The defendant sought to suppress statements he made to a police officer while he was strapped to a stretcher and receiving medical assistance. The District Court judge allowed the motion to suppress concluding that the defendant, who had
The judge found the following facts, none of which is alleged to be clearly erroneous: Police Officer Stephen Joy was dispatched to the scene of a two-car accident where he observed the defendant seated in the driver’s seat of one of the cars. The officer noted that the defendant appeared to be “dazed and confused” and that his breath smelled of alcohol. Although he had a severe laceration on his forehead, the defendant attempted to get out of his car. Officer Joy prevented him from doing so until emergency medical technicians (EMT) arrived.
Upon their arrival, EMT personnel removed the defendant from his vehicle, strapped him to a stretcher, and placed him in an ambulance. In response to an EMT’s question about what had happened, the defendant stated, “I had too much to drink.” The EMT informed Officer Joy of this statement, and the officer asked the defendant what he had had to drink. The defendant answered that he had consumed alcoholic beverages at two local establishments during the evening. When the officer asked him if the alcohol had affected his ability to operate his motor vehicle, the defendant responded that it probably had affected his ability to drive. The defendant was thereafter taken to the hospital. Officer Joy asked similar questions of the defendant in the emergency room. The defendant gave the same answers. In addition, at the emergency room, the officer also administered a field sobriety test to the defendant, asking him to recite the alphabet. The defendant failed the test. Officer Joy did not read the defendant his Miranda rights at any time before questioning him.
The motion judge concluded that when the officer first noticed the odor of alcohol on the defendant’s breath, he had reasonable suspicion that the defendant had committed a crime, and when he questioned the defendant while he was strapped to a stretcher, the defendant was in custody, and entitled to Miranda warnings. The judge therefore suppressed the defendant’s statements to the officer at the accident scene and the hospital.
When reviewing a decision on a motion to suppress, we accept the judge’s findings unless they are clearly erroneous, but we review independently the judge’s application of constitu
The “safeguards prescribed by Miranda become applicable as soon as a suspect’s freedom of action is curtailed to a ‘degree associated with formal arrest.’ ” Commonwealth v. Morse,
In determining whether an interrogation is custodial, the relevant inquiry is “how a reasonable [person] in the [defendant’s] position would have understood his situation.” Berke-mer v. McCarty,
Courts in other jurisdictions have addressed whether a suspect who is restrained for medical treatment by medical personnel must be informed of his Miranda rights before he is subjected to questions from police officers. These cases generally hold that there is no custodial interrogation in these circumstances. See, e.g., Wilson v. Coon,
In Wilson, the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals emphasized that a reasonable person would expect that restraint by ambulance personnel would “last only for the time that is medically necessary and would feel free to leave after then.” Moreover, as the physical restraint on the defendant was applied by ambulance attendants for medical purposes, rather than by law enforcement officers for investigative purposes, “[a] reasonable person would perceive this detention as imposed only for purposes of a medical examination, not a police interrogation.” Id. at 690. Finally, the detention’s occurring in public and in the presence of medical attendants “reduces the likelihood that law enforcement agents will use oppressive or abusive tactics and renders the situation less ‘police-dominated.’ ” Ibid. The court concluded that the concerns triggering Miranda protections — that compelling and lasting pressure would work to undermine the individual’s will to resist questioning — were therefore not present.
The insights of Wilson inform the application of the familiar four factors to the issue whether the defendant in the instant case was in custody when questioned. See note 2, supra. (1) The questioning occurred in public and EMT personnel were present thereby diminishing the possibility of police domination. See Miranda v. Arizona,
Order allowing motion to suppress reversed.
Notes
Terry v. Ohio,
See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Groome,
In that case, although the defendant was also taken to the hospital, there was no issue regarding questioning there. In the instant case, we need not address the legality of the questioning at the hospital as there is no argument that the questions or answers were any different there than at the accident site, with the exception of the alphabet test, which is nontestimonial. See Vanhouton v. Commonwealth,
The ambulance attendants were not agents of the police. Commonwealth v. McCambridge,
We note that because the trial judge suppressed the statements based on the failure to give Miranda warnings, she did not address the voluntariness of the statements. The issue of voluntariness was raised in the motion to suppress but was not developed in an affidavit or at the hearing on the motion. With this limited record, we decline to address the defendant’s appellate argument as to the voluntariness of the statements. Of course, if a substantial claim of involuntariness is a live issue at trial, the issue must be addressed by the judge prior to the admission of the statements. Commonwealth v. Brady,
