State v. Dispoto

913 A.2d 791, 189 N.J. 108, 2007 N.J. LEXIS 7
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJanuary 18, 2007
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 913 A.2d 791 (State v. Dispoto) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Dispoto, 913 A.2d 791, 189 N.J. 108, 2007 N.J. LEXIS 7 (N.J. 2007).

Opinion

*112 Justice LaVECCHIA

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The State appeals from the affirmance of an order granting defendant Vincent Dispoto’s motion to suppress an incriminating statement and other evidence gathered while law enforcement officials executed a domestic violence warrant to search for weapons. State v. Dispoto, 383 N.J.Super. 205, 891 A.2d 633 (App.Div.), leave to appeal granted, 186 N.J. 358, 895 A.2d 448 (2006). That statement and evidence had been used, in turn, to obtain a criminal warrant to search defendant’s residence and office for narcotics. Defendant received Miranda 1 warnings at the time that the officers served him with the domestic violence search warrant at police headquarters. However, defendant was not re- Mirandized at the time he was placed under arrest, approximately one hour later, when he turned over an unlicensed gun to the police at his home. The Appellate Division held that the failure to re-administer Miranda warnings at the time of arrest required suppression of defendant’s post-arrest incriminating statement, notwithstanding the pre-custodial warning about an hour earlier.

Two issues are advanced in this appeal. The issue that has drawn the parties’ foremost attention is whether law enforcement officials must re-administer Miranda warnings to a suspect at the time of arrest even though the individual recently received such warnings during pre-custodial interactions with the officers.. The second issue is whether the criminal search warrant in this matter was invalid.

We are convinced that there was insufficient evidence to support the issuance of the underlying domestic violence search warrant. Therefore, we hold that the criminal search warrant was invalid as fruit of the poisonous tree. Because our holding in regard to the domestic violence search warrant is dispositive of this matter, we add in respect of the issue of the Miranda warnings only that no bright line or per se rule governs whether re-administration is required following a pre-custodial Miranda warning. Courts are *113 to apply a totality of the circumstances analysis when determining whether re-administration of Miranda warnings is necessary.

I.

A.

Turning to the circumstances that generated the issuance of the domestic violence search warrant on April 25, 2001, we draw our facts from the record presented during the three-day suppression hearing conducted by the trial court. During the hearing, the court heard testimony about the facts and circumstances that had been presented to the municipal court judge who issued the domestic violence temporary restraining order and, later the same day, a domestic violence warrant to search for weapons.

On April 19, 2001, Detective Vincent Sheridan of the New Jersey State Police Narcotics and Organized Crime Bureau met with an informant, who had been brought to Sheridan’s attention by a representative of the Mahattan District Attorney’s Office. Sheridan testified that he had been told that the informant possessed information about suspected criminal activities by defendant; however, Sheridan was not told whether or how the District Attorney’s Office knew the informant to be reliable. Sheridan himself had not worked with the informant before and otherwise knew nothing about the informant or his reliability: The informant told Sheridan that defendant was associated with organized crime, was diverting money into offshore accounts, and was dealing narcotics to supplement his income. The informant also said that defendant, who was involved in a divorce proceeding, had asked the informant whether he knew “anybody who would Mil his (defendant’s) wife.”

Sheridan did not have any information at the time to support the informant’s various allegations. In respect of the alleged threat concerning defendant’s wife, Jacqueline, Sheridan did not take any immediate steps to contact and inform her that she might be in danger. Apart from running a computer criminal back *114 ground check on defendant, Sheridan testified that there was no attempt to corroborate, through independent investigation, the information provided by the informant. Instead, Sheridan asked the informant to arrange a meeting with defendant in which the informant could wear a recording device to tape the conversation with defendant.

On April 25, 2001, six days after Sheridan first met with the informant, the informant met with defendant as requested. The record reveals that the tape in the recording device that the informant was wearing ran out before the informant engaged defendant in any discussion about his previous alleged statement, namely, that he wanted to have someone kill his wife. Later, when the informant was being debriefed, he told Sheridan that defendant had denied wanting to have his wife killed. Indeed, defendant had expressed a lack of concern about his estranged wife and had stated that he would not attempt to have her killed because if anything happened to his wife he would become the primary suspect.

On review of the information gathered through the informant’s meeting with defendant, Sheridan’s supervising sergeant concluded that there was insufficient evidence to pursue a murder-for-hire investigation against defendant. 2 However, pursuant to advice provided by an attorney with the Office of the Attorney General, Division of Criminal Justice, the sergeant directed Sheridan to notify Jacqueline Dispoto that they had received uncorroborated information that she was in danger.

*115 That afternoon, on April 25, 2001, Sheridan and two other State Police detectives drove to Jacqueline’s residence in Morris Plains, New Jersey. At the time, Jacqueline had been separated, but not divorced, from defendant for two-and-a-half years. According to Sheridan, he told Jacqueline that he had information that defendant was attempting to hire someone to kill her. According to Jacqueline, who also testified at the suppression hearing, Sheridan did not inform her that the information was “uncorroborated.” Nor did he inform her about the exculpatory statements defendant had made to the informant earlier that day.

After 'hearing that her husband intended to have her killed, Jacqueline Dispoto became very upset. She told the detectives that she believed that defendant would attempt to hire someone to kill her because she previously had obtained two temporary restraining orders against defendant (both of which had been withdrawn). Sheridan encouraged Jacqueline to accompany the State Police detectives to the Morris Plains Police Department to seek a temporary restraining order against defendant, and she agreed.

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Bluebook (online)
913 A.2d 791, 189 N.J. 108, 2007 N.J. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-dispoto-nj-2007.