious injuries, the potential for a fatality, and the serious
criminal consequences that could (and did) result.
As expressed in Schmerber, this was a case in which Nino and
his fellow officers "might reasonably have believed that [they
were] confronted with an emergency, in which the delay necessary
to obtain a warrant, under the circumstances, threatened 'the
destruction of evidence.'" Schmerber, supra, 384 U.S. at 770,
86 S. Ct. at 1835, 16 L. Ed. 2d at 919-20 (citation omitted). The
exigency existing under the totality of circumstances here
rendered impractical the obtaining of a warrant in time to prevent
the dissipation of alcohol from defendant's bloodstream, thus
justifying the warrantless blood draw.
Affirmed.
21 A-2878-15T1