Lead Opinion
Wе granted review in this case to consider whether a defendant’s right against self-incrimination, as protected by the federal and Pennsylvania constitutions, is violated when the prosecution utilizes a non-testifying defendant’s pre-arrest silence as substantive evidence of guilt. After reviewing this issue of first impression, to which the United States Supreme Court has not definitively spoken, we agree with the Superior Court, as well as several of our sister courts, that the use of pre-arrest silence as substantive evidence of guilt violates a non-testifying defendant’s constitutional rights. As discussed below, we would affirm the order of the Superior Court remanding for a new trial. However, given that the status of federal jurisprudence is uncertain, we base our holding upon the right against self-incrimination set forth in Article I, Section 9 of the Pennsylvania Constitution.
The issue presented to this Court requires consideration of the Missing Persons Unit detective’s testimony and the prosecutor’s closing arguments regarding the early days of the investigation into Victim’s disappearance. Following a lead that Defendant was holding Victim against her will, the Missing Persons Unit detective assigned to the case went to Defendant’s house two days after Victim’s disappearance. Pamela Deloe, a second primary prosecution witness, answered the door and asserted that neither Victim nor Defendant were at the house. Accordingly, the detective left her card and asked that Defendant call her. Later that day, Defendant called the detective.
The detective testifiеd regarding the phone call from Defendant:
I asked him — well, before I could even ask him if he was aware of [Victim] being missing, he stated to me that there were — that he didn’t know where she was. It was out on the street that someone said that he was involved in her being missing and it wasn’t him.
Notes of Testimony (“N.T.”), Dec. 14-20, 2006, at 480. The detective then inquired as to when Defendant had last seen Victim. He initially responded that he had not seen her for a year and a half, but then he immediately contradicted his statement, claiming instead that he had not seen her for three months. Subsequent to this contradiction, the detective testified that she asked him to come to the police station to speak to her and he refused:
A. Yes. After he stated that, I asked him if he could come into our office and sit down and talk with me about the case, and he refused. He said he refused to come in.
Q. So this contact that you had with him was over the telephone. Is that what you’re saying?
A. Yes, it was over the telephone.
Id. at 481.
During closing argument, the prosecutor accentuated Defendant’s refusal to go to the police station, and when defense counsel objected, the prosecutor stated before the jury that it was not improper to comment on Defendant’s pre-arrest silence:
[Prosecutor:] Look also at what happened in terms of the police investigation in this matter. Three days after this young lady goes missing, three days after she goes missing, detectives are already knocking on the defendant’s door because of something they heard, maybe he was holding this personagainst their [sic] will, and he calls the police back and is very defensive. I mean, before a question’s even asked, he denies any knowledge or any involvement with this young lady. He makes contradictory statements to the police about when’s the last time that he saw her. First he says, “I saw her a year and a half ago.” Then he says, “I saw her three months ago.” But most telling, I think, is the fact that the officer invited him. “Well, come on down and talk tо us. We want to ask you some more questions about this incident, your knowledge of this young lady,” especially because he made these contradictory statements. And what happens? Nothing happens. He refuses to cooperate with the Missing Persons detectives. And why?
[Defense Counsel]: Your Honor, I have to object to that. That’s improper comment, absolutely improper.
[Prosecutor]: Your Honor, pre-arrest silence is not improper comment at all.
Id. at 579-80.
In a brief sidebar discussion, defense counsel requested that the jury be instructed to disregard the statement, which the defense viewed as “absolutely improper;” “If somebody wants to assert their right not to cooperate and talk to the police, that cannot be commented upon.” Id. at 580. Notably, defense counsel did not seek a mistrial at this juncture. The prosecution responded “there’s a sharp line drawn between pre-arrest silence and post-arrest silence.” Id. at 581. The court allowed the prosecution to proceed without issuing any instructions. Id. The prosecutor further emphasized the silence following the sidebar, stating, “Factor that in when you’re making an important decision in this case as well.” Id.
The jury found Defendant not guilty of first-degree murder but convicted him of third-degree murder and unlawful restraint based substantially on the eyewitness testimony of Benintend and Deloe, who claimed to have witnessed Defendant brutally beat Victim to death.
In its Pa.R.A.P. 1925(a) opinion, the trial court considered precedent from this Court and the United States Supreme Court regarding the right against self-incrimination, which will be discussed in detail below, and highlighted the distinction between pre- and post-arrest silence. After reviewing this precedent, the trial court briefly addressed whether it erred in allowing the prosecutor’s statements during closing arguments and also considered whether it should have granted a mistrial sua sponte, because of the statements. The court opined that the prosecutor “did nothing more than talk about the police investigation and provide information to the jury which would allow them to assess the credibility of [Defendant’s] ‘testimony.’ ”
Defendant appealed to the Superior Court challenging the use of his pre-arrest silence as substantive evidence of guilt. A three judge panel initially heard the appeal and reversed Defendant’s conviction. Upon the Commonwealth’s motion, the court granted reargument en banc, and again reversed the trial court, concluding that Defendant’s state and federal rights against self-incrimination were violated when the Commonwealth “urge[d] the jury to use a non-testifying defendant’s pre-arrest, pre-Miranda [
The Superior Court recognized that Defendant’s argument was limited to claiming that the prosecutor’s closing argument violated his right against self-incrimination and did not contend that the detective’s testimony itself was improper.
Prior to determining whether this use violated Defendant’s rights, the Superior Court conducted a thorough review of the caselaw relating to the right against self-incrimination. The court identified four distinct time periods during which a defendant “may either volunteer a statement or remain silent: (1) before arrest; (2) after arrest but before the warnings required by Miranda have been given; (3) after Miranda warnings have been given; and (4) at trial,” which the court considered in reverse order. Id. at 57.
The court recognized that defendants have an “absolute right to remain silent and to not present evidence” at trial and that prosecutors cannot comment on a defendant’s refusal to testify.
In considering the time period between arrest and the provision of Miranda warnings, the Superior Court found the caselaw to be more muddled than the first two time frames. It recognized that the United States Supreme Court in Fletcher v. Weir,
Turning to the pre-arrest period relevant to the case at bar, the Superior Court acknowledged that the United States Supreme Court found in Jenkins v. Anderson,
The Superior Court acknowledged that none of the above-referenced cases addressed a defendant’s pre-arrest silence where the defendant had neither waived his right to self-incrimination by testifying nor opened the door to the Commonwealth’s use of his silence as a fair response to defense arguments. Additionally, the court observed that the federal circuit courts and state courts are divided upon this issue. Molina,
Accordingly, the Superior Court held that, while the detective’s testimony, in and of itself, did not violate the right against self-incrimination, the right was violated when the prosecutor utilized Defendant’s refusal to speak further with the detective as substantive evidence of his guilt in his closing argument. The court further concluded that the trial court’s error was not harmless. Rather than constituting the overwhelming evidence necessary to meet the Commonwealth’s burden
Then-President Judge, now-Justice Stevens dissented, concluding that Defendant did not have a protected interest in remaining silent pre-arrest and, even if he did, the Commonwealth did not use his silence as substantive evidence of guilt in this case. The dissent emphasized that neither this Court nor the United States Supreme Court has found a “protected, constitutional interest in one’s deсision to remain silent in the pre-arrest, pre-Miranda setting” or “to remain silent in all of one’s interactions with police.” Id. at 71 (Stevens, P.J., dissenting). Instead, the dissent opined that the privilege against self-incrimination is “irrelevant” to the decision to remain silent when the individual is “under no official compulsion to speak.” Id. Even assuming arguendo that Defendant had a protected interest, the dissent concluded that the Commonwealth did not use his silence as substantive evidence of guilt because it never “specifically invite[d] the jury to infer guilt from [Defendant’s] silence.” Id. at 72. Moreover, the dissent emphasized that the jury is presumed to follow the instructions of the court, which included a prohibition against viewing the statements of counsel as evidence and an acknowledgment that Defendant had a right not to testify. Alternatively, the dissent opined that it would find any error harmless in light of the evidence presented by the Commonwealth and the de minimis nature of the reference to Defendant’s silence.
The Commonwealth filed a petition for allowance of appeal, and this Court granted review to consider whether “the Superior Court err[ed] in ruling that the use by the Commonwealth of a non-testifying defendant’s pre-arrest silence as substantive evidence of his guilt infringes upon his constitutional right to be free from self-incrimination?” Commonwealth v. Molina,
I. Salinas v. Texas
In February 2013, we placed the case on hold pending the decision of the United States Supreme Court in Salinas v. Texas, which, inter alia, raised a claim regarding the use of pre-arrest silence as substantive evidence. As discussed below, the plurality decision of the High Court in that case did not resolve the issue, but instead affirmed the use of the defendant’s silence in a fractured decision. Salinas v. Texas, — U.S. —,
Salinas involved a defendant who was interviewed by police regarding a double murder in Houston. At the time of the interview, Salinas had not been arrested nor provided Miranda warnings. Initially, Salinas answered the officer’s questions. However, when the officers inquired whether the shotgun shell casings recovered from the scene would match Salinas’s gun, he “[ljooked down at the floor, shuffled his feet, bit his bottom lip, cl[e]nched his hands in his lap, [and] began to tighten up.” Id. at 2178 (brackets in original). “After a few moments of silence, the officer asked additional questions, which petitioner answered.” Id.
While the High Court had accepted review in Salinas to resolve the split between the lower courts regarding the applicability of the Fifth Amendment to the use of a non-testifying defendant’s precustodial silence as substantive evidence of
A search of our caselaw interpreting both the state and federal protections does not reveal any prior insistence by this Court that there be an express invocation of the right against self-incrimination. Instead, our precedent is more aligned with the dissenting four justices in Salinas, who concluded that the no ritualistic language is needed but rather found that invocation of the right may be apparent from the circumstances surrounding the defendant’s statement. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Chmiel,
As applied to this case, we determine that Defendant’s actions in affirmatively and definitively refusing to come to the police station and ending the phone call were sufficient to invoke his right against self-incrimination and are distinguishable from Salinas’s temporary muteness sandwiched between voluntary verbal responses to police questioning. Defendant’s invocation is clarified upon consideration of the circumstances of the case. Regardless of whether Defendant had been officially designated a suspect, the detective’s testimony demonstrated that Defendant and the detective were aware during the phone call that “[i]t was out on the street that someone said that [Defendant] was involved in her being missing.” N.T., Dec. 14-20, 2006, at 480. Indeed, the prosecutor’s closing argument emphasized the detectives’ suspicions, noting that three days after Victim’s disappearance, they were “knocking on the defendant’s door because of something they heard, maybe he was holding this person against their [sic] will.” Id. at 579. Moreover, it appears that the detective’s suspicions were further raised when Defendant contradicted himself in regard to when he had last seen Victim, prompting her to request that he come to the station. Thus, at the least, both parties to the phone call were aware that he was suspected in the disappearance of Victim, even though the detective was unaware that the case involved a murder. We conclude that refusing to come to the police station to speak further with a detective and ending the phone call, in light of the circumstances of the case, constitutes an invocation of his right against self-incrimination, even absent a
II. Constitutionality of the Use of Pre-Arrest Silence as Substantive Evidence
Turning to the issue upon which we granted review, the Commonwealth maintains that the Superior Court erred in concluding that the prosecutor’s reference to Defendant’s prearrest silence violated his right against self-incrimination. The Commonwealth claims that this Court has drawn a line of significance between pre- and post-arrest silence, and that the “privilege against self-incrimination” does not extend backward from the post-arrest period to cover the pre-arrest timeframe scrutinized herein. Commonwealth’s Brief (“Com. Brief’) at 17. In support, the Commonwealth recounts the development of case law in the United States Supreme Court and this Court, noting that neither court has prohibited the use of a defendant’s pre-arrest silence as substantive evidence of guilt. The Commonwealth emphasizes that the High Court, in Fletcher,
Addressing our precedent, the Commonwealth acknowledges that this Court in Turner,
Noting that Bolus did not provide any rationale for the distinction between pre- and post-arrest, the Commonwealth ventures that the distinction is based upon the proposition that a defendant in custody is compelled to give evidence against himself. The Commonwealth emphasizes that the United States Supreme Court relied heavily on the issue of compulsion in Miranda. In contrast, the Commonwealth argues that defendants in the pre-arrest setting have not been removed from their normal surroundings and are not in custody such that one is “not under any compulsion to incriminate himself.” Com. Brief at 23. The Commonwealth relies upon Justice John Paul Stevens’ concurring opinion in Jenkins where he stated, “the privilege against compulsory self-incrimination is simply irrelevant to a citizen’s decision to remain silent when he is under no official compulsion to speak.” Id. at 24 (quoting Jenkins,
Given that [Defendant] was not only not under arrest when speaking with [the detective] but also not surrounded byantagonistic forces — rather, he was in his own home and talking to the officer on the phone during a call that he voluntarily made — there would seem to be no question that he was not in any way compelled to incriminate himself at that point.
Com. Brief at 25. Accordingly, the Commonwealth urges the Court to align with jurisdictions which have found the Fifth Amendment does not prohibit the use of prearrest silence as substantive evidence.
In response, Defendant urges this Court to affirm the Superior Court and follow those jurisdictions that have found that the use of a non-testifying defendant’s pre-arrest silence as substantive evidence of guilt is violative of the right against self-incrimination under both the federal and state constitutions.
He avers that if the prosecution is allowed to argue prearrest silence as evidence of guilt, then:
[A] person being questioned by the police has no right to stop answering questions posed by the police and must tell the truth. Thus, under this new law posed by the Commonwealth, persons will be required to confess unless they are innocent because the failure to talk and/or the failure to tell the truth will result in an instruction at trial to the jury that the defendant’s response to the police questioning should be considered consciousness of guilt.
Defendant’s Brief at 18.
Moreover, Defendant contends that to provide protection of the right against self-incrimination only upon arrest places the right inappropriately in the hands of the police. According to the Defendant, the police will interview a suspect prior to arrest in order to obtain either a statement or silence, knowing that the individual’s pre-arrest silence can be used as evidence of guilt at trial, even though the
Accordingly, we consider whether the trial court committed reversible error in allowing the prosecutor, over defense counsel’s objection, to use a non-testifying defendant’s pre-arrest silence as substantive evidence of guilt because such use violated the defendant’s constitutional right to be protected from self-incrimination. “As this is an issue involving a constitutional right, it is a question of law; thus, our standard of review is de novo, and our scope of review is plenary.” Commonwealth v. Baldwin,
Initially, we recognize that the constitutionality of the use of pre-arrest silence as substantive evidence has split the federal circuit courts and state courts, engendering numerous fractured decisions across the United States. While the United States Supreme Court accepted review of Salinas to resolve the issue, it appears to have created a new question regarding the sufficiency of invocation of the right under the Fifth Amendment without resolving whether the Fifth Amendment applies to the use of pre-arrest silence as substantive evidence of guilt, even if properly invoked.
When the federal constitutional jurisprudence has been unclear or in a state of flux, “this Court has not hesitated to render its independent judgment as a matter of distinct and enforceable Pennsylvania constitutional law.” Pap’s AM. v. City of Erie,
When considering the rights provided by the Pennsylvania Constitution, we are ever cognizant that the federal constitution provides the minimum levels of protection applicable to the analogous state constitutional provision. Commonwealth v. Edmunds,
As we stated in Pap’s AM., we conduct Pennsylvania constitutional analysis consistently with the model set forth in Edmunds. Pap’s A.M.,
In considering the text of the provisions, we first look to their placement in the larger charter.- The structure of the Pennsylvania Constitution highlights the primacy of Pennsylvania’s protection of individual rights: “The very first Article of the Pennsylvania Constitution consists of the Pennsylvania Declaration of Rights, and the first section of that Article affirms, among other things, that all citizens ‘have certain inherent and indefeasible rights.’” Pap’s A.M.,
One of the rights protected in Article I is Section 9’s right against self-incrimination. As is true of most of the provisions of the Pennsylvania Declaration of Rights, Section 9 was adopted in 1776 and served as a model for the protections provided by the Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution as it predated the federal provision by fifteen years. See generally id. at 896 (discussing the historical background of the Pennsylvania Declaration of Rights). Originally, the provision was worded to provide that no “man” can “be compelled to give evidence against himself,” with the current wording adopted in 1838. See Commonwealth v. Swinehart,
Other textual differences exist between the federal and state provisions which do not directly relate to the issue currently before this Court. For example, the final sentence of Section 9, which is not present in the Fifth Amendment, was added in 1984 in response to this Court’s decision in Triplett. See Swinehart,
The Pennsylvania Constitution also historically contained two exceptions to the right against self-incrimination not present in the federal charter. In 1874, Article III, Section 32 (repealed in 1967) and Article VIII, Section 10 (now renumbered Article VII, Section 8) were added to allow for compelled testimony regarding cases involving bribery or corrupt solicitations and contested elections, respectively. See Ken Gormley, The Pennsylvania Constitution: A Treatise on Rights and Liberties, § 12.6(c) at 387 n.318 (2004). The provisions stated that testimony could be compelled but “such testimony shall not afterwards be used against [the witness] in any judicial proceedings except for perjury in giving such testimony.” Pa. Const, art. 7, § 8; see generally Gormley, The Pennsylvania Constitution, § 12.6(c), at 387-88; Leonard Sosnov, Criminal Procedure Rights Under the Pennsylvania Constitution: examining the Present and Exploring the Future, 3 Widener J. Pub.L. 217, 306 (1993). While these provisions provide specific exceptions for when testimony can be compelled, they do not guide our analysis of whether the protections of Section 9 apply to pre-arrest silence.
B. History and Policy Considerations
Our precedent regarding the right against self-incrimination has generally developed in parallel or following the dictates of federal precedent interpreting the Fifth Amendment, particularly after the United States Supreme Court’s 1965 decision in Griffin,
We recognize, however, that this Court has taken inconsistent stances in determining whether the right against self-incrimination under Section 9 exceeds the prоtections of the Fifth Amendment. At times, we have “stated that, except for the protection afforded by our Commonwealth’s Constitution to reputation, the provision in Article I, § 9 which grants a privilege against self-incrimination tracks the protection afforded under the Fifth Amendment.” Commonwealth v. Arroyo, 555 Pa. 125,
On several occasions, our Court has specifically concluded that the protections of Section 9 exceed those in its federal counterpart. Swinehart,
Our jurisprudence regarding references to a defendant’s silence is severable into identifiable categories. We initially consider precedent addressing the right against self-incrimination generally. Next, we review those cases where reference to silence is permissible to impeach a defendant who has waived his right by testifying at trial or where counsel has raised an argument necessitating the prosecution’s fair response. Additionally, we recognize that courts have created an exception to this general impeachment and fair response rule when the provision of Miranda warnings induces a defendant’s silence, such that reference to the silence would violate Fourteenth Amendment due process rights, even if it would not violate the Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. Finally, in turning to the specific question of pre-arrest silence, we discuss this Court’s decision in Bolus, which addressed pre-arrest silence in the impeachment context, but specifically left open the question currently before the Court regarding the use of silence as substantive evidence of guilt.
1. General Right Against Self-Incrimination
Similar to the Fifth Amendment, Article I Section 9 dictates that the accused “cannot be compelled to give evidence against himself.” Pa. Const, art. I, § 9. The United States Supreme Court has broadly defined the reach of this protection, given its importance in the structure of our judicial system:
The privilege reflects a complex of our fundamental values and aspirations, and marks an important advance in the development of our liberty. It can be asserted in any proceeding, civil or criminal, administrative or judicial, investigatory or adjudicatory; and it protects against any disclosures which the witness reasonably believes could be used in a criminal prosecution or could lead to other evidence that might be so used.
Kastigar v. U.S.,
We have acknowledged, however, the “inherent conflict” between the right against self-incrimination and our system’s reliance on compelled testimony. Swinehart,
As the United States Supreme Court did in Griffin, this Court has viewed the right against self-incrimination as protecting silence as well as overt self-incrimination.
Under common law and, of course, this was doubly true in medieval continental Europe, forced confessions were as common as they were cruel and inhuman. The framers of our Bill of Rights were too aware of the excesses possible in all governments, even a representative government, to permit the possibility that any person under the protection of the United States flag could be forced to admit to having committed a crime. In order to make the protection hazard-proof, the framers went beyond coercion of confessions. They used the all-embracive language that no one could be compelled ‘to be a witness against himself. What did the Trial Court in this case do but compel Dravecz to be a witness against himself? Dravecz had said nothing, yet because something was read to him, to which he made no comment, the prosecution insisted that Dravecz admitted guilt. If Dravecz could not be made a self-accusing witness by coerced answers, he should not be made a witness against himself by unspoken assumed answers.
Commonwealth v. Dravecz,
Since Griffin, the protection of a defendant’s silence has become imbedded in our jurisprudence. See, e.g., Com. v. Wright,
2. Permitted Use of Silence as Impeachment Evidence or Fair Response
Under both state and federal precedent, the analysis changes dramatically once a defendant decides to testify because he has waived his right against self-incrimination: “His waiver is not partial; having once cast aside the cloak of immunity, he may not resume it at will, whenever cross-examination may be inconvenient or embarrassing.” Raffel v. U.S.,
In addition to impeachment, the Commonwealth may utilize a defendant’s silence, including pre-arrest silence, as fair response to a defendant’s argument at trial. Specifically, in DiNicola, we allowed reference to a defendant’s refusal to speak to a trooper as a fair response to defense counsel’s questioning of the adequacy of the trooper’s investigation.
In a related issue, we recognize that three justices of this Court diverged from federal precedent involving the right against self-incrimination in an impeachment scenario. Triplett,
3. Due Process Exception to Use of Silence as Impeachment in Postr-Miranda Warning Cases
Although the case at bar involves pre-arrest silence, and thus does not concern the provision of Miranda warnings and resulting due process concerns, we consider the post-Miranda warning cases to understand why courts found the timing of a defendant’s silence relevant to determining whether reference to that silence is permissible and to examine another area of jurisprudence where this Court has imposed more stringent protection of the right against self-incrimination.
Although, as discussed above, a defendant’s testimony may generally be impeached with prior silence, courts have concluded that a prosecutor may not use a defendant’s silence after the provision of Miranda warnings. In Doyle, 426 U.S. 610,
The High Court, in a per curiam opinion in Fletcher,
I. Pre-Arrest Silence
Given that this case does not involve the Fourteenth Amendment due process concerns of post-Miranda warning cases, we turn back to the right against self-incrimination, specifically in regard to pre-arrest silence. In Bolus,
The question of whether reference to a non-testifying defendant’s pre-arrest silence violates the defendant’s right against self-incrimination is now squarely beforе this Court. As discussed below, we conclude that the timing of the silence, whether
We recognize, however, that some do not view the drawing of an adverse inference of guilt from silence as within the protection of the right against self-incrimination because it is not “compelled” in the traditional sense. See Molina,
Justice Musmanno captured the conundrum: “If [a defendant] could not be made a self-accusing witness by coerced answers, he should not be made a witness against himself by unspoken assumed answers.” Dravecz,
Moreover, allowing reference to a defendant’s silence as substantive evidence endangers the truth-determining process given our recognition that individuals accused
We observe that the timing of the silence has little relevance to whether use of that silence as evidence of guilt will impinge on the right against self-incrimination. We have previously concluded that “[t]he difference between prosecutorial use of an accused’s silence at [t]rial and the use of an accused’s silence at [a]rrest is ... infinitesimal.” Haideman,
Accordingly, we conclude that our precedent, and the policies underlying it, support the conclusion that the right against self-incrimination prohibits use of a defendant’s prearrest silence as substantive evidence of guilt, unless it falls within an exception such as impeachment of a testifying defendant or fair response to an argument of the defense.
C. Other jurisdictions
In addition to reviewing the text, history, and policies relating to the Pennsylvania constitutional provisions, under Edmunds, we also consider the opinions of our sister states. In so doing, our goal is not to create a “score card,” but rather to consider whether the underlying logic of the decisions informs our analysis of the related Pennsylvania provision. Edmunds,
After reviewing Article I, Section 9 of the Pennsylvania Constitution pursuant to Edmunds, we conclude that the factors weigh in favor of diverging from the currently asserted minimum standard of federal protection of the right against self-incrimination in regard to the use of pre-arrest silence as substantive evidence. Specifically, while we recognize the textual similarities with the Fifth Amendment, we cоnclude that the primacy of the Declaration of Rights to Pennsylvania’s charter requires stronger protection of our liberties than under the federal counterpart. More significantly, we emphasize that, while this Court has often tracked federal jurisprudence in regard to the right against self-incrimination, we have interpreted Section 9 to provider a broader right on several occasions, including Triplett, Turner, and Swinehart. We find significant guidance from Turner where this Court diverged from federal precedent on an issue closely related to the issue at bar. In Turner, we refused to allow the use of a defendant’s decision to remain silent post-arrest to impeach the defendant’s trial testimony, unless the defendant at trial claims he did not previously remain silent. Accordingly, we hold that Article I, Section 9 is violated when the prosecution uses a defendant’s silence whether pre or post-arrest as substantive evidence of guilt.
Turning to the facts of this case, we agree with the Superior Court that the prosecutor violated Defendant’s Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination when he emphasized Defendant’s silence as “most telling,” by asking “why” Defendant refused to cooperate with the
III. Harmless Error Analysis
A violation of Section 9, however, does not automatically result in a reversal. Instead, we consider the Commonwealth’s alternative argument that any error was harmless. The Commonwealth asserts that the reference to Defendant’s silence in this case was a “lone mention” in a closing argument covering nearly thirty transcript pages that did not suggest that the failure to come to the police station constituted an admission of guilt. Accordingly, the Commonwealth urges the Court to reverse the decision of the Superior Court and reinstate the judgment of sentence.
In contrast, Defendant maintains that the error in this case was not harmless because the Commonwealth’s evidence was based substantially upon what it viewed as the biased and contradictory testimony of Michael Benintend, who was initially charged with the murder, and Pam Deloe, who was a drug-addicted prostitute with a motive to testify against Defendant. Given the critical importance of the credibility assessments of these two witnesses, Defendant maintains that the evidence of guilt was not overwhelming. He further argues that the prejudice was not de minimis given that the prosecutor implored the jury to factor his silence in when deciding the case. Accordingly, Defendant urges this Court to affirm the Superior Court’s decision.
“[T]he proper standard for determining whether an error involving state law is harmless is the same as the standard this Court applies to federal constitutional error: an error can be harmless
(1) the error did not prejudice the defendant or the prejudice was de minimis; (2) the erroneously admitted evidence was merely cumulative of other untainted evidence which was substantially similar to the erroneously admitted evidence; or (3) the properly admitted and uncontradicted evidence of guilt was so overwhelming and the prejudicial effect of the error was so insignificant by comparison that the error could not have contributed to the verdict.
Wright,
The Commonwealth’s case against Defendant was based on the testimony of the two eyewitnesses and several other witnesses who supported the details of the eyewitnesses’ testimony and provided information regarding Victim’s activities on the morning of the murder. Given the questionable credibility of the two primary eyewitnesses, Michael Benin-tend and Pam Deloe, as detailed below, we conclude that the prosecutor’s entreaty for the jury to “[f]actor” in Defendant’s failure to meet with the detective was prejudicial and not de minimis. Moreover, Defendant’s silence was not cumulative of any other evidence. We additionally conclude that the other evidence in the case is not overwhelming. While we do not discount the heinous crime involved and have empathy for the loved ones of the victim, we cannot ignore that the blame for the crime was placed on Defendant by Michael Benintend and Pam Deloe whose credibility was significantly questioned during trial, allowing the real potentiality that the jurors could have been swayed to believe the witnesses after considering the inference that the Defendant had something to hide by not meeting with the Missing Persons Unit detective, as urged by the prosecutor.
To elaborate, Benintend testified that he called Victim to sell him drugs at Benintend’s home where Defendant later arrived. Benintend further claimed to have witnessed Defendant ask Victim for money she owed him and, when she did not pay, watched Defendant beat Victim viciously with his hands and then a baseball bat. Benintend asserted that he ran out the back door while Defendant continued to beat Victim. Soon thereafter he moved to Key West, Florida. Given that the body was found in the house in which Benin-tend lived, he was originally charged with the murder. When first questioned by detectives in Florida, he did not reveal any information about the murder. However, in the second interview, he placed the blame on Defendant. Benintend eventually pled guilty to aggravated assault, unlawful restraint, and criminal conspiracy in exchange for his testimony against Defendant. Indeed, the trial court at sentencing recognized that, while the facts pointed to Defendant as the perpetrator, “Mr. Benintend’s involvement was substantially greater than he has let it on to be.” N.T., March 15, 2007, at 13. Benin-tend also had prior crimen falsi convictions.
However, Deloe admitted to being a prostitute and drug addict who was being supported by Defendant. She acknowledged having difficulty remembering, which she blamed on beatings she received from Defendant, for which he was also on trial at the time of the murder proceeding. Moreover, in a confusing portion of her testimony that evidenced her faulty memory, Deloe alleged that Defendant severely beat her when she accused him publicly of Victim’s murder. However, the hospital record introduced to support the alleged beating was for treatment that occurred prior to the murder, thus arguably undermining her claims. N.T., Dec. 14-20, 2006, at 234-36. Defense counsel further highlighted several inconsistencies between Benintend and Deloe’s testimony, including whether another man, named Troy, was present in the house during the murder and whether Benintend remained in the house after Defendant left. Recognizing the significant credibility issues concerning the eyewitness testimony of Benintend and Deloe, we are not “convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that the error was harmless.” Story,
Accordingly, we conclude that the prosecutor’s use of the non-testifying defendant’s silence as substantive evidence of guilt was not harmless. Therefore, we would affirm the decision of the Superior Court reversing the judgment of sentence and remanding for a new trial.
Notes
. We observe that the detective was not questioned as to exactly how the refusal was phrased or whether it implied an assertion of Defendant’s rights against self-incrimination.
. The details of their testimony are not relevant to the primary issue before this Court, but will be discussed in conjunction with the harmless error analysis, infra at 453-54.
. The trial court granted the defense motion for acquittal on the charge of criminal conspiracy to commit criminal homicide. On the same date, the court sentenced Defendant to four to eight years of imprisonment for aggravated assault, simple assault, and unlawful restraint for conduct related to witness Pam Deloe to which Defendant had pled guilty.
. Miranda v. Arizona,
. The Superior Court also rejected the Commonwealth’s waiver argument stemming from counsel’s failure to object to the detective’s testimony. Although the Commonwealth addresses this issue in a footnote, our grant of review does not extend to that question.
. While the Superior Court’s holdings were based primarily on the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution, we recognize that the Fifth Amendment provides the minimum level of protection of individual rights. Commonwealth v. Edmunds,
. In support, the Commonwealth relies upon the following decisions of our sister courts: United States v. Oplinger,
. The Pennsylvania District Attorneys Association filed an amicus curiae brief in support of the Commonwealth.
. Defendant relies upon the following decisions of our sister courts: Combs v. Coyle,
. Although originally contained in Article I, the Declaration of Rights were moved to Article K, in the Constitution of 1790 and then returned to Article I in 1874. See Ken Gormley, The Pennsylvania Constitution: A Treatise on Rights and Liberties § 12.1, at 327, Appendix I, at 877-78, 880-81, 887-89 (2004).
. Article I, Section 9 provides in full:
Rights of accused in criminal prosecutions
In all criminal prosecutions the accused hath a right to be heard by himself and his counsel, to demand the nature and cause of the accusation against him, to be confronted with the witnesses against him, to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor, and, in prosecutions by indictment or information, a speedy public trial by an impartial jury of the vicinage; he cannot be compelled to give evidence against himself, nor can he be deprived of his life, liberty or property, unless by the judgment of his peers or the law of the land. The use of a suppressed voluntary admission or voluntary confession to impeach the credibility of a person may be permitted and shall not be construed as compelling a person to give evidence against himself.
Pa. Const, art. 1, § 9.
. In full, the Fifth Amendment provides:
No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a Grand Jury, except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the Militia, when in actual service in time of War or public danger; nor shall any person be subject for the same offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb; nor shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself, nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.
U.S. Const, amend. V.
. While not relevant to the issues before this Court, Pennsylvania’s constitution, unlike its federal counterpart, includes reputation as an "inherent and indefeasible’’ right:
All men are born equally free and independent, and have certain inherent and indefeasible rights, among which are those of enjoying and defending life and liberty, of acquiring, possessing and protecting property and reputation, and of pursuing their own happiness.
Pa. Const, art. I, § 1.
. The Star Chamber was an English court of law existing from the Fifteenth to Seventeenth Centuries. The United States Supreme Court described its relevance to the enactment of the Fifth Amendment’s right against self-incrimination:
Historically, the privilege was intended to prevent the use of legal compulsion to extract from the accused a sworn communication of facts which would incriminate him. Such was the process of the ecclesiastical courts and the Star Chamber — the inquisitorial method of putting the accused upon his oath and compelling him to answer questions designed to uncover uncharged offenses, without evidence from another source.
Pennsylvania v. Muniz,
. As discussed infra at 450 we recognize that some justices of both the United States Supreme Court and this Court view the Fifth Amendment as limited to protecting only compelled speech, rather than silence.
. Although a testifying defendant’s right is not infringed by reference to his prior silence, given his waiver, a violation of his due process rights may occur because his silence was induced by Miranda warnings, see infra at 448.
. In another case related to Miranda warnings not directly relevant to the issue before this Court, a plurality of this Court imposed more stringent protections on the right against self-incrimination than the federal jurisprudence, requiring that police obtain an explicit waiver of Miranda rights, rather than adopting the minimal criteria set by the United States Supreme Court in North Carolina v. Butler,
. We also acknowledged that the defendant in Bolus failed to present an argument for distinguishing the protections provided by Section 9 from the federal provisions. Bolus,
. The following Courts of Appeals have concluded that use of prearrest silence as substantive evidence is unconstitutional: Combs v. Coyle,
The following Courts of Appeals have concluded that use, as substantive evidence, of silence prior to arrest is constitutional: United States v. Oplinger,
. The following state courts have concluded that use of pre-arrest silence as substantive evidence is unconstitutional: People v. Welsh,
The following state courts have concluded that use of pre-arrest silence as substantive evidence is constitutional: State v. Lopez,
. Moreover, I note that the ramifications of a decision condoning this prosecutor’s closing statement are noteworthy. It is without controversy under our Fourth Amendment/Article I, Section 8 jurisprudence that a citizen has the right to break off a mere encounter with police by declining to speak and walking away. Commonwealth v. Ickes,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I join the lead opinion, subject to a few modest departures.
In terms of these differences, first, I believe that it is unnecessary to determine whether Appellant impliedly invoked his constitutional right against self-incrimination. See Opinion Announcing the Judgment of the Court, at 478,
Next, I have some difficulty to the degree the lead opinion treats “protection of the adversary system” as an end unto itself. Id. at 493-95,
In terms of my agreement with the majority opinion, from my perspective, the majority does an admirable job working through what has become a highly complex and, indeed, counter-intuitive area of federal constitutional jurisprudence. See, e.g., Peg Green, Pre-Arrest, Pre-Miranda Silence: Questions Left Unanswered by Salinas v. Texas, 7 Phoenix L.Rev. 395, 409 (2013) (“The odd result of Salinas is that one must speak in order to remain silent; and if a person remains silent instead of speaking up, that silence can be used against him as evidence of guilt.”). To my mind, the result is the delineation of a reasoned and just avenue of departure in our enforcement of a core right guaranteed by the Pennsylvania Constitution.
. In addition to the reasons referenced by the lead Justices, see id. at 498-500,
. In the present state of the constitutional jurisprudence on this score, at the very least, trial judges should consider our evidentiary rules. See, e.g., Pa.R.E. 403 (providing that a court may exclude evidence if its probative value is outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice).
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I dissent and also join Mr. Justice Eakin’s Dissenting Opinion. Because the trial court committed no error, I would reverse the Superior Court decision and reinstate the judgment of sentence. My reasons follow.
At trial, the Commonwealth introduced, without objection, evidence that appellee had called a detective and provided some information about the missing victim. After appellee contradicted himself concerning when he had last seen the victim, the detective asked him to come to the police station to speak further; appellee refused.
In finding that the trial court erred, the Superior Court en bane majority strayed from its institutional role, which should counsel restraint when asked to innovate a federal constitutional right never accepted by the U.S. Supreme Court or by this Court — especially when the trial court was never asked to embrace the innovation. Instead, the intermediate court established a novel and far-ranging Fourteenth Amendment parameter for the Fifth Amendment right against “compulsion,” in circumstances that were not exactly crying out for the innovation. The court’s holding essentially guaranteed that this Court would have to review the issue. After granting review, this Court then had the benefit of an intervening case from the U.S. Supreme Court, which offered the prospect of resolving the Fifth Amendment issue. See Salinas v. Texas, — U.S. —,
The Superior Court should have been more cautious. The case presents multiple circumstances counseling restraint, including some of the same cautionary circumstances that led the Salinas Court not to act. I recognize the temptation when a constitutional claim is at issue. But, the Superior Court is not the U.S. Supreme Court and its primary institutional role vis a vis that Court in cases posing federal сonstitutional questions is to implement that Court’s existing commands concerning questions of federal law.
Momentous decisions such as the one under review — affecting the conduct of police and the evidentiary options available to the Commonwealth — should be reserved for egregious circumstances. At a minimum, such decisions should be limited to circumstances where the constitutional innovation was plainly implicated both in terms of issue preservation and in terms of the circumstances. For multiple reasons, in my view, this case did not warrant indulging a predictive Fifth Amendment judgment. For one thing, under existing law — which the prosecutor invoked in response to the defense objection— the prosecutor did nothing wrong. Relatedly, appellee never put the trial court on notice that he was seeking relief based upon a
Moreover, one has to strain to fit the facts into a Fifth Amendment invocation-of-rights paradigm. This is not a case where, for example, evidence came in over objection to the effect that: the police asked to speak to the defendant, not in custody; the defendant (perhaps being a law professor) said, “Absolutely not, I have a Fifth Amendment right to remain silent in all of my actions with the police department”; that exchange was introduced as substantive evidence at trial of a tacit admission of guilt; the Commonwealth then argued to the jury that it could conclude that the defendant was guilty because any innocent person would have spoken up and protested his innocence; and, finally, the trial court instructed the jury that it could draw an inference of guilt from the defendant’s silence.
Instead, what happened here was that appellee, prior to arrest, actually spoke to the police, he did not even necessarily decline to speak further, the trial event leading thе Superior Court to grant relief did not involve substantive evidence of guilt, but only prosecutorial commentary in closing concerning evidence admitted without objection; and there was no instruction from the judge to consider the comment as if it were evidence, much less an instruction inviting the jury to treat appellee’s interaction with police as a tacit admission of guilt. As then-President Judge, and now-Justice Stevens observed in dissent below, “the prosecution’s statements during closing argument did not constitute the use of pre-arrest silence as substantive evidence of guilt____The prosecution provided no additional commentary on this point, and nowhere did it specifically invite the jury to infer guilt from [Molina’s] silence.” Commonwealth v. Molina,
The OAJC obviously realizes that the Superior Court’s finding of trial court error cannot be sustained in terms of the federal constitutional right it conjured. The Justices favoring affirmance would instead affirm the grant of relief premised upon conjuring a distinct Pennsylvania constitutional argument that appellee likewise never forwarded to the trial court. I cannot join the innovation for the same reasons I believe the Superior Court erred in conjuring a new federal right on this record: the trial court committed no error, when measured against the objection actually forwarded, and therefore, appellee is not entitled to relief.
I am also disinclined to innovate new Pennsylvania constitutional law in this particular
Indeed, given the multitude of circumstances that can lead a person not to speak, it is difficult to see the constitutional error. As the OAJC correctly concedes, the jury could have postulated any number of reasons for appellee’s decision not to come down to the station and speak further to police, but the OAJC then declares that “jurors generally view silence as an indication of guilt.” OAJC at 451 (citing Commonwealth v. Turner,
Finally, on the merits of the state constitutional issue addressed by the Justices supporting affirmance, I offer the following. There certainly have been state constitutional holdings rendered in this general area, as ably described by the OAJC. But, in my view, the decisions are a doctrinal disaster, and further counsel а nonconstitutional focus. The foundational decisions in the area obviously were powered by federal constitutional law. See e.g., Quinn v. U.S.,
Soon after Miranda, the High Court recognized an exception to its rule of exclusion, holding in Harris v. New York,
There had been no independent Pennsylvania constitutional inroads in this area, in majority decisions at least, prior to the federal dictate in Doyle, supra,
Furthermore, a subsequent state constitutional decision, Commonwealth v. Bolus,
For the reasons I have outlined, I do not believe that the trial court erred. Moreover, I view the core problem in this area not to be a constitutional one, but a question of relevance respecting what inferences can be drawn from silence — or noncooperation, for that matter — which is a point long made by this Court. See, e.g., Dravecz,
. The Opinion Announcing the Judgment of the Court by Mr. Justice Baer (hereinafter “OAJC") sets forth the prosecutor’s argument, the defense objection, the relevant ensuing sidebar disсussion, and the prosecutor’s final comment, verbatim. OAJC at 433-34.
. The High Court had granted certiorari in Salinas “to resolve a division of authority in the lower courts over whether the prosecution may use a defendant's assertion of the privilege against self-incrimination during a noncustodial police interview as part of its case in chief.” Id. at —,
. See Benton v. Maryland,
. Notably, the Salinas plurality was of the view that a defendant must expressly invoke his right to remain silent when he is otherwise not being compelled to speak, and that a "witness does not expressly invoke the privilege by standing mute.” Salinas, — U.S. at —,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
My colleagues frame the Superior Court’s sole rationale for reversal as “the prosecutor utilized [appelleej’s refusal to speak further with the detective as substantive evidence of his guilt in his closing argument.” Opinion Announcing Judgment of Court, at 476,
Thus, the issue before us is quite limited: whether the prosecutor’s narrow remark constituted an improper reference to the accused’s articulated exercise of his right against self-incrimination. I find three major problems with the decision to affirm the grant of a new trial on this basis.
First, there was no “silence” for the prosecutor to refer to in the first place — appellee verbalized a refusal to go to the police station, terminating a phone call which was initiated by appellee himself. This is not silence at all — it was an affirmative statement unrelated to an exercise of rights.
Secondly, there was no assertion whatsoever of the right against self-incrimination, express or implied, much less one which was unequivocal. Even if the Pennsylvania Constitution is implicated here, and even if that were to require the analysis my colleagues suggest, there must still be some affirmative evidence of that invocation; here, there was none.
Finally, the prosecutor’s reference was to factual testimony already heard by the jury, which is unchallenged herein. Any effort to “utilize” the evidence or make argument about its significance was preempted by timely objection.
Respectfully, the prosecutor never committed the sins laid at his feet. He never told the jury appellee’s “refusal to speak further” or his “silence” showed guilt. Whatever additional comments might have been considered by the prosecutor, the record shows he never utilized appellee’s refusal at all — the timely objection by vigilant defense counsel cut short any utilization. The prosecutor repeated the acknowledged facts and testimony about appellee’s refusal to continue the conversation at the police station; when he asked “and why?” the objection was lodged and nothing followed — the record shows the refusal was never argued. Had there been no objection, perhaps there might have been argument about the inferences
Even had such an argument been made by the prosecutor, a lawyer’s argument is never substantive evidence. See Commonwealth v. Puksar,
To complain of denial of the right against self-incrimination under either the federal or state constitution, one must empirically invoke that right. Such an invocation was never expressed and, in my judgment, is not reasonably inferred from appellee’s declination to continue the conversation at the police station. I agree that “talismanic invocation of the constitutional provision” is not required to invoke the right, see Opinion Announcing Judgment of Court, at 439, but this does not excuse the obligation to say or do something to invoke it. The right still must be affirmatively asserted — a defendant “must claim it or he will not be considered to have been ‘compelled[.]’ ” Minnesota v. Murphy,
Chmiel and Salinas both involve custodial interrogations— they occurred while the accused was in what cases describe as the coercive clutches of the police. Specifically, Chmiel was in custody when police asked where he was on the night of the murder; he replied, “ T don’t think I better talk about that.’ ” Id., at 479,
Salinas was a fractured decision, but a majority of the Court clearly found no express invocation of rights. Salinas, in custody, stood mute, and intuiting invocation from the circumstances was not approved. However, the dissent, finding the circumstances sufficient to infer an invocation of the Fifth Amendment, emphasized “[pjolice ... made clear that [Salinas] was a suspect” and “[h]is interrogation took place at the police station.” Salinas, at 2189 (Breyer, J., dissenting). Here, again in stark contrast, appellee was not in custody. He did not stand mute. He was not told he was a suspect at all when he spoke to the detective — indeed, there was no known crime at this point, nor was that implied by police in any way. His refusal to meet with detectives occurred at the end of a voluntary telephone conversation, contact with police he initiated himself. Two factors emphasized by Justice Breyer were police-station interrogation and the declaration the person was a suspect — neither exists here. Even if Pennsylvania constitutional jurisprudence ignored the Salinas majority and aligned itself with the Salinas dissent, there was no invocation of rights in the present case.
A fortiori, this was not just a pre-arrest scenario — this was a pre-discovery-there-was-even-a-crime scenario. Unlike the defendants in Salinas and Chmiel, appellee did not respond to interrogation that might incriminate him; there are no facts indicating police treated him as a suspect or suggested there was even a crime to be talked about. When he called, this was presented to appellee as a missing persons matter, nothing more. While appellee stated “it was on the street,” there was no express or implied effort by police suggesting they wished to extract incriminating evidence from him. Appellee volunteered information over the phone, then declined to meet with the detective in person. This was neither “silence” nor the invocation of rights.
This case simply does not include “silence in the face of police questioning” — it involves termination of a self-initiated monologue without police questioning, without arrest, without suggestion of suspect status, and really without silence. Even the lead opinion acknowledges “a defendant’s
Finally, even if the right against self-incrimination were applicable to pre-arrest silence, much less pre-discovery-of-acrime silence, and even if appellee had somehow properly invoked it, he still would not be entitled to relief, as he must show prejudice, which is not established by a prosecutor’s mere mention of testimony already admitted at trial. See Commonwealth v. DiNicola,
Here, the prosecutor did nothing more than recapitulate testimony the lead opinion concedes was properly admitted. The absolute most that can be said is that the prosecutor asked the jurors to “[fjactor that in” when making their decision. N.T. Trial, 12/14-20/06, at 581. Indeed, this statement came after he enumerated the much more significant contradictions in appellee’s statement — it is not clear that this isolated throwaway comment referred to the refusal to go to the station at all.
And while the single sentence at issue is assumed to have “emphasized” appellee’s lack of cooperation with police, see Opinion Announcing Judgment of Court, at 452-53, that is what a closing argument is — emphasizing the evidence in a persuasive manner. The really worthwhile evidence to be factored in was the contradictions preceding the termination of the phone call, which were spoken of in detail immediately before mention of the refusal. Which was to be “factored in”? Any emphasis is really a matter of speculation, given we are limited to a transcript that reveals no emphasis at all. The prosecutor certainly did not make this the crux of the argument, and even if it can be read to refer only to the refusal to go to the station, this comprised a miniscule fraction of what was said. Reversal is appropriate only where the context of the statement is “likely to suggest to the jury that silence is the equivalent of a tacit admission of guilt[,]” Whitney, at 478 (citation omitted), which cannot be found under these circumstances where any such argument was cut off by the prompt objection.
Accordingly, while the history of this fine of cases as set forth by the lead opinion is intellectually appealing, it is inapplicable to the facts of this case. It is an expansive step to extend precepts from post-arrest cases to pre-arrest circumstances, much less pre-discovery-of-a-crime circumstances, and we certainly should not do so by means of a case where there was no silence, no invocation of rights, and no prosecutorial comment at all about silence or the meaning of testimony which the jury already heard without challenge.
The premise of any argument requires that the factual basis of the issue exists; merely saying so here begs the question. The testimony shows there was no silence. The record shows there was no invocation
Thus, as I would reverse the decision of the Superior Court and reinstate appellee’s convictions and judgment of sentence, I respectfully dissent.
. Salinas v. Texas, — U.S. —,
. Further, the record does not contain any testimony at all that appellee’s words indicated he was invoking any rights. The detective testified to what happened, but there was no detailing by either party of appellee’s actual words. The detective said, "He said he refused to come in[,]” N.T. Trial, 12/14-20/06, at 481, and that was it. It seems unlikely that appellee’s precise words were “I refuse to come in” — one surmises his refusal was a bit less stilted. But perhaps it is exactly those words that were used. Perhaps not. There are refusals, and there are refusals. The problem is that the examination of the detective was not aimed at evaluating whether there was an invocation of rights; therefore, the specific words were not sought from the witness. And now, based on a record where one can only speculate about appellee’s actual words, to conclude those words were intended as such an invocation is just as speculative.
. It is ironic that appellee's "silence” can be found in an articulated refusal to continue a conversation at the police station, while an articulated "invocation of rights” can be intuited from the exact same "silence.” Also ironic is the suggestion that his "silence,” such as it was, is so ambiguous that it cannot comprise substantive evidence, yet it is unambiguous enough to constitute an assertion of rights.
