State v. Segars

799 A.2d 541, 172 N.J. 481, 2002 N.J. LEXIS 885
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 26, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 799 A.2d 541 (State v. Segars) 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. Segars, 799 A.2d 541, 172 N.J. 481, 2002 N.J. LEXIS 885 (N.J. 2002).

Opinions

PER CURIAM.

On February 15, 1999, Ridgewood Police Officer Douglas Williams issued defendant, Alan Segars, a summons for operating a motor vehicle with a suspended license. Throughout the proceedings below, Segars, an African-American, maintained that Officer Williams checked his license plates on a Mobile Data Terminal (MDT) because of his race. All parties agree that if that was the case, his action would have been impermissible. The issue presented is narrower: Should the trial court’s conclusion that Segars failed to sustain the burden of proving discriminatory targeting be sustained? Under the unusual facts of this case, we think it should not.

I

Segars was charged in Ridgewood Municipal Court with driving with a suspended license, contrary to N.J.S.A. 39:3-40. He subsequently filed a motion to suppress the evidence against him. Before the hearing, he moved for discovery of Officer Williams’s personnel file, the Ridgewood Police Department’s procedures for use of the MDT, and any reports regarding Officer Williams’s use of the MDT on February 15,1999.

The motion to compel discovery proceeded first. The facts were sharply contested; the parties offered radically different versions of the event. Segars testified that on the date in question, at [485]*485approximately 1:00 p.m., he drove his car into the parking lot of the Bank of New York in Ridgewood. He parked next to an unoccupied police car, which was the only other car in the lot at the time, and entered the bank to use the automated teller machine. On the way in, he passed Officer Williams, who is Caucasian, exiting the bank. Segars “noticed that [Officer Williams] sort of was looking with sort of a question mark on his face. As I was getting ready to use the machine, he was sort of looking back.” Segars was wearing a running outfit and a baseball cap. By the time he returned to his car after using the automated teller machine, Officer Williams’s car was blocking the exit lane. Segars exited the parking lot through the teller’s lane and drove next door to the Quick Stop. After a few minutes in the Quick Stop, Segars returned to his car where he was approached by Officer Williams, who asked to see his credentials. Segars produced them and, when asked, admitted that his license had been suspended.

According to Segars, before issuing him a ticket Officer Williams went to another car parked on the street in front of the bank and talked to its occupant. Another police officer arrived and issued a ticket to the occupant of that car, who was Caucasian, while Officer Williams issued a ticket to Segars. Officer Williams offered Segars a ride home, which he accepted. Segars testified that Officer Williams was polite and made no comments in respect of race.

Contrariwise, Officer Williams testified that he recalled that Segars’s unoccupied car already was in the bank parking lot when he drove in. He decided to check the license plates on his MDT, and may have checked the plates on another car that was parked in the bank lot at the same time. The check of Segars’s plate revealed that the registered owner of the vehicle had a suspended driver’s license. Officer Williams said he then pulled up next to the parking lot exit and called central dispatch to determine the reason for the suspension, which he discovered was for driving while impaired. While waiting for Segars to return to his car, [486]*486Officer Williams checked the plates on another car that pulled up in front of the bank because he noticed that it had an expired inspection sticker. He saw the driver of that car use the automated teller machine. That driver, who was the Caucasian mentioned in Segars’s testimony, subsequently was issued a ticket. From the point that Segars left the bank, his version of the events coincides with Officer Williams’s testimony.

On cross-examination, Officer Williams restated that he did not use the automated teller machine within the span of time in question, although he may have used it at 8:00 a.m., and that he never saw Segars in the bank or anywhere else prior to the MDT check. When asked why he “ran” Segars’s plate, Officer Williams replied, “It was a bank holiday ... very light traffic, very — not many cars parked in the lot. There were two cars parked there; I ran both plates____[A]ny car that was in the lot I would have run.” Officer Williams stated that he knew that the driver of the car parked in front of the bank was using the automated teller machine but that did not affect his decision to run those plates. He stated that he runs plates frequently, without “rhyme or reason,” and that if it is a slow day, like a holiday, he might check every car that goes by.

At the end of the first day of testimony, the Municipal Court denied Segars’s discovery motion regarding Officer Williams’s personnel file and motor vehicle stops (other than the two pages that he had received already from the State), but granted his request for a copy of the Ridgewood Police Department’s MDT policy and procedures. In making its ruling, the court assumed that Segars’s account was true and that Officer Williams had seen him in the bank prior to running his plates, but reasoned:

I haven’t heard anything that persuades this Court that Officer Williams ran Mr. Segars MDT — on the MDT just because he was African-American. There were three apparent runnings just within a very short time of each other, and apparently at least one of which was a Caucasian person____[H]e runs vehicles all of the time, even at random____ The fact that Mr. Segars is African-American alone is not enough, even accepting that the officer knew that he was African-American.

[487]*487The court stated that it was more likely that Segars was correct regarding the chronology because it is understandable that he would remember the event better.

On the second day of trial, Segars presented the records of the Bank of New York regarding automated teller machine usage on the day in question. Those records supported the accuracy of Segars’s testimony where it conflicted with that of Officer Williams. In particular, they bolstered Segars’s assertion that he and Officer Williams first encountered each other in the bank, and that the officer only then ran the MDT check Sn Segars’s license plate. The records showed that Officer Williams used the automated teller machine at 1:10 p.m. and Segars used it at 1:11 p.m. Concomitantly, police records revealed that Officer Williams checked the plates on another car at 1:12 p.m., on Segars’s at 1:13 p.m., and on a third at 1:16 p.m.

The court denied Segars’s motion to suppress. Confronted with Officer Williams’s bank records, the court held that his testimony that he had not known Segars was African-American prior to checking his plates was not believable, but noted that even before being presented with the records it believed that Segars’s testimony was probably more accurate. The court expressed the view that Officer Williams simply had forgotten the facts of the stop, which had occurred six months before, or that Officer Williams denied using the automated teller machine because he was not supposed to perform personal errands while on duty. The court concluded that given all the facts of the case, including that Officer Williams ran the plates of two other cars at the time he ran Segars’s, he was “satisfied that [Officer Williams] used the MDT in this case for other than racial purposes.”

Segars pled guilty to driving with a suspended license and was sentenced.

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Bluebook (online)
799 A.2d 541, 172 N.J. 481, 2002 N.J. LEXIS 885, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-segars-nj-2002.