STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. CHRISTOPHER RADEL (16-08-0697, PASSAIC COUNTY AND STATEWIDE)

CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedOctober 20, 2020
DocketA-2503-18T3
StatusPublished

This text of STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. CHRISTOPHER RADEL (16-08-0697, PASSAIC COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. CHRISTOPHER RADEL (16-08-0697, PASSAIC COUNTY AND STATEWIDE)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. CHRISTOPHER RADEL (16-08-0697, PASSAIC COUNTY AND STATEWIDE), (N.J. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION

SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY APPELLATE DIVISION DOCKET NO. A-2503-18T3

STATE OF NEW JERSEY,

Plaintiff-Respondent, APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION

October 20, 2020 v. APPELLATE DIVISION CHRISTOPHER RADEL a/k/a CHRISTOPH R. RADEL, CHRISTPOH R. RADEL, and CHRISTOHE R. RADEL,

Defendant-Appellant. _____________________________

Argued September 15, 2020 – Decided October 20, 2020

Before Judges Fisher, Moynihan and Gummer.

On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division, Passaic County, Indictment No. 16-08-0697.

Stefan Van Jura, Assistant Deputy Public Defender, argued the cause for appellant (Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney; Stefan Van Jura, of counsel and on the brief).

Deborah Bartolomey, Deputy Attorney General, argued the cause for respondent (Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney General, attorney; Deborah Bartolomey, of counsel and on the brief).

The opinion of the court was delivered by FISHER, P.J.A.D.

After being indicted and charged with numerous weapons and drug

offenses, defendant moved in the trial court for the suppression of evidence

seized from his home. The evidence – guns, ammunition, drugs, and drug

paraphernalia – was seized pursuant to a search warrant supported by

information police had obtained during a warrantless entry into defendant's

home. The State persuaded the trial judge that the warrantless entry did not run

afoul of the Fourth Amendment because the police were justified in conducting

a protective sweep. Because the evidence and the judge's findings do not support

that conclusion, we vacate the order denying suppression and remand for further

proceedings. In light of this disposition, we find it unnecessary at this time to

consider the other issues defendant raised in this appeal.

The record reveals that after the judge's denial of defendant's suppression

motion, defendant reached a plea agreement with the State and entered a

conditional guilty plea to one count of second-degree being a certain person not

permitted to possess weapons, N.J.S.A. 2C:39-7(b)(1), and one count of second-

degree unlawful possession of a weapon, N.J.S.A. 2C:39-5(b)(1). As part of the

plea agreement, the State dismissed the other eighty-six counts of the

indictment. Defendant was later sentenced, within the plea agreement's

A-2503-18T3 2 parameters, to a ten-year prison term, subject to a five-year period of parole

ineligibility, on the certain-persons conviction and a fifteen-year prison term,

subject to a seven-and-one-half-year period of parole ineligibility, on the

unlawful-possession-of-a-weapon conviction; both terms were ordered to run

consecutively.

Defendant appeals, arguing:

(1) the warrantless entry and purported protective sweep of his home could not be justified because, among other things, he was arrested and handcuffed outside the home before the sweep occurred;

(2) those counts charging unlawful possession of a firearm under N.J.S.A. 2C:39-5(b)(1), were barred by N.J.S.A. 2C:39-6(e), which declares that nothing in subsection (b) of N.J.S.A. 2C:39-5 "shall be construed to prevent a person keeping or carrying about his . . . residence . . . any firearm";

(3) those counts charging possession of hollow nose bullets, N.J.S.A. 2C:39-3(f)(1), were barred by N.J.S.A. 2C:39-3(g)(2)(a), for reasons similar to those raised in his second point;

(4) the charges based on defendant's possession of marijuana or drug paraphernalia should have been dismissed because, in defendant's words, "the State failed to present clearly exculpatory evidence to the grand jury demonstrating that defendant could lawfully possess marijuana for medical reasons"; and

(5) the sentence imposed was shocking to the judicial conscience and otherwise improperly imposed.

A-2503-18T3 3 We agree with defendant that the police were not entitled to conduct a protective

sweep under the circumstances. For that reason, we vacate the order denying

the suppression motion and remand for further proceedings without reaching or

deciding the other four issues.1

Three police officers and defendant testified at the suppression hearing.

The State's evidence revealed that police interest in defendant started with an

assistant prosecutor's January 7, 2016 call to local police about an October 27,

2015 order, which apparently sprang from defendant's March 2015 conviction

for unlawful possession of a weapon. The order directed "members of Little

Falls Police Department [to] respond to the [d]efendant's home, located at 103

Browertown Road [, Little Falls] . . . for the limited purpose of retrieving from

said home any and all firearms, including one Beretta [handgun]." One of the

officers testified that after the phone call from the prosecutor's office he did

some research and learned defendant was the target of two outstanding

municipal arrest warrants. He also learned that defendant lived at 81

Browertown Road, not 103 Browertown Road where his parents lived. The

1 Because we do not consider them at this time, defendant may pursue those other four issues in any later appeal, if necessary. A-2503-18T3 4 officer called and briefly spoke to defendant's mother, who, the officer asserted,

wasn't helpful in assisting his attempts to get in touch with defendant.

The police assembled a team of six officers for the purpose of going to

defendant's neighborhood and arresting him on the outstanding municipal arrest

warrants. 81 Browertown and 103 Browertown are on the same side of the street

and separated by a driveway that runs off Browertown and into a Passaic Valley

High School parking lot. The officers were stationed around the premises; some

watched the backs of the homes, and others sat in the driveway to the high school

between 81 and 103 Browertown. Before long, one officer noticed a figure in

blue in the backyard of 81 Browertown entering the rear of that home; that

officer also heard a "loud bang." Within a few minutes, other officers saw a

person, who matched their photos of defendant, wearing a blue jacket as he

exited the front door of 81 Browertown carrying a laundry basket. As defendant

placed the laundry basket in the backseat of a vehicle parked in the driveway,

an officer – in his words – was "on" him, seizing defendant and placing him face

down as he applied handcuffs. Defendant did not resist. Once defendant was in

custody, the police concluded a protective sweep of 81 Browertown was

necessary out of a concern there might be others inside, along with the handgun

they had come to retrieve.

A-2503-18T3 5 After entering the dwelling at 81 Browertown, police observed in plain

sight a black handgun in a glass cabinet, a ballistics vest, and drug paraphernalia.

No other person was inside. Some officers then left to seek out a search warrant

while others remained behind to secure the premises until the warrant was

obtained. A judge issued a search warrant and the subsequent search led to the

seizure of weapons and other evidence that were the subject of defendant's

unsuccessful suppression motion. The linchpin of the judge's denial of the

motion was his finding that the officers engaged in a legitimate protective sweep

of 81 Browertown.

In considering defendant's argument about the challenged protective

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STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. CHRISTOPHER RADEL (16-08-0697, PASSAIC COUNTY AND STATEWIDE), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-new-jersey-vs-christopher-radel-16-08-0697-passaic-county-and-njsuperctappdiv-2020.