State v. Herrerra

48 A.3d 1009, 211 N.J. 308
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedAugust 7, 2012
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 48 A.3d 1009 (State v. Herrerra) 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. Herrerra, 48 A.3d 1009, 211 N.J. 308 (N.J. 2012).

Opinion

Chief Justice RABNER

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this case, we must decide whether defendants are entitled to racial profiling discovery to challenge their convictions for attempted murder. The convictions relate to defendants’ attack on a law enforcement officer after a motor vehicle stop.

According to the evidence at trial, a New Jersey State Trooper stopped two Hispanic men for speeding on the New Jersey Turnpike in 1992. As the officer questioned the men immediately after the stop, they tried to overpower him. One defendant grabbed the officer around the neck and began to choke him, while the other tried to get control of the officer’s firearm. During that struggle, the officer ultimately broke the second defendant’s grip, retrieved his weapon, and fired twice, hitting the defendants. The police later obtained a search warrant for defendants’ car and found about fourteen ounces of cocaine in it.

At trial, the State introduced the cocaine seized after the stop as evidence in support of all of the charges. Both defendants were convicted for drug charges as well as attempted murder and related offenses.

Years later, in a motion for post-conviction relief, defendants sought racial profiling discovery to prove that the stop was racially [314]*314motivated. After a series of rulings at the trial and appellate levels, the Attorney General dismissed the drug convictions, leaving only defendants’ convictions for attempted murder and related offenses. Defendants now continue to press for profiling discovery to challenge the remaining convictions. They contend that they need the discovery to demonstrate that the drug evidence should have been suppressed.

That sequence of events raises the following question: whether the exclusionary rule applies to the prosecution of a violent attack on a police officer if the initial stop was unlawful.

The law can and must protect citizens from racial profiling at the same time it protects law enforcement officers from violent attacks in the field. Both are intolerable, and this ease does not require us to choose between those principles.

When acts of racial profiling occur, there are very real legal consequences. To deter official misconduct, the exclusionary rule typically bars the use of any drugs seized after an unlawful stop in a prosecution for violating the drug laws. But extending the exclusionary rule to a prosecution for a violent attack on a police officer after an illegal stop would not serve any of the rule’s purposes. Instead, such an approach would help immunize defendants for separate, deliberate, violent acts that are unrelated to the initial stop.

Because we conclude that the exclusionary rule does not apply in this case — to a prosecution for attempted murder after a possibly unlawful stop — there is no need for further discovery to determine whether the stop was in fact illegal. In short, defendants could not take the law into their own hands and later seek to suppress evidence in a prosecution for attempting to kill a trooper. Instead, they should have peacefully obeyed the officer’s directions and tried to suppress the drugs in court.

Defendants also seek racial profiling discovery to challenge the trooper’s credibility at a new trial. Under the rules of evidence, specific instances of conduct are generally inadmissible to attack a [315]*315witness’s credibility at trial, aside from certain limited exceptions. Defendants offer no viable theory to use possible evidence of racial profiling at trial. We also note that the trial judge reviewed the trooper’s personnel file and found “nothing whatsoever of a discoverable nature in the file.”

For those reasons, we reverse the judgment of the Appellate Division directing that discovery be produced.

I.

A.

The State presented the following evidence. On August 16, 1992, Trooper David Acevedo of the New Jersey State Police was patrolling Route 78 in Warren County. At about 10:00 p.m., he saw a blue Pontiac driving at a high rate of speed. According to the Trooper’s radar unit, the driver was traveling sixty-eight miles per hour in a fifty-five mile per hour zone.

The Trooper pulled the car over onto the shoulder of the road. Two men were in the front seats: defendant Herrerra had been driving, and defendant Gonzalez was in the passenger seat. The Trooper approached the driver’s side and asked Herrerra for his license and registration. He produced a Missouri driver’s license in the name of “Herrerra, Alfonso Lorenzo,” with a Kansas City address. He could not find the car’s registration but handed the Trooper a Pennsylvania title issued to “Lorenzo A. Herrera” of Reading, Pennsylvania. Thus, the first and middle names appeared in a different order on the documents; the last name was spelled differently with three or four “R’s”;1 and the documents listed different addresses.

[316]*316The Trooper directed Herrerra to get out of the car, and the two spoke behind the Pontiac. In response to the Trooper’s questions, Herrerra said he had come from New York but could not remember from where specifically. When the Trooper asked about the passenger, Herrerra identified him as a friend whose name was “Nelson” but said he could not recall his last name.

The Trooper then approached the passenger and asked for identification. Gonzalez provided a Missouri driver’s license with the same street address in Kansas City as defendant Herrerra’s but a different apartment number. Gonzalez also said that he was traveling from New York but could not remember from where. The Trooper, by now concerned, asked Gonzalez to get out of the ear, and the two continued speaking in front of the Pontiac. In response to a question about the driver, Gonzalez described him as a friend and identified him by a name other than what appeared on Herrerra’s license and title.

At that point, the Trooper returned to Herrerra and asked for permission to search the Pontiac. Herrerra agreed to the request and said he preferred a consent form written in Spanish. The Trooper retrieved the form from the police car and called for backup. He then explained the consent form to Herrerra in Spanish. In response, Herrerra said he did not understand the form and wanted Gonzalez to explain it to him.

The Trooper continued to keep the men separate from each other and reviewed the form with Gonzalez behind the police car. Midway through the explanation, Herrerra began walking toward the Trooper while saying, “I’ll sign it. I’ll sign it.” At that moment, Gonzalez grabbed the Trooper from behind in a “bear hug.” Herrerra then charged the Trooper and grabbed him around the neck.

All three fell to the grassy part of the shoulder. The Trooper landed on top of Gonzalez, who tugged at the Trooper’s weapon and tried to remove it from its holster. Meanwhile, Herrerra had his hands around the Trooper’s neck and was choking him. During the struggle, the Trooper — who speaks Spanish — heard Gon[317]*317zalez and Herrerra direct each other in Spanish: Gonzalez told Herrerra to choke the Trooper; and Herrerra urged Gonzalez to “get it”- — referring to the gun. The Trooper pressed down on his weapon to prevent Gonzalez from getting hold of the gun, and eventually broke Gonzalez’s grip. Once the Trooper retrieved the weapon from his holster, he fired two shots at the defendants. One round hit Herrerra in the buttocks.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 A.3d 1009, 211 N.J. 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-herrerra-nj-2012.