State v. Randy K. Manning (080834) (Bergen County & Statewide)

CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJanuary 13, 2020
DocketA-10-18
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Randy K. Manning (080834) (Bergen County & Statewide) (State v. Randy K. Manning (080834) (Bergen County & Statewide)) 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. Randy K. Manning (080834) (Bergen County & Statewide), (N.J. 2020).

Opinion

SYLLABUS

This syllabus is not part of the Court’s opinion. It has been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for the convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Court. In the interest of brevity, portions of an opinion may not have been summarized.

State v. Randy K. Manning (A-10-18) (080834)

Argued September 23, 2019 -- Decided January 13, 2020

ALBIN, J., writing for the Court.

The primary issue in this appeal is whether, during the interim period between passage of the amendment to the New Jersey Wiretapping and Electronic Surveillance Control Act (Wiretap Act) in 2010 and the effective date of the Court’s decision in State v. Earls, 214 N.J. 564 (2013), the constitutional warrant requirement and corresponding suppression remedy applied to securing cell-phone location information. This appeal also presents the issues of whether exceptions to the warrant requirement applied to securing that information and whether those same exceptions also applied to securing call-detail records under State v. Hunt, 91 N.J. 338 (1982).

Here, in 2011, after the Wiretap Act amendment went into effect but before the Court’s decision in Earls, law-enforcement officers -- without a warrant or court order -- obtained defendant Randy K. Manning’s cell-phone records by submitting an exigent- circumstances request to a cell-phone service provider. Thus, the constitutional propriety of the police conduct depends on the application of the exigent-circumstances doctrine.

On August 16, 2011, shortly after 8:00 a.m., the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office investigated the grisly murder of a victim who had died from multiple gunshot wounds and whose charred body was found in the rear of his Chevy. Detectives secured a judicially authorized warrant to search the vehicle. By the late afternoon or early evening of August 16, Detective John Frazer had two pieces of information that made defendant “a person of interest”: defendant’s fake California license was found in the Chevy owned by his friend, the victim, and defendant’s timeline of his claimed whereabouts seemingly conflicted with the victim’s cell-phone records.

Despite the securing of a search warrant earlier for the Chevy, Detective Frazer bypassed the warrant/court-order process and, that evening, submitted an exigent- circumstances request form to AT&T for defendant’s cell-phone records. Detective Frazer admittedly used the exigent-circumstances request “as an investigatory tool.” Although the detective stated that applying for a search warrant “was not practical at that time,” he conceded that he could have applied for a telephonic warrant. He gave no estimate of the time that it would have taken to apply for a telephonic warrant or to 1 prepare an affidavit for a search warrant. Nor did he estimate the time it would have taken to secure a warrant, given that a Superior Court judge was on call.

Based on the cell-phone records, defendant became the target of the investigation. The next day, Detective Frazer submitted three separate and detailed affidavits in support of three warrants, including one for a wiretap of, and another for further communications data from, defendant’s cell phone. According to Detective Gary Boesch, on August 17, defendant called the Bergen County Police Department and inquired whether the police wanted to speak with him. The next day Detective Boesch returned defendant’s call. On August 19, defendant took public transportation to the Hackensack bus terminal, where Detective Boesch picked him up for questioning.

The trial court denied defendant’s motion to suppress the warrantless search of his cell-phone records based on the exigent-circumstances exception. Defendant was convicted of murder, desecration of human remains, and related crimes. In an unpublished opinion, the Appellate Division reversed defendant’s convictions on two grounds and remanded for a new trial. First, the Appellate Division held that the trial court erred in not granting defendant’s request for jury instructions on aggravated manslaughter and reckless manslaughter -- lesser-included offenses to the charge of murder. Second, the Appellate Division held that the failure of the police to secure a warrant or court order for defendant’s cell-phone records should have resulted in the suppression of those records.

The Court granted the State’s petition for certification “limited to the issue of the admissibility of the defendant’s cell phone records.” 235 N.J. 311 (2018).

HELD: During the three-year interim period between passage of the amendment to the Wiretap Act in 2010 and the effective date of the Court’s Earls decision in 2013, individuals possessed a reasonable expectation of privacy in cell-phone location information cognizable under our State Constitution. As in other contexts, exceptions to the constitutional warrant requirement -- such as consent or exigent circumstances -- apply to securing cell-phone records. Therefore, in 2011, our Constitution required law-enforcement officers to obtain either a warrant or court order for cell-phone location information in accordance with the standards of N.J.S.A. 2A:156A-29 or to satisfy one of the exceptions to the warrant requirement. It also follows that, under Article I, Paragraph 7, the exclusionary rule applies to unconstitutional searches and seizures of cell-phone records. Here, the State did not obtain a warrant or court order and failed to satisfy its burden of proving that exigent circumstances justified the warrantless search, requiring suppression of defendant’s cell-phone records.

1. In 2013, in Earls, the Court held that Article I, Paragraph 7 of our State Constitution afforded individuals a reasonable expectation of privacy in their cell-phone location information. 214 N.J. at 588. In light of the constitutional right to privacy safeguarded 2 by Article I, Paragraph 7, the Court declared that law enforcement “must obtain a warrant based on a showing of probable cause, or qualify for an exception to the warrant requirement,” to secure cell-phone location information. Ibid. The Court determined that the Earls decision represented a new rule of law and therefore applied the warrant requirement for cell-phone location information prospectively. Id. at 591. The Court recognized, however, that since the 2010 amendment to the Wiretap Act, state law had required law enforcement to secure a court order or a warrant to obtain cell-phone location information from a service provider. Id. at 589 (citing N.J.S.A. 2A:156A-29). (pp. 18-23)

2. The Court now holds that the constitutional warrant requirement applied to cell-phone location information during the three-year interim period between passage of the amendment to the Wiretap Act in 2010 and the effective date of the Court’s Earls decision in 2013. However, in light of Earls and the legitimate expectations of law enforcement under the Wiretap Act, the Court also determines that the standard for securing a court order for those records during the three-year interim period was the one set forth in the Act. That is, in the absence of an exception to the warrant requirement, to secure cell-phone location information from a service provider, law enforcement was required, at the very least, to obtain a court order based on “specific and articulable facts showing that there [were] reasonable grounds to believe that the record or other information . . . [was] relevant and material to an ongoing criminal investigation.” See N.J.S.A. 2A:156A-29(e). The Court also expressly holds that following the 2010 amendment to the Wiretap Act, law-enforcement officers were justified in relying on well-established exceptions to the State Constitution’s warrant requirement for securing cell-phone records, including the exigent-circumstances exception.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Johnson v. United States
333 U.S. 10 (Supreme Court, 1948)
Miranda v. Arizona
384 U.S. 436 (Supreme Court, 1966)
Katz v. United States
389 U.S. 347 (Supreme Court, 1967)
Mincey v. Arizona
437 U.S. 385 (Supreme Court, 1978)
State v. Frankel
847 A.2d 561 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 2004)
State v. Johnson
940 A.2d 1185 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 2008)
State v. DeLuca
775 A.2d 1284 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 2001)
State v. Evers
815 A.2d 432 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 2003)
State v. Mollica
554 A.2d 1315 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1989)
State v. Hunt
450 A.2d 952 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1982)
State v. MINITEE
44 A.3d 1100 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 2012)
State v. Elders
927 A.2d 1250 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 2007)
State v. William L. Witt(074468)
126 A.3d 850 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 2015)
State v. Gary Lunsford (075691)
141 A.3d 270 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 2016)
Carpenter v. United States
585 U.S. 296 (Supreme Court, 2018)
State v. Edmonds
47 A.3d 737 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 2012)
State v. Vargas
63 A.3d 175 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 2013)
In re Warren
66 A.3d 1267 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 2013)
State v. Earls
70 A.3d 630 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 2013)
State v. Hathaway
120 A.3d 155 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 2015)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
State v. Randy K. Manning (080834) (Bergen County & Statewide), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-randy-k-manning-080834-bergen-county-statewide-nj-2020.