Respondent Glenn Charles was arrested in Grand Rapids, Mich., while driving a stolen car. The car belonged to Theodore Ziefle, who had been strangled to death in his Ann Arbor home less than a week earlier. The respondent was charged with first-degree murder. At his trial in the Circuit Court of Washtenaw County, Mich., the State presented circumstantial evidence linking the respondent with the crime. The respondent was found with Ziefle’s car and some of his other personal property. The respondent also owned clothing like that worn by the man last seen with the victim, and he boasted to witnesses that he had killed a man and stolen *405 his car. Police Detective Robert LeVanseler testified that he interviewed the respondent shortly after his arrest. After giving the respondent Miranda warnings, LeVanseler asked him about the stolen automobile. According to LeVanseler, the respondent said that he stole the car in Ann Arbor from the vicinity of Washtenaw and Hill Streets, about two miles from the local bus station.
The respondent testified in his own behalf. On direct examination, he stated that he took Ziefle’s unattended automobile from the parking lot of Kelly’s Tire Co. in Ann Arbor. On cross-examination, the following colloquy occurred:
“Q. Now, this Kelly’s Tire Company, that’s right next to the bus station, isn’t it?
“A. That’s correct.
“Q. And, the bus station and Kelly’s Tire are right next to the Washtenaw County Jail are they not?
“A. They are.
“Q. And, when you’re standing in the Washtenaw County Jail looking out the window you can look right out and see the bus station and Kelly’s Tire, can you not?
“A. That’s correct.
“Q. So, you’ve had plenty of opportunity from — well, first you spent some time in the Washtenaw County Jail, haven’t you?
“A. Quite a bit.
“Q. And, you have had plenty of opportunity to look out that window and see the bus station and Kelly’s Tire?
“A. That’s right.
“Q. And, you’ve seen cars being parked there, isn’t that right?
“A. That’s correct.
“Q. Is this where you got the idea to come up with the story that you took a car from that location?
*406 “A. No, the reason I came up with that is because it’s the truth.
“Q. It's the truth?
“A. That’s right.
“Q. Don’t you think it’s rather odd that if it were the truth that you didn’t come forward and tell anybody at the time you were arrested, where you got that car?
“A. No, I don’t.
“Q. You don’t think that’s odd?
“A. I wasn’t charged with auto theft, I was charged with murder.
“Q. Didn’t you think at the time you were arrested that possibly the car would have something to do with the charge of murder?
“A. When I tried to talk to my attorney they wouldn’t let me see him and after that he just said to keep quiet.
“Q. This is a rather recent fabrication of yours isn’t [sic] it not?
“A. No it isn’t.
“Q. Well, you told Detective LeVanseler back when you were first arrested, you stole the car back on Wash-tenaw and Hill Street?
“A. Never spoke with Detective LeVanseler.
“Q. Never did?
“A. Right, except when Detective Hall and Price were there and then it was on tape.” Trial Transcript 302-304.
The jury convicted the respondent of first-degree murder. The Michigan Court of Appeals affirmed,
People
v.
Charles,
In
Doyle,
we held that the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment prohibits impeachment on the basis of a defendant’s silence following
Miranda
warnings. The case involved two defendants who made no postarrest statements about their involvement in the crime.
2
Each testified at trial that he had been framed. On cross-examination, the prosecutor asked the defendants why they had not told the frameup story to the police upon arrest. We concluded that such impeachment was fundamentally unfair because
Miranda
warnings inform a person of his right to remain silent and
*408
assure him, at least implicitly, that his silence will not be used against him.
Doyle
bars the use against a criminal defendant of silence maintained after receipt of governmental assurances. But
Doyle
does not apply to cross-examination that merely inquires into prior inconsistent statements. Such questioning makes no unfair use of silence, because a defendant who voluntarily speaks after receiving
Miranda
warnings has not been induced to remain silent. As to the subject matter of his statements, the defendant has not remained silent at all. See
United States
v.
Agee,
In this case, the Court of Appeals recognized that the respondent could be questioned about prior statements inconsistent with his trial testimony. The court therefore approved the “latter portion of the above quoted cross-examination. . . .”
We do not believe that the cross-examination in this case can be bifurcated so neatly. The quoted colloquy, taken as a whole, does “not refe[r] to the [respondent’s] exercise of his right to remain silent; rather [it asks] the [respondent] why, if [his trial testimony] were true, he didn’t tell the officer that he stole the decedent’s car from the tire store parking lot instead of telling him that he took it from the
*409
street.”
We conclude that Doyle does not apply to the facts of this case. Each of two inconsistent descriptions of events may be said to involve “silence” insofar as it omits facts included in the other version. But Doyle does not require any such formalistic understanding of “silence,” and we find no reason to adopt such a view in this case.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is
Reversed.
Notes
Neither the Court of Appeals nor the state courts addressed the question whether
Doyle
should be applied retroactively. Although the petitioner now claims that
Doyle
should be limited to prospective application, see
Stovall
v.
Denno,
One defendant said nothing at all. The other asked arresting officers, “[W]hat’s this all about?”
