In this сase, the State of Alabama (“the State”) appeals from the district court’s order granting Donald Owen’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C.A. § 2254. We affirm.
I.
On July 31, 1981, Owen was convicted by a Mobile County jury for the capital murder of an on-duty, uniformed police officer. He was sentenced to life in prison without parole. The Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed Owen’s conviction and sentence.
Owen v. State,
On February 14, 1985, Owen filed a petition for habeas corpus, alleging
inter alia
that his confession to killing the police officer was obtained in violation of
Miranda v. Arizona,
The relevant facts follow. At approximately 2:14 A.M. on April 8,1980, a Chickasaw, Alabama, police officer was killed by two shotgun blasts at the scene of a traffic stop. Officers who arrived on the scene shortly after the shooting found two spent shotgun shells and a police department “ticket book” near the victim’s body. A nearly completed speeding ticket in the book was made out to Owen. The ticket included Owen’s name, address, date of birth, and license plate number. The defendant’s driver’s license was also found at the scene.
Owen,
At approximately 3:00 A.M., the police arrived at Owen’s home. After verifying that the license plate on his car matched the number written in the victim’s “ticket book,” they arrested Owen. While searching the house for any armed accomplices, the police discovered a .12 gauge shotgun and a box of shotgun shells which matched the type of shells found beside the victim. The weapon had been fired recently and ballistics tests later demonstrated that the shells found at the scene had been fired from the shotgun found in Owen’s house. Id. at 217-18.
After arresting Owen, the police officers began to read the defendant his Miranda warnings. Owen interrupted them, saying, “I know my damn rights.” Id. at 218. At the police station, Sgt. Jack Creekmore read Owen his rights again. Creekmore stated that, when he informed Owen of the defendant’s right to have an attorney appointed, the defendant said, “I think I’ll let ya’ll [sic] appoint me one.” Id. Creekmore then read the remaining Miranda warnings and asked the defendant if he understood his rights. Owen replied that he did, and he refused to sign the waiver of rights form. Id.
After this exchange, Creekmore questioned the defendant about the crime, and Owen confessed. The defendant statеd that the victim had stopped him for speeding, that the officer insisted on citing Owen for a violation, and that Owen became infuriated and shot the victim. Creekmore testified that Owen said:
It seemed like I saw him go for his gun. I kept waiting for [sic] to get hit. I shot twice and pumped the gun and clicked it. It wouldn’t shoot no more. There were just two shells in the gun, that’s all ... I just shot twice. If I had a thousand in there I would have shot a thousand. Maybe this will teach them a lesson. They ought to know better than to have just one man in a car on patrol. Now, maybe they will hire some more. I was in law enforcement for four years, you know.
Id. at 219.
Creekmore further testified that, at approximately 7:30 or 8:00 A.M., the defendant said to the district attorney “something along the lines of ‘can I call my lawyer now’ or something to that effect, or T want my lawyer now.’ ” At that point, the district attorney stopped questioning Owen.
*538 At trial, Owen raised an insanity defense. He presented psychiatric testimony, and the psychiatrist related details of the shooting as told to him by Owen. Owеn’s ex-wife testified that Owen had telephoned her on the night of the shooting and that he told her that the police officer had left the defendant standing between the two cars for a long time, that the defendant had “clicked,” that he did not remember shooting the officer but when he regained his composure he was pumping an empty gun, and that “[however] many bullets were in the gun was how many times he shot him.”
Owen’s motion to suppress the confession obtained by the police was denied. In his petition for habeas corpus, he argued that the failure to suppress was error because the confession was obtained in violation of Miranda. The federal magistratе agreed and the district court adopted the magistrate’s recommendation as the opinion of the court. From this decision, the State appeals.
II.
A.
The State argues that the district court erred in granting Owen’s petition for habeas corpus. It claims that the totality of the circumstances indicates that Owen was not аttempting to invoke his right to counsel during the police station interrogation.
The Fifth Amendment requires that, when a person requests an attorney during a custodial interrogation, all questioning must cease until an attorney is present.
Miranda,
when an accused has invoked his right to have counsel present during custodial interrogation, a valid waiver of that right cannot be established by showing only that he responded to further police-initiated custodial interrogation even if he has been advised of his rights. We further hold that an accused, ... having expressed his desire to deal with the police only through counsel, is not subject to further interrogation by the authorities until counsel has been made available to him, unless the accused himself initiates further communication, exchanges, or conversations with the police.
The framework developed in
Edwards
is explained more fully in
Smith.
In
Smith,
the police read the accused his
Miranda
warnings and asked the defendant if he understood his right to have an attorney present during questioning. Smith responded, “Uh, yeah. I’d like to do that.”
The facts of the present case are very similar to those in
Smith.
Owen’s statement, “I think I’ll let y’all appoint me one,” made in response to the
Miranda
warning concerning the right to counsel is arguably sufficient to invoke the right. The settled approach to questions of waiver requires courts “to give a broad, rather than a narrow interpretation to a defendant’s request
*539
for counsel.”
Michigan v. Jackson,
Even if we were to find that Owen’s statement was not a clear invocation of the right to counsel, it qualifies, at a minimum, as an equivocal request for an attorney. This Court employs an equally “rigid prophylactic rule” in such situations. When a defendant makes an equivocal request for an attorney during a custodial interrogаtion, “the scope of that interrogation is immediately narrowed to one subject and one only.
Further questioning thereafter must be limited to clarifying that request
until it
is
clarified.”
Thompson v. Wainwright,
After Owеn said, “I think I’ll let y’all appoint me one” in response to Creek-more’s statement concerning the defendant’s right to have counsel appointed, further interrogation should have been limited to clarifying Owen’s request. Nonetheless, Creekmore proceeded to question Owen about his involvement in the murder. The State does not dispute this. Instead, it argues that because Owen had been a police officer for four years, because he said he understood his rights, and because he later said to the district attorney “can I call my lawyer now” or “I want my lawyer now,” his earlier statement was not a request for an attorney. In other words, the State аrgues that the totality of the circumstances indicates that Owen’s initial statement was not a request to have an attorney appointed.
The State’s argument ignores the Supreme Court’s pronouncement in
Smith
that postrequest responses to further interrogation cannot be used to cast doubt on the clarity of the initial request. This position also contravenes this Court’s precedents regarding equivocal custodial statements concerning the right to counsel.
See Thompson,
Common sense suggests that the police should both complete reading petitioner his rights and then ask him to state clearly what he elects to do, even if he indicated a tentative desire while he was being informed of his rights. This is entirely consistent with applicable language in Miranda itself: “Once warnings have been given, the subsequent procedure is clear. If the individual indicates in any manner, at any time prior to or during questioning, that he wishes to remain silent, the interrogation must cease.”
In the сase at bar, the police did not attempt to clarify Owen’s request. Instead, they continued their interrogation and obtained a confession. This violated *540 Miranda. See Thompson, 601 F.2d at 772. 1
B.
The State contends that, even if Owen’s confession should have been suppressed by the trial court, the failure to do so was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
See Chapman v. California,
To qualify as harmless, an error must not contribute to the defendant’s conviction.
Chapman,
In this case, Owen was charged with the intentional killing of the police officer. He raised an insanity defense and alternatively claimed that the killing was done in self-defense. While there was considerable physical evidence linking Owen to the scene of the crime, and although he made incriminating statements to his ex-wife and his psychiatrist, the Magistrate held that Owen’s intent to kill was “poignantly evident only in his confession.” Magistrate’s Recommendation at 25. In that confession, Owen said in part, “If I had a thousand [shells] in there I would have shot a thousand. Maybe this will teach. them a lesson.”
Owen,
The State contends that Owen’s custodial confession was merely cumulative because his psychiatrist and his ex-wife testified to his participation in the shooting. Owen responds that his counsel’s decision to elicit facts concerning the shooting from the psychiatrist was made only after Owen’s full confession had been admitted into evidence. Moreover, neither the psychiatrist nor Owen’s ex-wife testified that Owen said he intended to kill the officer. In fact, Owen told his wife that he did not remember killing the officеr, and Owen presented psychiatric and other testimony that he was insane at the time of the offense. Thus, the police confession constituted significant evidence, and it appears to have impacted “upon the conduct of the defense.”
See
*541
Cape,
More importantly, the confession presents evidence not found in the incriminating statements made to the psychiatrist and ex-wife. Intentional killing requires that the defendant have a specific intent to kill.
See
Ala. Code § 13A-6-2. As the state appellate court noted, this is a necessary element of the offense.
See Owen,
In sum, because Owen’s police confession provided the only direct evidence of the defendant’s intent to kill, we are not convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that the error did not contribute to the conviction.
See Chapman,
III.
The State violated Miranda and Edwards during the custodial interrogation of Owen. When Owen made his (at least) equivocal request for counsel, the police should have either stopped the interrogation or sought clarification of Owen’s desires. Failure to seek clarification before continuing the interrogation violated this Circuit’s precedents, and admission of the improperly obtained evidence was error. Although the harmless error issue is a closer question, we believe that, because the confession likely contributed to the conviction in a significant manner, its admission was not harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. Accordingly, we AFFIRM the district court’s order granting the writ of ha-beas corpus.
Notes
. The State relies on
Connecticut v. Barrett,
The State’s reliance on Barrett is misрlaced here. Barrett did not make an explicit or equivocal statement invoking his right to counsel; he stated that he would talk to the police. Conversely, Owen arguably requested an attorney, and he did not specifically waive his right to counsel or agree to make a statement.
. The State argues that the intent to kill wаs evident from the facts of the crime and the cold-blooded method in which the killing was carried out. Assuming arguendo that the intent to kill can be inferred from the nature of a crime, we cannot say that the admission of Owen’s police confession did not contribute to his conviction. Since the police confession was the only direct evidence of intent, it is likely that admission of that statement prejudiced Owen.
. The State also argues that the confession was harmless on the issue of self defense because there was little evidence of self defense anyway, and Owen did not show that he had retreated before firing his weapon, as is required by Alabama law.
See Trammel v. State,
