Appellant was convicted of first degree murder in the burglary-shooting death of Miss Rose DeWood in her house in Fort Wayne, Indiana. His appeal from that conviction was first considered by this. Court and reported as Craig v. State, (1977)
The evidence given at the hearing below may be summarized. On November 19, 1975, appellant was seen by a detective of the Fort Wayne Police Department during a morning surveillance and was shortly thereafter arrested by county warrants officers on a warrant for failure to pay a fine on a misdemeanor conviction. At the time appellant was twenty-one years of age, employed by a private security company as a guard, and was well-acquainted with one Sgt. Woods of the department through whom he had sought information about joining the police department.
On the same day at 1:15 p. m., while in custody awaiting appearance in court, appellant was approached by one Detective O’Leary who expressed a desire to interview him. Appellant agreed and the detective began to read a rights advisement to him as required by Miranda v. Arizona, (1966)
Shortly before 3:00 p. m. the interrogating officer suggested that appellant take a lie detector test after which he could go home. Appellant agreed and was again advised of his Miranda rights by the machine operator, Russell, and executed another written waiver form. He was then questioned about involvement in the two shootings. At the completion of the examination the operator said that he was holding something back and was not telling the truth. Appellant then admitted the fact that he shot Miss DeWood as she was screaming because he was afraid that she would be heard in the neighborhood and that he would be arrested.
The next day, November 20, 1975, one Officer Brunkhart at about 10:15 a. m. approached appellant, advised him of his Miranda rights, and asked him further questions regarding the shooting of the elderly man. After about an hour of questioning the officer procured appellant’s lunch for him and accompanied him to a holding cell behind the court room where appellant was to appear in answer to the misdemeanor matter for which he had been arrested. While there appellant again admitted the DeWood killing under continued questioning by Brunkhart. Appellant’s inculpatory admissions to Russell and to Brunkhart of the DeWood killing were admitted at trial over appellant’s objection.
Appellant at the hearing below testified that at the time of the waiver of rights on the 19th he had pain in his arm and was bleeding from an infection under the foreskin of his penis and that his interrogators refused to get him a doctor. He testified further that he was under the influence of marijuana, codeine cough medicine and pain pills, and feared for the welfare of his family. He also stated that he had been tricked by the police officers when they told him that if he .took the lie detector test he could then go home.
The trial court conducting the hearing below resolved the conflict in the testimony and concluded that the waiver of right by appellant had been voluntary and knowing and that the confession was properly admitted.
Appellant contends that his waiver of Miranda rights was obtained in violation of. the Fourth Amendment and therefore the subsequent confession was inadmissible. At the time of his interrogation appellant was under arrest and in custody on a warrant for having failed to pay a fine arising from an unrelated misdemeanor charge. Appellant does not contend that the warrant or his arrest upon the warrant was illegal, but that there was no probable cause to conduct an interrogation into the circumstances of a homicide and that such interrogation was completely outside the scope of a custodial arrest and detention for a failure to pay á misdemeanor fine. Appellant relies upon cases which impose Fourth Amendment restrictions upon the processes of making arrests and searches. Wong Sun v. United States, (1963)
The prosecution faced with an objection to its attempted introduction of appellant’s incriminating statements made during custodial interrogation was under a burden to show a prior valid waiver of rights beyond a reasonable doubt. Burton v. State, (1973)
In Ortiz v. State, (1976)
Appellant finally points to the testimony presented at the hearing that he was in great pain at the time of the interrogation and could get medical help and relief from suffering only by confessing, that he was then under the influence of drugs, that he could gain protection for his family only by confessing and that he was tricked by the lie detector operator into confessing. This testimony was presented for the most part by appellant himself and is in direct contradiction to the testimony of the interrogating officers who stated under oath that appellant appeared fully in control of his mental faculties, and expressed no such feeling of pain or concern to them. Their testimony if credited clearly supports the inference that appellant’s pain and concern was of insufficient intensity to cause him to make serious complaint and was therefore also insufficient to improperly influence his decision to waive his rights and answer questions. With regard to the use of the lie detector as an interrogation tool, we have observed that it could constitute an improper influence. Montes v. State, (1975) 263
Subject to rehearing, appellant’s conviction is affirmed and this appeal terminated.
