A single justice of this court granted the Commonwealth’s application for leave to appeal interlocutory orders suppressing certain evidence. See Mass. R. Grim. P. 15 (b) (2),
On January 12, 1979, an Essex County grand jury indicted the defendant Gallant for robbery, assault with intent to murder, mayhem, assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon, and аssault and battery. On the same day, the grand jury indicted Searles for robbery. These indictments related to incidents that occurred at a variety store in Amesbury. Each defendant filed a motion to suppress inculpatory statements allegedly made by him to police officers.
The judge who heard the motions made findings of fact. On January 4, 1979, two Amesbury police officers arrested Michael Gallant, brother of the defendant Gallant, at his home on a charge unrelated tо the incidents at the Ames-bury variety store. Michael was advised of his Miranda rights and questioned about the matter for which he was arrested. He admitted his involvement in that crime. He was then questioned about the incidents at the variety store and signеd a statement implicating himself and each of the defendants in the variety store crimes. No question is presented here concerning the propriety of the procedures by which the police obtained Michael Gallаnt’s statement. The judge denied a motion to suppress Michael’s statement to the police.
On January 5, 1979, the defendant Gallant was arrested in connection with the variety store incidents. He was given Miranda warnings and was taken to the Amеsbury police station. There he was advised of his rights again. He said that he knew his rights and that he did not wish to give a statement. A minute or so after Gallant indicated that he did not wish to make a statement, the chief of police handed Gallant his brоther’s statement implicating Gallant in the variety store crimes. Gallant read the statement. The chief advised him again that he did not have to say anything if he did not want to and then asked him if his brother’s statement was true. Gallant said it was and made an оral state
The defendant Searles, who knew the police wanted to question him concerning the variety store incidents, appeared with his mother in the Amesbury District Court on January 22, 1979, on an unrelated matter. Searles was reprеsented by counsel in the unrelated matter. The chief of police asked Searles and his mother to talk with him in his office. The attorney on the unrelated matter was not present. Neither Searles nor his mother asked for counsel to be present. The chief advised Searles of his constitutional rights. Although the judge found that Searles understood his rights, he did not expressly find that Searles waived those rights. The chief showed Searles the typed statement that Gallant had acknowlеdged as being accurate but had not signed. Searles then made a statement indicating his involvement in the variety store robbery.
The judge concluded that Gallant’s right to cut off questioning was not scrupulously honored and allowed the motion tо suppress his statements to the police. The judge also determined that Searles’s “admissions . . . were obtained from him directly as a consequence of his having been shown admissions illegally obtained” from Gallant, and, acknowledging that hе had found no authority directly in point, concluded that Searles’s statement should be suppressed as well because “it is my opinion that a prophylactic rule should be applied here.”
1. We agree with the judge’s ruling suppressing Gallаnt’s statements. This result is required by what we recently said in
Commonwealth
v.
Brant,
The issue is whether Gallant’s right to terminate questioning was scrupulously honored. Commonwealth v. Brant, supra at 882. Here, the police chief immediately showed Gallant his brother’s inculpatory statement after Gallant said he did not want to talk. There was an insufficient passage of time between the events to constitute a scrupulous observance of the defendant’s right to cut off questioning. Id at 883. We do not say that a disclosure at some considerably later time of his brother’s inculpatory statement, accompanied by fresh warnings as to his rights, would have made a statement by Gallant inadmissible. Id. at 886. However, the one minute interval between Gallant’s assertion of his right to remain silent and the revelation of his brother’s statement, for the obvious purpose of eliciting a response, was an infringement of Gallant’s right to remain silent.
2. The issue as to the suppression of Searles’s statement to the police is more troublesome. The judge concluded that, because Gallant’s statement was obtained in violation of his constitutional rights and was shown to Searles before he mаde his inculpatory statement, Searles’s statement should be suppressed as well.
2
The police were not led to Searles solely by Kenneth Gallant’s statement. Michael Gallant’s lawfully obtained statement implicated and identifiеd Searles as- well. We are bound by the judge’s finding, however, that Searles was shown only Kenneth’s statement before Searles made his inculpatory statement. See
Commonwealth
v.
Mahnke,
In
United States
v.
Ceccolini,
The factors that must be considered in determining whether the taint of policе misconduct has dissipated include the witness’s free will in choosing to testify; the time, place and manner of the initial questioning of the witness; the time lapse between the time of the illegal conduct and the initial contact with the witness; the nature and extent of police misconduct; and the possibility of obtaining the same testimony independently of the illegal conduct.
Commonwealth
v.
Caso,
We think that the “prophylactic rule” by which an unconstitutionally obtained statement is excluded from evidence in order to encourage police officers to preserve people’s constitutional rights has generally served its purpose when the statements of the person whose constitutional rights were violated are suppressed.
United States
v.
Cec-colini, supra
at 275-276. The unlawful conduct in obtaining Kenneth’s statement in no way tainted the procedures followed in questioning Searles. If the police had fabricated Kenneth’s statement, or had obtained it by coercion, or possibly if the police had been led to Searles only because of Kenneth’s statements, a broader application of the prophylactic rule might be warranted. See
Commonwealth
v.
Meehan,
We affirm the order suppressing statemеnts made by Kenneth Gallant and reverse the order suppressing Searles’s statements. Searles’s motion to suppress must be considered further on those contentions not dealt with by the judge — the contention that Searles talked becаuse he believed the “cat was out of the bag” and the further contentions mentioned in note 2, supra.
So ordered.
Notes
He did not rule explicitly on whether Searles had knowingly and intelligently waived his right to counsel or whether the postindictment questioning of Searles in thе absence of counsel violated his right to counsel.
Searles’s motion to suppress sought a suppression of all his statements to officers of the Amesbury police because the statements were taken in violation of Searles’s constitutional rights. The judge and the parties have treated Searles’s motion to suppress as based also on a claim that Searles’s statement should be suppressed because of the violation of Gallant’s cоnstitutional rights.
In search and seizure cases under the Fourth Amendment, application of the exclusionary rule is limited to evidence obtained in violation of the constitutional rights of the person who is challenging the admissibility of such evidence. See, e.g.,
United States
v.
Salvucci,
