This is аn interlocutory appeal by the Commonwealth from a Superior Court judge’s allowance of a motion to suppress statements made by the defendant, a correction officer at the Worcester County house of correction (the facility), to a superior officer during an investigation of a beating of an inmate. The investigation resulted in cоnspiracy charges against the defendant for assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon and for violation of the inmate’s constitutional rights. Applying the analysis set forth in Commonwealth v. Bryant,
Recognizing that we must accept the motion judge’s subsidiary findings аbsent clear error and that his ultimate conclusions, while entitled to substantial deference, Commonwealth v. Eagles,
1. Place of interrogation. The judge determined that the defendant’s interrogation by a superior officer took place in a coercive setting. The defendant was interrogated behind closed doors in the office of the deputy superintendent, who was responsible for conducting criminal and internal affairs investigations within the facility. Present during the interview were the deputy superintendent, an armed observer, and a note taker. The office was located in a locked building within the facility. The defendant could not leave this building unless another corrеction officer unlocked the door. Because the place of interrogation was the defendant’s work place where closed doors, locked buildings, and armed guаrds were routine, the Commonwealth argues that this setting was non-coercive.
While it is true that courts are much less likely to find the circumstances custodial when the interrogation occurs in familiar or at least neutral surroundings, Breese v. Commonwealth,
The Commonwealth also argues that the judge’s analysis was flawed becаuse he viewed the facts from the perspective of “a reasonable mythical person” rather than the perspective of a reasonable correctiоn officer. As the Commonwealth itself acknowledges, the judge did take into account that the defendant was a law enforcement officer and presumably less susceptible to the coercive consequences of locked buildings and closed doors. Nevertheless, the judge concluded that “a reasonable person in defendant’s circumstanсes” would have found the setting isolating and coercive. This was the proper standard. Commonwealth v. A Juvenile,
Furthermore, the mere fact that the defendant was accustomed to closed doors, locked buildings, and individuals wearing guns would not have precluded the judge from reaching the conclusion he did. The judge did not base his ultimate conclusion on those facts standing alone; he took into consideration the totality of the circumstances. In particular, he focused on the fact that the defendant was escorted to the place of interrogation by his superior and that the setting was the office of a superior officer to whom the defendant owed a duty of obedience by training and organizational mandate. Commonwealth v. Bryant,
2. Focus of the investigation. The judge determined that the investigation had focused on the defendant at the time of the interrogation. He based his conclusion not on the subjective intent of the interrogаting officer but upon the objective circumstances of the interview. See Stansbury v. California,
The Commonwealth’s only argument is that it is not clear from the judge’s findings that the investigation had focused on the defendant. While such statements as “be honest” and “it would be better if you cooperated” are noncoercive, Commonwealth v. Mandile,
3. Nature of the interrogation. The judge found that the questioning was “formal, dоmineering and relentless . . . [qjualities evocative of custody.” The judge found that at least twice during the questioning the defendant began crying and each time the officer continued the interrogation and on one occasion urged the defendant “to be honest” with him.
Relying upon Commonwealth v. Harvey,
4. Freedom to leave. The judge found that the defendant was free to leave at the conclusion of the questioning and was not arrested despite his admissions whiсh implicated his complicity in the beating. Nevertheless, the judge found that at the time of the defendant’s statement he was not free to leave and that his eventual release, while some evidence of non-custody, paled in comparison with the custodial indicia. The Commonwealth argues that the judge erred because there is no better proof of noncustodial interrogation than the fact that the defendant was not arrested and was free to leave at the conclusion of the questioning.
Since no one factor under the Bryant analysis is dispositive, the mere fаct that the defendant was not arrested is not conclusive on the question of whether there was custodial interrogation. See Bryant, supra at 737. Moreover, the true test is whether at the time his inсriminating statement was made a reasonable person in the defendant’s position would have believed that he was free to end the interrogation by leaving. Commonwealth v. Gil, supra at 212. Given the nature оf the interrogation, its setting, and its focus on the defendant, we conclude that a reasonable person in the defendant’s circumstances would not have believed he was free to leave until his superior officer released him. Cf. Commonwealth v. Jung,
Order allowing motion to suppress affirmed.
