¶ 1 Paul Laney appeals from the judgment of sentence entered after a jury convicted him of aggravated assault, recklessly endangering another person, and illegal possession, use or control of a firearm. We affirm.
¶ 2 The learned trial court aptly summarized the facts:
On July 12, 1997, Kenneth Zeigler was assigned as a fire policeman to protect pedestrians at a demolition site of Andy’s Bar on the corner of North Pitt Street and West North Street in the Borough of Carlisle. For years that street corner and the surrounding area has been infamous for street level drug dealing. In the summer of 1997, law enforcement authorities targeted the area and maintained an increased presence in an effort to reduce such illegal activity. Zeigler was wearing a fire police uniform and sitting inside his private automobile which was parked diagonally across North Pitt Street from the demolition site. He was joined by a friend, Charles Messinger, a fire policeman who was not on duty and was in civilian clothes. During the evening, [appellant], Paul Laney, came to the automobile and asked Zeigler and Mes-singer if they had any cigarettes, which they did not. A short time later, five gunshots were fired. The shots went into the passenger side of the vehicle in which Zeigler and Messinger were sitting in the front seat. One bullet entered the side of Messinger’s head, went through his right eye, and lodged under his skin to the left of his nose. Among other injuries caused by that bullet, Messinger permanently lost sight in his right eye. Zeigler was not struck.
The police responded to the scene. They discovered that the bullets had been shot at the fire policemen from behind the brick wall. As the investigation proceeded, a sizable crowd assembled outside the roped off crime scene. [Appellant] was in that crowd. He was listening to a Walkman and singing. [Appellant] yelled to Detective David Fones that “The mother fucker deserved to get shot,” “He doesn’t belong in our neighborhood,” and “Fuck the police.”
On July 18, 1997, the Carlisle Police, pursuant to a search warrant, searched the residence of [appellant] on an unrelated matter. [Appellant] was then arrested on that date for various drug violations. He was also arrested on a warrant charging him with disorderly conduct that has [sic] occurred during the police investigation at the scene of the shooting on July 12. [Appellant] failed to make bail on either charge and was incarcerated in the Cumberland County Prison. [Appellant’s] cell mate was James Pope. On several occasions, [appellant] told Pope that he had fired the shots into the vehicle of the fire policemen on July 12. On July 81, Pope volunteered to the Carlisle Police what [appellant] had told him. Pope then agreed to participate in a consensual interception of [appellant]. On August 6, the Cumberland County District Attorney approved the interception. On the same day, Pope was outfitted with a hidden tape recorder. While in their cell at the Cumberland County Prison, Pope engaged Laney in a tape recorded conversation during which Laney admitted in considerable detail of how he fired the shots into the automobile of the fire policemen on July 12. On September 4, the Carlisle Police obtained a warrant and arrested [appellant] for the shooting. After waiving his Miranda rights, [appellant] admitted to Detective Ronald Egolf that he fired the shots into the vehicle of the fire policemen on July 12.
Trial Court Opinion, 5/8/98, at 2-5 (footnote omitted).
¶4 Our standard of review is clear:
In an appeal from the denial of a motion to suppress our role is to determine whether the record supports the suppression court’s factual findings and the legitimacy of the inferences and legal conclusions drawn from those findings. In making this determination, we may consider only the evidence of the prosecution’s witnesses and so much of the defense as, fairly read in the context of the record as a whole, remains uncontra-dicted. When the factual findings of the suppression court are supported by the evidence, we may reverse only if there is an error in the legal conclusions drawn from those factual findings.
Commonwealth v. Carlson,
¶ 5 We first, examine the Sixth Amendment claim. A defendant who asserts a desire to have counsel may not be questioned concerning a matter on which he has been arrested, unless counsel is present or the right is properly waived.
McNeil v. Wisconsin,
¶ 6 The Sixth Amendment right to counsel is easily invoked for a charged offense, but that invocation cannot extend to future uncharged crimes, unless they stem from the same incident.
In re Pack,
¶ 7 In Pennsylvania, this right attaches at the moment of arrest.
Commonwealth v. Rishel,
¶ 8 Appellant shouted obscenities at the crime scene, and was charged as a loudmouthed obstructionist, not for involvement in the shooting. The two incidents are simply not related in any relevant sense. There are unique elements in each crime. They are proven by different facts. The assault was complete long be
¶ 9 This was not the situation in Pack. Pack was charged with theft, and the “new” uncharged crime was the burglary which encompassed that same theft. Such indivisible offenses may be within the scope of a single Sixth Amendment assertion, but such an assertion does not, and cannot, preclude questioning about matters which are not legally intertwined in the charges already brought. Unless we graft onto the Sixth Amendment an analysis based simply on time and location, rather than common elements or common sense, this shooting was not part of the same incident as the harangue that followed it.
¶ 10 A separate non-offensespeeiflc right to counsel is encompassed in the Fifth Amendment guarantee “no person ... shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself.”
See McNeil,
at 176,
¶ 11 As the suppression court cogently explained:
In Miranda v. Arizona, [supra ], the United States Supreme Court held that the Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination prohibits admitting statements given by a suspect during “custodial interrogation” without a prior warning. In Illinois v. Perkins,496 U.S. 292 ,110 S.Ct. 2394 ,110 L.Ed.2d 243 (1990), an undercover law enforcement officer, posing as a fellow inmate, obtained a confession from a defendant. The defendant objected to the use of his confession at trial because no Miranda warnings were given prior to his conversation with the undercover officer. The Supreme Court held that the tactic used to elicit the confession from the defendant did not violate the constitutional Fifth Amendment guarantee against self-incrimination, stating:
Custodial interrogation means questioning initiated by law enforcement officers after a person has been taken into custody. The warning mandated by Miranda was meant to preserve the privilege during incommunicado interrogation of individuals in a police-dominated atmosphere. That atmosphere is said to generate inherently compelling pressures which work to undermine the individual’s will to resist and to compel him to speak where he would not otherwise do so freely. Fidelity to the doctrine announced in Miranda requires that it be enforced strictly, but only in those types of situations in which the concerns that powered the decision are implicated.
Conversations between suspects and undercover agents do not implicate the concerns underlying Miranda. The essential ingredients of the ‘police-dominated atmosphere’ and compulsion are not present.... There is no empirical basis for the assumption that a suspect speaking to those whom he assumes are not officers will feel compelled to speak by the fear ofreprisal for remaining silent or in the hope of more lenient treatment should he confess.
[Id., at 296-97,110 S.Ct. 2394 (citations omitted)]; See also, Commonwealth v. Boggs,695 A.2d 839 (Pa.Super.1997)[,appeal denied,553 Pa. 686 ,717 A.2d 1026 (1998)]. For the reasons set forth in Perkins, [appellant’s] Fifth Amendment rights were not violated during his tape recorded conversation with James Pope on August 6, 1997.
Suppression Court Opinion, 1/2/98, at 5-6.
¶ 12 We agree with this analysis. Prison walls do not make every conversation inside a custodial one. Appellant talked to James Pope in an atmosphere that was not custodial, particularly as he had no reason to believe Pope would pass along his incriminating words. There being no custody, there is no custodial interrogation, and no violation of appellant’s Fifth Amendment rights.
¶ 13 This statement was not the product of police overbearing or disregard for appellant’s constitutional rights. As the facts bear out, one problem appellant does not have is reticence, and we cannot find his statement was the product of anything other than his inability to keep his mouth closed.
¶ 14 Judgment of sentence affirmed.
¶ 15 CAVANAUGH, J., dissents.
Notes
. Appellant also suggests a violation of his right to counsel under Article I, Section 9 of the Pennsylvania Constitution, but offers neither caselaw nor reason to hold that provision offers protection different from the federal constitution. Where a defendant asserts violations of both constitutions, but claims no heightened protection from the Pennsylvania Constitution, we assume the protections afforded by each constitutional provision are co-extensive.
Commonwealth
v.
Starr,
