NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-3303-18T2
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
DELSHON J. TAYLOR,
Defendant-Respondent.
_____________________________
Submitted July 9, 2019 – Decided August 28, 2019
Before Judges Hoffman and Currier.
On appeal from an interlocutory order of the Superior
Court of New Jersey, Law Division, Salem County,
Indictment No. 18-07-0257.
John T. Lenahan, Salem County Prosecutor, attorney
for appellant (David M. Galemba, Assistant Prosecutor,
of counsel and on the briefs).
Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney for
respondent (Stefan Van Jura, Assistant Deputy Public
Defender, of counsel and on the brief).
PER CURIAM
By leave granted, the State appeals from a February 11, 2019 order
granting defendant's motion for reconsideration, resulting in the court granting
defendant's motion to suppress evidence. Following our review of the record
presented to us, we summarily remand this matter to the Law Division for further
consideration based on State v. Williams, 192 N.J. 1 (2007).
I
We discern the following facts from the initial hearing on defendant's
motion to suppress. While on patrol on November 15, 2017, shortly after 9:00
p.m., Sgt. Carmen Hernandez of the Penns Grove Police Department heard a
radio report of "shots fired" from Officer Travis Paul, who was on patrol in a
local apartment complex. Officer Paul left the complex and drove onto South
Broad Street, in the direction where he heard the shots. Sgt. Hernandez drove
toward the complex from the other direction on South Broad Street, and within
one to five minutes of the radio report, she approached three males walking at a
location "about two blocks" from the complex. Sgt. Hernandez testified "hardly
anybody was in the area" other than these individuals, so she approached them
in response to the shots fired.
Viewing the video from Sgt. Hernandez's body-worn camera, the Law
Division judge observed "that as soon as [Sgt.] Hernandez began approaching
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the three men she said, 'Wait a minute. Don't leave yet.' She then detained the
men until back-up arrived, explaining that shots were fired 'close to this area.'"
The judge then found that when Officer Paul arrived, he
exited his vehicle [and] saw . . . defendant attempting
to walk away. The officer told him "I have to pat you
down." . . . [D]efendant continued pacing and then took
off running. Officer Paul and Officer Haslett, who had
also arrived on location, pursued him. Officer Paul
observed . . . defendant reach into his waistband and
throw a gun to the ground. He apprehended . . .
defendant, and the gun was located and seized.
A grand jury indicted defendant, charging him with two counts of
possession of a weapon, N.J.S.A. 2C:39-4a(1) and N.J.S.A. 2C:28-6(1), one
count of obstruction, N.J.S.A. 2C:29-1a, and one count of tampering with
physical evidence, N.J.S.A. 2C:28-6(1). Defendant filed a motion to suppress
the evidence seized, arguing it was recovered subsequent to an unlawful
investigatory stop.
On November 2, 2018, the Law Division issued a written opinion denying
defendant's motion to suppress. Since Sgt. Hernandez told the individuals to
remain until her backup arrived, the judge found they "reasonably perceived they
were not free to leave," and thus were subject to "an investigative detention."
However, considering "the totality of the circumstances to determine whether
reasonable suspicion existed," and giving "due weight to all inferences which
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3
can be made from the specific and articulable facts present at the time of the
detention," (citing State v. Pineiro, 181 N.J. 13, 25-27 (2004)), the judge found
"there was a reasonable and articulable suspicion that one or more of these men
had engaged in or been part of the shots fired incident[,] and thus an
investigative detention was warranted." The judge determined that Officer
Paul's attempted pat-down was warranted, and concluded "that the action by the
police in this case was not unlawful."
Lastly, the judge observed:
[R]egardless of the ultimate determination as to the
legality of the [Terry1] stop, the New Jersey Supreme
Court has determined that a person must submit to a
stop by police regardless of the lawfulness of the stop
because the resistance and fleeing puts officers and the
public at risk. State v. Crawley, 187 N.J. 440 (2006).
The proper way to challenge a stop is in court. By
fleeing the scene, defendant committed the offense of
obstructing the administration of law. He discarded the
weapon while in the course of committing that offense,
not during the course of the investigative
determination. Therefore, the weapon was lawfully
recovered.
Defendant filed a motion for the Law Division to reconsider its denial of
defendant's original motion to suppress the evidence seized. After the parties
submitted briefs and orally argued, the judge granted defendant's motion for
1
Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1 (1968).
A-3303-18T2
4
reconsideration, resulting in the grant of "[d]efendant's motion to suppress
evidence, namely the handgun."
The judge issued a written opinion in support of her decision to grant the
motion for reconsideration. The judge stated that in his motion for
reconsideration,
defense counsel argued that the court had relied on
observations and circumstances that occurred after the
men were detained to support the conclusion that the
detention was lawful. . . . He further argued that at the
moment [Sgt.] Hernandez ordered . . . defendant to
wait, she had no basis to justify . . . defendant's
detention. . . . I cannot disagree with defense counsel's
assessment after further review of the testimony.
Since she "clearly had instructed them not to leave" immediately upon
approaching the individuals, the judge found Sgt. Hernandez "did not have a
reasonable and particularized suspicion that any of these men had just engaged
in or was about to engage in criminal activity."
The judge then addressed the State's argument that Crawley "requires
denial of the motion to suppress notwithstanding the fact that the investigatory
stop was unlawful." The judge framed the issue in Crawley as "whether a
suspect can be convicted of the offense of obstruction under N.J.S.A. 2C:29 -1
if he flees the scene of an investigatory stop later found to be unconstitutional."
The judge observed the Supreme Court "emphasized the fact that an individua l
A-3303-18T2
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may not flee from police who are acting in good faith and under color of their
authority." See Crawley, 187 N.J. at 460-61 n.8. The judge then quoted the
Court's discussion of good faith:
Among other things, good faith means "honesty in
belief or purpose" and "faithfulness to one's duty or
obligation." A police officer who reasonably relies on
information from headquarters in responding to an
emergency or public safety threat may be said to be
acting in good faith under the statute. However, a
police officer who without any basis arbitrarily detains
a person on the street would not be acting in good faith.
[. . .] [Good] faith is an objective, not a subjective,
standard.
[(quoting Ibid. (citation omitted) (second alteration in
original))]
Applying the facts to this definition, the judge found
the complete absence of articulated facts to support
[Sgt.] Hernandez'[s] decision to subject . . . defendant
to an investigatory stop[,] indicat[ing] that she
arbitrarily detained . . . defendant. The mere fact that
shots were fired somewhere in the community does not
authorize police officers to stop and detain every
individual they encounter. Yet there is no question that
. . . defendant was detained by [Sgt.] Hernandez simply
because another officer heard shots fired somewhere in
Penns Grove. . . .
The Crawley decision does not stand for the
proposition that the police may order anyone to stop
without a reasonable articulable suspicion for doing so.
The circumstances presented here are so devoid of any
basis to conclude that an investigatory stop was
A-3303-18T2
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warranted that the court declines to find that . . .
defendant's flight from police is sufficient to overcome
the constitutional deficiencies of the detention.
II
Police encounters with individuals generally occur at three distinct levels:
a field inquiry; an investigatory stop; and/or an arrest. State v. Nishina, 175 N.J.
502, 510-11 (2003). There are constitutional considerations at all levels of
encounters. Ibid.
An investigative stop, often referred to as a Terry stop-and-frisk, does not
require probable cause to believe a person has committed or is about to commit
an offense. Id. at 510. Rather, "[a] police officer may conduct an investigatory
stop if, based on the totality of the circumstances, the officer ha[s] a reasonable
and particularized suspicion to believe that an individual has just engaged in, or
was about to engage in, criminal activity." State v. Stovall, 170 N.J. 346, 356
(2002) (citing Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1, 21 (1968)).
We presume the investigatory stop in this case was unconstitutional. See
Williams, 192 N.J. at 10. Our reason for ordering a remand is that the judge's
decision on whether to deny the motion to suppress notwithstanding the
unlawful stop was guided entirely by Crawley, when Williams applies more
directly to the facts of this case. As the Court explained in Williams:
A-3303-18T2
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In . . . Crawley, . . . we determined that a defendant
commits the crime of obstruction if he disobeys a police
command and flees from an investigatory stop--even an
unconstitutional one. In this appeal, we must decide
whether [the] defendant who resisted and fled from a
presumed unconstitutional investigatory stop and who
was later arrested for obstruction is entitled to
suppression of the handgun seized incident to his lawful
arrest.
[Williams, 192 N.J. at 4.]
By focusing on the admissibility of the handgun as opposed to the criminality
of obstruction after an unlawful investigatory stop, we note that the Court in
Williams additionally analyzed "whether [the] evidence [was] sufficiently
attenuated from the taint of the constitutional violation . . . ." Id. at 15.
The Court then provided the following guidance for cases like the one
under review:
In evaluating whether evidence is sufficiently
attenuated from the taint of a constitutional violation,
we look to three factors: "(1) the temporal proximity
between the illegal conduct and the challenged
evidence; (2) the presence of intervening
circumstances; and (3) the flagrancy and purpose of the
police misconduct."
[Id. at 28-29 (quoting State v. Johnson, 118 N.J. 639,
653 (1990)).]
A-3303-18T2
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In granting reconsideration, the judge did not specifically address these three
factors, and instead focused solely on "the constitutional deficiencies of the
detention."
While fully explaining her reasons for concluding that Sgt. Hernandez
lacked a basis for conducting "an investigatory stop," the judge did not reject
her initial determination
that the officer would have had a basis to make a field
inquiry. Since "a field inquiry is voluntary and does
not effect a seizure in constitutional terms, no particular
suspicion of criminal activity is necessary on the part
of an officer conducting such an inquiry." State v.
Rosario, 229 N.J. 263, 272 (2017). In other words, Sgt.
Hernandez certainly would have been justified in
asking the men to talk to her about what they may have
heard or seen.
Under the circumstances, we conclude that a remand for further
consideration is appropriate, thereby allowing the motion judge to apply the
three factors cited in Williams to the facts of this case. We imply no view as to
what the judge should decide on remand, only that the judge's decision should
fully address the factors identified in Williams.
Remanded. We do not retain jurisdiction.
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