PER CURIAM.
Following a trial in the municipal court and trial de novo on the municipal court record in the Law Division, defendant Edwin Olivera was convicted of failure to produce an insurance card,
The operative facts are uncontested. At defendant's municipal trial the State presented two witnesses. Officer Roseboro of the Merchantville Police Department testified that he was monitoring traffic in Merchantville when he ran a random license plate check on the silver Jaguar defendant was driving. His inquiry revealed the registered owner, who appeared from the photograph on his mobile terminal to be the same person as the driver, was reported to have a suspended license.
The officer pulled behind the Jaguar, which was now headed toward Camden, and activated his overhead lights. The driver did not stop, but continued for about five blocks, eventually pulling over in Camden. Officer Roseboro approached the driver and requested his license, registration, and insurance card. Defendant refused to supply the documents, instead telling the officer he believed he had been stopped illegally and insisting to speak with Officer Roseboro's supervisor. The officer obliged him, and Sergeant Talarico responded to the scene.
Despite repeated requests, defendant refused to provide the sergeant with his license, registration, or insurance card. The sergeant told defendant he would be charged with obstruction of justice if he did not provide the requested documentation. Nonetheless, defendant did not produce the documents and was told he was under arrest for obstruction of justice. When the officers told defendant to get out of the car, he refused saying they needed a warrant to remove him. After the officers told defendant they would forcibly remove him from the car if necessary, he finally complied.
On the way to the station house, defendant stated that he was being kidnapped and deprived of his civil rights. At the station house, defendant refused to provide his name, birthdate or any other any personal identifying information, refused to sign the
Following defendant's trial de novo in the Law Division, the judge found defendant guilty of the charges and imposed the same sentence as had the municipal court judge. The Law Division judge found that defendant was lawfully stopped and refused to produce his driving credentials. He rejected defendant's argument that the officer, part of the Merchantville police department, was without jurisdiction to stop defendant in Camden.
Finally, the judge agreed with the municipal court judge that defendant's refusal to cooperate with a lawful stop and subsequent arrest, including his initial failure to pull over, refusal to get out of the car, refusal to produce his credentials, including the driver's license he had in his pocket, refusal to provide any personal identifying information, and failure to cooperate in the taking of his fingerprints established that defendant was guilty of acts amounting to an obstruction of justice.
Defendant raises the following issues on appeal:
We find these arguments to be utterly without merit.
The statute under which defendant was convicted,
We held thirty years ago that refusing an officer's request to show driving credentials and failing to comply with the officer's directions are independently unlawful acts sufficient to support a conviction for obstructing the administration of justice.
As the essential facts are undisputed and the law clear, we affirm defendant's convictions.
Affirmed.