Court Opinion

ID: 4175507
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2017-06-08 14:12:46.846817+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:21:31.898034
License: Public Domain

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
                      APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
     This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court."
      Although it is posted on the internet, this opinion is binding only on the
         parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R.1:36-3.

                                       SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
                                       APPELLATE DIVISION
                                       DOCKET NO. A-5772-14T4

STATE OF NEW JERSEY,

        Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.

VASILIO KOUTSOGIANNIS, a/k/a
VASILIO KOUTSGIANNIS,

        Defendant-Appellant.

              Submitted May 10, 2017 – Decided           June 8, 2017

              Before Judges Simonelli, Carroll and Gooden
              Brown.

              On appeal from the Superior Court of New
              Jersey, Law Division, Ocean County, Indictment
              No. 13-07-1902.

              Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney
              for appellant (David A. Gies, Designated
              Counsel, on the briefs).

              Joseph D. Coronato, Ocean County Prosecutor,
              attorney for respondent (Samuel Marzarella,
              Chief Appellate Attorney, of counsel; William
              Kyle Meighan, Senior Assistant Prosecutor, on
              the brief).

              Appellant filed a pro se supplemental brief.
PER CURIAM

       In this appeal, defendant Vasilio Koutsogiannis challenges

the denial of his motion to suppress, as unconstitutional, his

arrest, his custodial statement, and evidence seized from his

parents' home where he was temporarily residing.                        We affirm,

substantially      for   the   reasons     expressed     in   Judge     Francis    R.

Hodgson, Jr.'s thorough written opinion of September 24, 2014.

                                         I.

       On March 2, 2013, T.M.1 called 9-1-1 to report he was robbed

at gunpoint.    Sergeant Dennis Jarin of the Ocean Township Police

Department (OTPD) responded to the scene at approximately 5:42

p.m.    T.M. told Jarin the robbery occurred while he was walking

and a passing car stopped and asked him for directions.                         T.M.

reported that $500 and a butane lighter were taken from him at

gunpoint by the vehicle's two occupants.              T.M. supplied Jarin with

a    description     and   license       plate      number    of    the    vehicle.

Investigation      revealed    the   car      was   registered     to   defendant's

sister, Katerina Koutsogiannis (Katerina),2 who resided on Ross

1
    We use initials for the victim to protect his privacy interests.
2
  Because defendant, his co-defendant Katerina, and other family
members who testified at the suppression hearing share a common
surname, we refer to them by their first names in this opinion for
clarity and ease of reference.

                                         2                                  A-5772-14T4
Court in Manahawkin.    The description of the vehicle was broadcast

to surrounding police agencies in an attempt to locate it.

     T.M. was transported to OTPD headquarters where he was further

interviewed by Sergeant Michael Rogalski.   T.M. initially reported

that the female passenger reached out of the car with a rope, tied

him around the neck, and dragged him into the car.    The male driver

then shoved a handgun in his face, and the two stole $500 from him

before driving off.

     Under further questioning by Rogalski, T.M. changed his story

and admitted the robbery occurred during his sale of thirty-seven

bags of heroin to the two suspects.     T.M. now stated he entered

the vehicle and met with a male driver with a goatee known as

"Vic" and a woman who sat in the back seat.          The three began

discussing the drug transaction when suddenly the woman wrapped

something around his neck and the driver stuck a handgun in his

left cheek and demanded he empty his pockets.      The pair allowed

T.M. to leave after he placed the heroin and his money on the

floor of the vehicle.     T.M. explained that he called the police

because he feared for his safety and that of his family.       During

this recorded interview, Rogalski noted redness to T.M.'s neck and

a mark on his left cheek, consistent with T.M.'s version of events.

                                  3                           A-5772-14T4
     A short time later, officers from the Stafford Township Police

Department (STPD) located the subject vehicle on Kristine Avenue 3

in Manahawkin, one block east of the Ross Court address that

appeared on Katerina's registration.    At around 6:15 p.m., STPD

Patrolman Robert Conforti, accompanied by his K-9 dog who was

trained to track the freshest odor, followed the fresh scent to

the Ross Court address to which the car was registered.   Believing

the car's occupants were involved in the armed robbery and were

presently in the Ross Court home, Conforti and other officers took

positions around the outside.

     STPD Lieutenant Herman Pharo, who was in charge of the

regional S.W.A.T. unit, was called and responded to the scene.

Pharo believed the home was occupied based on reports from other

officers that they observed movement and lights being turned on

and off inside.     Pharo called the house phone and, although he

heard it ringing, no one answered.      The phone was eventually

answered by Frank Koutsogiannis (Frank), the father of defendant

and Katerina.     Frank owned the Ross Court home, and Pharo knew

Frank because he owned a local restaurant.    Frank told Pharo he

was in Florida and his phone calls were being forwarded to him

there.   Frank advised Pharo that defendant was staying in the

3
  Kristine Avenue alternately appears as Christine Avenue in the
record.

                                 4                          A-5772-14T4
house, and that the only other person who had access to it was

Katerina.    Pharo informed Frank that defendant and Katerina were

suspects in an armed robbery.   According to Pharo, Frank then gave

permission for police to enter the home, and indicated he would

send his older daughter Sophia with a key.

     Sophia arrived about fifteen minutes later.      She testified

at the hearing: "My father called me, he was in Florida.     He said

to go to . . . my parents' house, to let the police in, because

they were looking for [defendant and Katerina]."    Although Sophia

claimed she had a key, she was met by Pharo who kept her away from

the house and, consequently, she did not use the key to enter.

     The ensuing events are recounted in Judge Hodgson's written

opinion as follows:

                 Pharo continued his attempts to make
            contact with the occupants of the house. He
            walked to the front door and knocked and
            identified himself as police and called out
            to occupants with no response. Pharo walked
            around the back of the house and then toward
            the front again and knocked and called out as
            he proceeded [but] no one answered.      As he
            continued his walk around the house the garage
            door went up. As the officers began to enter
            the garage, the door started to close. The
            entering officers triggered the infrared
            safety mechanism that stops the door from
            closing when it is blocked and the door
            reversed and continued to open. The officers
            entered the garage and partially opened the
            interior garage door leading from the garage
            into the house. Officers called out for the
            occupants and identified themselves as police,

                                  5                          A-5772-14T4
          at this point not yet crossing the threshold
          of this interior garage door.      [Defendant]
          came from inside the house to the interior
          garage door with his hands up, presenting
          himself to the officers, and was taken into
          custody.   Officers then entered the house
          through the door from the attached garage and
          continued to call out. [Katerina] was located
          on the first floor at the top of the stairway
          leading to the basement walking toward the
          officers with her hands up. She complied with
          police orders to come to them. She was then
          taken into custody without incident.      Both
          [Katerina] and [defendant] were brought
          outside, handcuffed, and taken away in police
          cars. The police swept the house for other
          occupants and then secured the residence while
          they sought a search warrant.      Sophia was
          permitted into the house and told to wait
          until the officers returned with a search
          warrant.     Police reported securing the
          residence at about 8:03 p.m.

     Defendant and Katerina were taken to police headquarters

where they were interviewed separately.       Rogalski first read

Katerina her Miranda4 rights and presented her with the OTPD

standard rights form, which she signed. Katerina initially claimed

that defendant received a phone call from a friend to pick up

someone named Joey.   When "Joey" entered the vehicle he appeared

beat up and stated someone had just tried to rob him.    "Joey" then

"pull[ed] out a bunch of dope.   Blue bags of heroin."   Upon seeing

the drugs, Katerina and her brother ordered "Joey" out of the car.

4
  Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436, 86 S.Ct. 1602, 16 L. Ed. 2d
694 (1966).

                                 6                           A-5772-14T4
     Katerina's     initial   version   of    events   changed    as    her

questioning progressed until eventually it coincided more closely

with that of T.M.     She revealed that recently she had again been

using heroin.     She stated her brother took her along for a ride

when she told him she could not lend him any money.              They then

went to pick up "Joey" and, when he entered the car, defendant

pulled out a gun, pushed it into "Joey's" neck, and announced it

was a robbery.      After a break in the questioning during which

police spoke to defendant, Katerina admitted she used a scarf to

hold T.M. by the neck from the back seat of the car.        She further

admitted that, upon arriving back at her parents' house, she and

defendant concocted her initial version that the victim entered

the car after having already been beaten.         Katerina stated that

heroin, but no cash, was taken from the victim.           She also said

defendant took the gun from the car and stashed it somewhere in

the garage of the home.

     Defendant was interviewed next.         He denied the robbery and

gun possession allegations after being read his Miranda rights.

Defendant told police, as Katerina initially did, that "Joey"

appeared roughed up when he entered the car and defendant ordered

him to leave after "Joey" "pull[ed] out about I don't know how

many bags [] of pot [and] maybe [thirty], [forty] bags of heroin."

When informed by police that Katerina stated otherwise, defendant

                                   7                               A-5772-14T4
claimed his sister was in "cohoots" with T.M., and would say

anything to avoid blame.      Defendant advised that Katerina parked

the car on Kristine Drive because she was not allowed in her

parents' house.        Defendant further stated he heard the police

knocking and that he cooperated with them by opening the garage

door and lying down.      Rogalski testified that later, as Katerina

was brought into the patrol room where defendant was being held

in a cell, defendant told her, "I can't believe you ratted out

your own brother."

      Sophia was allowed to remain in the kitchen and bathroom of

the residence while police obtained a warrant to search the home

and car.     While using the bathroom, Sophia noticed the cabinet was

not closing properly.      She attempted to close it and, in doing so,

found empty heroin packets and a needle, which she turned over to

the police.      Following issuance of the search warrant, police

recovered a multicolored scarf from the car, and heroin and a

handgun from the garage of the home.

      In July 2013, while T.M. was incarcerated, he recanted his

prior version of events. Instead, T.M. told a defense investigator

he was not the victim of a robbery, there was no gun, and no scarf

had been placed around his neck.

      Later that month, defendant and Katerina were jointly charged

in   Ocean    County   Indictment   No.   13-07-1902   with   first-degree

                                     8                             A-5772-14T4
robbery, N.J.S.A. 2C:15-1 (count one); second-degree possession

of a weapon for an unlawful purpose, N.J.S.A. 2C:39-4(a) (count

two); third-degree unlawful possession of a weapon,                 N.J.S.A.

2C:39-5b   (count   three);     and       third-degree    possession     of    a

controlled dangerous substance (CDS), N.J.S.A. 2C:35-10a(1) (count

five).     Defendant   was    charged      separately    with   fourth-degree

aggravated assault, N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1b(4) (count four); and second-

degree possession of a firearm by a convicted person,               N.J.S.A.

2C:39-7b (count six).        Katerina was separately charged in count

seven with second-degree possession of a firearm by a convicted

person, N.J.S.A. 2C:39-7b.

     Defendant and Katerina moved to suppress their arrests, their

custodial statements, and the seized evidence.              The trial court

denied the motions on September 22, 2014.               On February 6, 2015,

pursuant to a negotiated plea agreement, defendant pled guilty to

an amended charge of second-degree robbery, and the State agreed

to dismiss the remaining charges in Indictment No. 13-07-1902.

Defendant also reserved the right to appeal the denial of his

suppression motion and certain other designated legal issues.5

5
   Defendant also pled guilty to an unrelated third-degree
possession of CDS charge under Indictment No. 13-06-1400, for
which he received a concurrent four-year prison sentence.

                                      9                                A-5772-14T4
     On May 15, 2015, defendant filed a pro se motion to withdraw

his plea, claiming he was not guilty of the charges in the

indictment, and that his plea was coerced and not knowingly and

intelligently entered. Defendant subsequently withdrew the motion

and proceeded to sentencing on July 31, 2015.    The court imposed

a five-year prison term with an eighty-five-percent period of

parole ineligibility pursuant to the No Early Release Act, N.J.S.A.

2C:43-7.2.   This appeal followed.

                               II.

     In his counseled brief, defendant raises the following issues

for our consideration:

          POINT ONE

          []   DEFENDANT'S   WARRANTLESS   ARREST WAS
          UNCONSTITUTIONAL WHERE THE POLICE OFFICERS
          ENTERED HIS HOME WITHOUT CONSENT OR THE
          PRESENCE OF EXIGENT CIRCUMSTANCES.

          POINT TWO

          SOPHIA'S CONDUCT WHICH WAS CONTROLLED BY THE
          POLICE OFFICERS WHO ALLOWED HER TO ENTER THE
          HOME AFTER IT WAS SECURED AMOUNTED TO JOINT
          PARTICIPATION SUFFICIENT TO BRING THE PRIVATE
          PARTY'S SEIZURE OF THE EMPTY WAX FOLDS WITHIN
          THE PURVIEW OF THE EXCLUSIONARY RULE.

          POINT THREE

          THE FACTS AND CIRCUMSTANCES TO SUPPORT A WELL-
          GROUNDED SUSPICION THAT A CRIME OCCURRED IN
          ORDER TO ISSUE A SEARCH WARRANT OF []
          DEFENDANT'S HOME IS ABSENT WHERE THE POLICE
          OFFICER RELIED ON INFORMATION TOLD TO HIM BY

                               10                           A-5772-14T4
         ANOTHER OFFICER WHICH RESTED ON FACTS RELATED
         BY A KNOWN UNRELIABLE SOURCE WHO LATER
         RECANTED.

         POINT FOUR

         LACKING THE EXISTENCE OF A WELL-GROUNDED
         SUSPICION THAT [] DEFENDANT WAS KATERINA'S
         PARTNER IN THE ALLEGED ROBBERY, [] DEFENDANT'S
         CUSTODIAL STATEMENT SHOULD BE SUPPRESSED WHERE
         IT WAS OBTAINED AFTER AN ILLEGAL ARREST.

         POINT FIVE

         KATERINA'S CUSTODIAL STATEMENTS SHOULD BE
         SUPPRESSED WHERE HER RESPONSES SHOW THAT HER
         SUBMISSION TO THE INTERROGATION WAS NOT
         VOLUNTARY.

    The following additional points are raised in defendant's pro

se supplemental brief:

         POINT ONE

         [THE] COURT ERRED IN FINDING SUFFICIENT
         PROBABLE   CAUSE  EXISTED   TO  JUSTIFY   THE
         WAR[R]ANTLESS [ARREST] OF DEFENDANT AND
         CODEFENDANT AT [THE] SUPPRESSION HEARING.

         POINT TWO

         NO VALID EXCEPTIONS TO THE WARRANT REQUIREMENT
         EXISTED    TO   JUSTIFY    THE   ENTRY    INTO
         [DEFENDANT'S] HOME [] OR HIS SUBSEQUENT
         ARREST.

         POINT THREE

         STATEMENTS OBTAINED BY [THE] O.T.P.D. WERE THE
         PRODUCT OF AN UNLAWFUL ARREST AND JUDGE
         HODGSON ERRED IN NOT SUPPRESSING THEM.

                              11                          A-5772-14T4
           POINT FOUR

           THE PROTECTIVE SWEEP OF [DEFENDANT'S] HOME WAS
           UNLAWFUL UNDER THE [FOURTH] AMENDMENT [TO THE
           UNITED STATES CONSTITUTION] AND JUDGE HODGSON
           ERRED IN FINDING IT TO BE REASONABLE.

           POINT FIVE

           THE STATE[']S CONDUCT IN INSTIGATING FALSE AND
           FRAUDULENT AND BELATED POLICE REPORTS AND
           TESTIMONY   AT   [THE]   SUPPRESSION   HEARING
           VIOLATED [DEFENDANT'S FOURTEENTH] AMENDMENT
           DUE   PROCESS   RIGHTS  AND   PREJUDICED   THE
           PROCEEDINGS. JUDGE HODGSON ERRED IN ADMITTING
           THEM.

           POINT SIX

           [DEFENDANT'S] GUILTY PLEA IS INVALID AND MUST
           BE VACATED.

           POINT SEVEN

           VINDICTIVE,   MALICIOUS,     AND    SELECTIVE
           PROSECUTION  []   PREJUDICED    DEFENDANT[']S
           JUDICIAL PROCEEDINGS AND SUBSEQUENT PLEA
           AGREEMENT.

           POINT EIGHT

           [THE] PROSECUTOR FAILED TO PRESENT EXCULPATORY
           EVIDENCE TO [THE] GRAND JURY [] NEGAT[ING]
           DEFENDANT[']S GUILT THUS REQUIRING DISMISSAL
           OF IND. NO: 13-07-1902.

We   consolidate   defendant's   arguments   in   the   discussion   that

follows.

                                 III.

                                  A.

                                  12                             A-5772-14T4
    We   first   address   defendant's   contention   that   the    police

lacked probable cause to arrest him.        In his written opinion,

Judge Hodgson began by noting that the "threshold issue to be

addressed [] is whether the police had probable cause to arrest

defendant[]."    The judge found probable cause for the arrest,

reasoning:

               In the instant case, at the time of their
          entry into the residence at Ross Court, police
          were acting on a report from an identified
          citizen who reported being robbed at gunpoint
          first by making a call to 9-1-1 and then
          providing statements to [O]fficer Jarin, the
          responding    officer[,]    and    [D]etective
          Rogalski.   The responding Stafford officers
          were entitled to rely on the underlying police
          work of other officers who were investigating
          the crime; information possessed by the 9-1-1
          dispatcher as well as [O]fficers Jarin and
          Rogalski is properly imputed to the responding
          officers. See United States v. Robinson, 535
          F.2d 1298, 1299 (9th Cir. 1976); United States
          v. Hensley, 469 U.S. 221, 230-31[, 105 S. Ct.
          675, 681-82, 83      L. Ed. 2d 604, 613-14]
          (1985); Whiteley v. Warden of Wyo. State
          Penitentiary, 401 U.S. 560, 568[, 91 S. Ct.
          1031, 1037, 28 L. Ed. 2d 306, 313] (1971).
          See also, State v. Crawley, 187 N.J. 440, 457,
          cert. denied, 549 U.S. 1078[, 127       S. Ct.
          740, 166 L. Ed. 2d 563] (2006); State v.
          Williams, 404 N.J. Super. 147, 170-71 (App.
          Div. 2008). . . . [T.M.] was able to identify
          the suspects by providing: the make and
          license plate number of the car; a description
          of the occupants; and a detailed description
          of the gun.     Corroborating his report to
          police, [T.M.] had injuries consistent with
          his statement: red marks on his cheek and
          neck. In addition, police located the car on
          an adjacent street to the Koutsogiannis

                                 13                                A-5772-14T4
            residence and were able to track the occupants
            to the house. The fact that the subject car
            was parked on an adjacent street to the
            address of the registered owner, and that a
            K-9   tracked   to   that   residence   raises
            additional support for the proposition that
            criminal activity was afoot.     This apparent
            attempt at disguising their location and
            whereabouts demonstrates a consciousness of
            guilt and supports the conclusion that the
            occupants were involved in criminal activity
            and attempting to thwart law enforcement.
            This suspicion is bolstered by the fact that
            although   movement   was   detected  in   the
            residence, no one answered the phone calls by
            [Lt.] Pharo or the officers knocking on the
            front door. Finally, the identification was
            corroborated   by   Frank    identifying   the
            occupants   as   [defendant]   and   Katerina,
            matching the description given by [T.M.].
            Based on the foregoing, I am satisfied that
            under the totality of the circumstances, the
            information provided by the [victim] together
            with the information learned by police through
            their investigation was clearly sufficient to
            establish probable cause to believe that
            [defendant] and Katerina had robbed T.M. at
            gun point and were located in the residence
            at Ross Court.

     Defendant disagrees and asserts that the police did not have

probable cause to arrest him.      "Probable cause exists if the facts

and circumstances known to the officer warrant a prudent man in

believing   that   the   offense   has   been   committed."   State    v.

Novembrino, 105 N.J. 95, 106 (1987) (quoting Henry v. United

States, 361 U.S. 98, 100-02, 80 S. Ct. 168, 170-71, 4 L. Ed. 2d

134, 137-38 (1959)).       Furthermore, "[w]hen determining whether

probable cause exists, courts must consider the totality of the

                                   14                           A-5772-14T4
circumstances[.]"    Schneider v. Simonini, 163 N.J. 336, 361 (2000)

(citing Illinois v. Gates, 462 U.S. 213, 230-31, 238, 103 S. Ct.

2317, 2328, 2332, 76 L. Ed. 2d 527, 543-44 (1983); Novembrino,

supra, 105 N.J. at 122), cert. denied, 531 U.S. 1146, 121 S. Ct.

1083, 148 L. Ed. 2d 959 (2001).

       Our Supreme Court has noted that an ordinary citizen reporting

crime to the police is not viewed with suspicion.       See State v.

Amelio, 197 N.J. 207, 212 (2008), cert. denied, 556 U.S. 1237, 129

S. Ct. 2402, 173 L. Ed. 2d 1297 (2009).     "There is an assumption

grounded in common experience that such a person is motivated by

factors that are consistent with law enforcement goals."          State

v. Davis, 104 N.J. 490, 506 (1986).

       Here, the police received a report from an identified citizen,

T.M., regarding criminal activity at a specific location.          The

information T.M. provided was immediately corroborated by Sgt.

Rogalski's observation of marks on T.M.'s face and neck that were

consistent with T.M.'s report that he was the victim of an armed

robbery.     T.M. provided a description of the male and female

suspects and the vehicle involved, including its license plate

number.    Viewing the totality of the circumstances, we agree with

Judge Hodgson that the information provided by T.M., along with

that    developed   through   further   police   investigation,     was

sufficient to establish probable cause to believe that defendant

                                 15                           A-5772-14T4
and Katerina robbed T.M. at gun point and were located in the Ross

Court residence.

                                    B.

     Defendant argues that the warrantless entry of the residence

by police was unlawful.     In addressing this issue, Judge Hodgson

observed that, while there was probable cause to arrest defendant,

"it is well settled that police could not lawfully enter the

residence   without   either   an   arrest   or   a   search   warrant   or,

alternatively, a recognized exception to the warrant requirement

of the Fourth Amendment and our State Constitution, such as

consent."    After reviewing the testimony and relevant case law,

the judge found "the police entry into the Ross Court residence

to arrest the defendants was lawful because [defendant] consented

to the entry."     He elaborated:

            It is noteworthy that [defendant's] initial
            statement to Rogalski is quite different from
            his testimony at the hearing. [Defendant]
            testified during the suppression hearing that
            he did not know the police were present. He
            stated that he heard a boom when police kicked
            in the door and he came out of the bathroom
            where he was confronted by police who put a
            gun in his face and forced him to lie face
            down on the floor where he was handcuffed.
            This testimony differs not only from the
            version of the officers who testified during
            the hearing, but also differs significantly
            in   key  aspects   from   [defendant's]   own
            statement initially provided to Rogalski on
            March 2, [2013], within hours of the event.
            During his initial statement[,] [defendant]

                                    16                              A-5772-14T4
          stated that he knew police were present and
          he opened the garage door and [laid] down in
          the hallway in order to be cooperative. This
          initial statement by [defendant] to Rogalski
          not only explains the opening of the garage
          door, but is consistent with the testimony of
          police: [Lt.] Pharo and [O]fficer Conforti
          testified that police walked around the house,
          knocking   on   the   door   and   identifying
          themselves while calling to the occupants to
          make their presence known, and that the garage
          opened and [defendant] came to the threshold
          of the interior garage door with his hands up
          and was then taken into custody. With regard
          to the circumstances of the police entry into
          the residence, I find [defendant's] initial
          version given during his taped statement to
          Rogalski to be the more credible version: it
          was given close in time to the event, before
          he had any opportunity to reflect and
          fabricate; and is also corroborated by the
          police testimony.   Accordingly, I find that
          [defendant] consented to the police entry,
          that [defendant] heard police and opened the
          garage door and came to the threshold of the
          interior garage door with his hands up
          surrendering to police and that he intended
          to let the police into the residence.

     In reviewing a motion to suppress, an appellate court defers

to the trial court's factual and credibility findings, "so long

as those findings are supported by sufficient credible evidence

in the record."    State v. Handy, 206 N.J. 39, 44 (2011) (quoting

State v. Elders, 192 N.J. 224, 243 (2007)).        Deference is afforded

"because the 'findings of the trial judge . . . are substantially

influenced   by   his   [or   her]   opportunity   to   hear   and   see   the

witnesses and to have the "feel" of the case, which a reviewing

                                     17                              A-5772-14T4
court cannot enjoy.'"       State v. Reece, 222 N.J. 154, 166 (2015)

(quoting    State   v.   Locurto,   157      N.J.   463,    471    (1999)).      "An

appellate court should disregard those findings only when a trial

court's findings of fact are clearly mistaken."               State v. Hubbard,

222 N.J. 249, 262 (2015).        The legal conclusions of a trial court

are reviewed de novo.      Id. at 263.        We must focus on "whether the

motion to suppress was properly decided based on the evidence

presented at that time."         State v. Gibson, 318 N.J. Super. 1, 9

(App. Div. 1999) (quoting State v. Jordan, 115 N.J. Super. 73, 76

(App. Div.), cert. denied, 59 N.J. 293 (1971)).

      Here, it is undisputed that the police walked around the

house, knocked on the door, and otherwise made their presence

known to the home's occupants.              It is further undisputed that

neither the police nor Sophia activated the garage door opener.

We discern no error in the motion judge accepting as credible

defendant's initial recorded statement in which he indicated he

heard the police knock and responded by opening the garage door.

He   then   cooperated    with   the   police       entry   into    the   home    to

effectuate his arrest. On these facts, we find no basis to disturb

Judge Hodgson's well-reasoned determination that defendant was

validly arrested. "The Constitution protects against unreasonable

searches     and    seizures     and        against    coerced       waivers      of

constitutional rights.      It does not disallow voluntary cooperation

                                       18                                  A-5772-14T4
with the police."   State v. Domicz, 188 N.J. 285, 308-09 (2006).

Moreover, as the judge correctly recognized, this motion turned,

at least in part, on a credibility question.      The judge found

defendant's testimony at the suppression hearing incredible and,

although not explicitly stating so, found the police testimony

credible.

     The judge additionally found the police entry into the home

was valid because Frank, its owner, "knowingly consented and agreed

to allow the entry and even sent his daughter Sophia to assist."

Certainly, factual support for this conclusion is found in Sophia's

unequivocal testimony that Frank said he gave the police permission

to enter the home and asked her to let the police in.   Indeed, in

the context of the search of a home, both the United States Supreme

Court and our Supreme Court have recognized that a third party can

validly consent to a search in certain circumstances.        United

States v. Matlock, 415 U.S. 164, 170-71, 94 S. Ct. 988, 992-93,

39 L. Ed. 2d 242, 249-50 (1974); State v. Cushing, 226 N.J. 187,

199 (2016). "The third party's ability to consent to such a search

rests on his or her 'joint occupation' of and 'common authority'

over the premises."    Cushing, supra, 226 N.J. at 199 (quoting

Fernandez v. California, ___ U.S. ___, ___, 134 S. Ct. 1126, 1132-

33, 188 L. Ed. 2d 25, 32-33 (2014)).   Moreover, depending on the

circumstances, the law enforcement officer may rely on the apparent

                               19                           A-5772-14T4
authority of a person to consent to a search.                       Illinois v.

Rodriguez, 497 U.S. 177, 185-89, 110 S. Ct. 2793, 2800-02, 111 L.

Ed. 2d 148, 159-61 (1990).

     We note, however, again in the context of a search under the

consent exception to the warrant requirement, that the State must

prove "the consent was voluntary and that the consenting party

understood   his   or    her   right    to   refuse   consent."       State    v.

Maristany,   133   N.J.    299,   305    (1993).      The   State   must   prove

voluntariness by "clear and positive testimony." State v. Chapman,

332 N.J. Super. 452, 466 (App. Div. 2000) (quoting State v. King,

44 N.J. 346, 352 (1965)).         Furthermore, the State must show that

the individual giving consent "knew that he or she 'had a choice

in the matter.'"    State v. Carty, 170 N.J. 632, 639 (quoting State

v. Johnson, 68 N.J. 349, 354 (1975)), modified by 174 N.J. 351

(2002).

     Guided by these criteria, we have no doubt that Frank gave

permission to the police to enter his home, and dispatched Sophia

to assist them.         Notwithstanding, because the record does not

reflect that Frank was informed of his right to refuse consent,

or otherwise knew he had a choice in the matter, we are constrained

to find his consent was not voluntary. We do not deem this finding

fatal to the validity of defendant's arrest however, because

ultimately the police did not avail themselves of Frank's consent

                                        20                              A-5772-14T4
or Sophia's assistance to enter the home.     Rather, as we have

noted, they lawfully relied on defendant's own conduct and actions

in opening the garage door so the police could enter the home to

effectuate his arrest.

                               C.

     We next address defendant's contention that his statement,

along with all evidence seized, must be suppressed as products of

the unlawful police entry into the home.       In rejecting this

argument, we adopt Judge Hodgson's well-reasoned analysis:

               Having found . . . probable cause
          [existed] to arrest defendants and that the
          entry into the residence was consensual and
          therefore lawful, the evidence recovered
          pursuant to the search warrants and statements
          obtained are not "poisoned fruit" and are
          therefore admissible.     However, [assuming]
          arguendo, even if the entry were found to be
          unlawful, the statements would be admissible
          since courts have generally declined to apply
          the exclusionary rule to statements obtained
          where probable cause existed prior to the
          unlawful conduct.    New York v. Harris, 495
          U.S. 14, 17-19[, 110     S. Ct. 1640, 1642-44,
          109 L. Ed. 2d 13, 20-22] (1990) (the Supreme
          Court addressed a case in which the police
          illegally entered defendant's home in order
          to effect his arrest for which they had
          probable cause. . . .        [T]he arrest was
          otherwise legal, although the entry into the
          house without a search warrant violated
          Payton.6   In Harris, the Court declined to
          suppress defendant's confession). See also,
          State v. Bell, 388 N.J. Super. 629, 637 (App.

6
  Payton v. New York, 445 U.S. 573, 100 S. Ct. 1371, 63 L. Ed. 2d
639 (1980).

                               21                            A-5772-14T4
Div. 2006) (the [C]ourt cited Harris and
"decline[d] to apply the exclusionary rule in
this context because the rule in Payton was
designed to protect the physical integrity of
the home; it was not intended to grant
criminal suspects, like Harris, protection for
statements made outside their premises where
the police have probable cause to arrest the
suspect for committing a crime.").     In this
case, and as explained in Harris, "the
statement[s], while the product of an arrest
and being in custody, [were] not the fruit of
the fact that the arrest was made in the house
rather than someplace else." [Harris, supra],
495 U.S. [at] 20 [].

     In the instant case, probable cause to
arrest defendants was established by the
statements of the victim [T.M.], and exists
independently of the entry.       [] Similarly,
because the probable cause supporting the
search warrant does not rely on any illegally
obtained evidence, the recovery of the gun and
drugs would also not be considered poisoned
fruit and not subject to suppression.        In
addition, it is not necessary to assess the
subject   searches   under    the   attenuation
doctrine   since   the    probable   cause   is
established in the warrants without reference
to any illegally obtained evidence.      As the
Supreme Court in Harris explained, "[the]
attenuation analysis is only appropriate
where, as a threshold matter, courts determine
that 'the challenged evidence is in some sense
the product of illegal government activity.'"
[Harris, supra], 495 U.S. at 19[, 110 S. Ct.
at 1642-43, 109 L. Ed. 2d at 21] (citing United
States v. Crews, [445 U.S. 463], 471 [, 100
S. Ct. 1244, 1250, 63 L. Ed. 2d 537, 546
(1980)]. "[T]he exclusionary rule enjoins the
Government from benefiting from evidence it
has unlawfully obtained; it does not reach
backward to taint information that was in
official hands prior to any illegality[.]"

                     22                           A-5772-14T4
          [Crews, supra, 445 U.S. at 475, 100 S. Ct. at
          1252, 63 L. Ed. 2d at 548].

               . . . .

               In this case[,] the probable cause
          supporting the search warrants is established
          by the statements of [T.M.] and [Katerina],
          which are not the product of any illegal
          government activity.    [] For the foregoing
          reasons, even were the entry of the residence
          at Ross Court to be found unlawful, the
          statements from [Katerina] and defendant as
          well as the items recovered pursuant to the
          search warrants would not be "poisoned fruit"
          and subject to the exclusionary rule.

                                 D.

     For the first time on appeal, defendant argues that Sophia's

joint participation with police brings her conduct within the

purview of the exclusionary rule.     Specifically, he contends that

the empty wax folds and drug paraphernalia Sophia found in the

bathroom should be suppressed on this basis.    We do not find this

argument persuasive.

     Defendant cites State v. Scrotsky, 39 N.J. 410 (1963), to

support his position.     However, we deem defendant's reliance on

Scrotsky misplaced.     In that case, police brought a landlady to

defendant's apartment when he was not home so she could search for

articles she claimed were stolen.      The Court concluded that the

warrantless search was unlawful because the landlady entered the

apartment with the officers "and seized the property under color

                                 23                          A-5772-14T4
of their authority and as a participant in a police action."            Id.

at 415.

     In the present case, it was Frank, not the police, who

requested that Sophia go to the residence.        After police conducted

a protective sweep of the home, they allowed Sophia to enter and

remain inside while they secured a search warrant.           During this

period,   Sophia   was   confined    to    the   kitchen   and   bathroom.

Importantly, Sophia testified unequivocally that she was not asked

or directed by the police to search for anything.            Rather, she

inadvertently discovered the items when she used the bathroom and

noted the cabinet doors were not shutting properly.               She then

turned the items over to the police.         The police did not search

the home, or seize the items Sophia discovered, until a search

warrant was obtained.     Accordingly, defendant's contention that

Sophia was a "joint participant" in the police search of the home

lacks record support.

                                    E.

     Defendant in his supplemental brief also argues that the

protective sweep of the home was unreasonable and violated his

Fourth    Amendment   rights.       This    argument   warrants     little

discussion.

     In Maryland v. Buie, 494 U.S. 325, 334, 110 S.Ct. 1093, 1098,

108 L. Ed. 2d 276, 286 (1990), the United States Supreme Court

                                    24                             A-5772-14T4
authorized     a    "protective   sweep"     exception       to    the   warrant

requirement for a search conducted in conjunction with an arrest,

carefully limiting the search to "spaces immediately adjoining the

place   of   arrest    from   which    an   attack   could    be    immediately

launched."     Our Supreme Court has

             limited the protective sweep of a home to
             settings in which "(1) police officers are
             lawfully within the private premises for a
             legitimate purpose, which may include consent
             to enter; and (2) the officers on the scene
             have a reasonable articulable suspicion that
             the area to be swept harbors an individual
             posing a danger." [State v. Davila, 203 N.J.
             97, 102 (2010)]. This Court has also imposed
             strict constraints on the duration and scope
             of the protective sweep in the residential
             setting.   Ibid.; accord State v. Cope, 224
             N.J. 530, 548 (2016).

             [State v. Robinson, ___ N.J. ___, ___ (2017)
             (slip op. at 18-19).]

     Here, the police conducted a protective sweep of the home

after defendant and Katerina were removed.               In sustaining the

validity of the protective sweep, Judge Hodgson found "the officers

had a reasonable basis to perceive danger after receiving a report

from dispatch that a man was just robbed at gunpoint.                Therefore,

the protective sweep was reasonable to ensure officer safety."

"Further, [the] officers were justified in securing the residence

pending a search warrant."            We agree with these well-reasoned

conclusions.       Moreover, defendant points to no evidence that was

                                      25                                 A-5772-14T4
discovered or seized during the limited protective sweep, which

was conducted for the officers' safety while they secured the home

pending issuance of the search warrant.

                                      F.

     We have considered defendant's other contentions in light of

the record and applicable legal principles and conclude they are

without sufficient merit to warrant extensive discussion in a

written opinion.         R. 2:11-3(e)(2).        We add only the following

comments.

     Defendant      challenges    the       admissibility        of     Katerina's

statement on the grounds that she was high on drugs and the police

did not re-administer Miranda warnings to her upon resuming her

interrogation.      However,     as   the    State     correctly      points   out,

defendant lacks standing to assert Katerina's rights against self-

incrimination.     State v. Baum, 199 N.J. 407, 420-26 (2009).                    In

any event, after reviewing the testimony and evidence, Judge

Hodgson concluded that "[Katerina] knowingly, intelligently, and

voluntarily waived her Miranda rights," and her "will had not been

overborne    and   the    requirements      of   due   process    had    not   been

violated."    Having reviewed the record, we discern no basis to

disturb the judge's factual findings and legal conclusions.

     Defendant argues in his pro se brief that his guilty plea is

invalid and must be vacated.             However, defendant withdrew his

                                      26                                   A-5772-14T4
motion to vacate his guilty plea, thereby depriving the trial

court of the opportunity to decide the issue.    Similarly, while

defendant now argues that the State failed to present exculpatory

evidence to the grand jury (specifically, the fact that T.M.

recanted his allegations that a robbery occurred), defendant did

not move to dismiss the indictment on this basis.   "Generally, an

appellate court will not consider issues, even constitutional

ones, which were not raised below."    State v. Galicia, 210 N.J.

364, 383 (2012).   To the extent defendant attributes these or any

other errors to the ineffective assistance of counsel, such claims

involve allegations and evidence that lie outside the trial record

and are thus more appropriately addressed in a post-conviction

proceeding.   State v. Preciose, 129 N.J. 451, 460 (1992).

     Affirmed.

                                27                           A-5772-14T4