Rickey Lee Johnson was convicted in the Jefferson Circuit Court of capital murder. In a unanimous decision, the Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed Johnson's conviction and sentence. Although Johnson raises numerous issues on appeal, we find it necessary to address only three of those issues.
A detailed discussion of the facts is contained in State v.Johnson,
In the ensuing investigation of the murder, the police arrested Johnson as a suspect. Following his arrest, Johnson gave a statement to the police, which was audiotaped. His picture was included in a photographic array shown to Brown on June 16, 1988, and he appeared before her in a line-up on July 7, 1988. Brown was unable to identify her assailant on either occasion. Immediately after the July 7 line-up, Brown went to the office of Sgt. Randy Boissel, the investigating officer on the case, to look at another group of photographs. Boissel began to locate and organize photographs of several men who spent time at a vacant house located beside Brown's home. At trial, Brown testified that a photograph of Johnson fell out of one of the photograph books and that she then identified the person pictured in that photograph as her assailant.
The first issue raised is whether the trial court erred in admitting into evidence the audiotaped statement Johnson gave to the police following his arrest. Johnson contends that that statement was involuntary and violated the principles ofMiranda v. Arizona,
An in-custody statement by an accused is prima facie involuntary and inadmissible; to overcome this presumption, the State must first establish that before the defendant gave his statement the police informed him of his rights, as required byMiranda. Ex parte Callahan,
At trial, Sgt. Boissel testified that Johnson volunteered to give a statement following his arrest and after being given aMiranda warning. Boissel testified:
"Q. All right. Prior to having this conversation with Rickey Johnson did you read him what is commonly known as his Miranda rights?
"A. I did."
This was the extent of the State's inquiry as to exactly what the police said to Johnson concerning his Miranda rights before they took his statement. Under the principles of Swicegood, this exchange was not sufficient to establish the necessaryMiranda predicate, because the general question of whether theMiranda warnings were given does not adequately establish whether the warnings were properly given and understood by the defendant. Swicegood. See, also, Arthur v. State,
"The simple question 'Did you read the defendant his rights as per the Miranda decision,' does not indicate whether the rights were read before or after questioning, whether the defendant understood the rights, and whether he made an *712 intelligent waiver of these rights. Even in cases where officers have attempted to give a detailed Miranda warning, key elements have been left out or misstated; thus, it is critical that the testifying officer give some detail as to exactly what language was used for the Miranda warning and under what circumstances."
In Ex parte Callahan,
We note that in-custody statements given by the defendant relating to purely collateral matters and not inculpatory in any respect do not fall under the principle ofSwicegood and, thus, evidence of such statements is admissible without the showing of a proper Miranda predicate. Cartwrightv. State,
The State argues that even if evidence of Johnson's statements was inadmissible, its introduction into evidence was harmless error. We must recognize, however, that Johnson's statement that he had gotten himself into trouble and that he had eluded the police, as well as his statements regarding the accusations of his family and friend, were in some respects inculpatory. We cannot therefore hold that the improper admission of this evidence constituted harmless error.
Although we reverse for the reasons stated above, for the sake of judicial economy we address two other issues raised by Johnson, which are almost certain to come up again on remand for a new trial.
First, Johnson argues that the pretrial eyewitness identification procedures were unnecessarily suggestive and that the resulting identification evidence was therefore inadmissible. Pretrial identifications are to be set aside on grounds of prejudice only if the pretrial identification procedure is so suggestive as to give rise to a substantial likelihood of misidentification. Ex parte Stout,
Johnson argues that because his picture was included in two photographic arrays and he appeared in a line-up before Brown identified him, the process of identification was improperly repetitive. To bolster his argument, Johnson relies onFoster v. California,
In this case, there is no indication that the police repeatedly arranged confrontations between Johnson and Brown; the mere fact that Brown was shown Johnson's picture and also saw him in the line-up does not establish any impropriety in the identification process. Under Alabama law, it is not error to have a defendant participate in both a photographic array and a line-up, even though he may be the only common participant in the two procedures. Nicholes v. State,
Next, Johnson argues that the evidence does not show that he murdered Whitehead during a first-degree robbery of Brown. Johnson points out that, under Alabama law, a robbery committed as a "mere after-thought" and unrelated to the murder will not sustain a conviction for the capital offense of robbery murder, pursuant to §
To sustain a conviction under §
Johnson contends that, according to the evidence, Whitehead's murder was complete before Brown arrived at the house and that the robbery of Brown was thus the result of a mere afterthought arising after Whitehead's murder. This argument is not supported by the record, which would support a finding that Whitehead's murder was not complete until after Johnson had robbed Brown. The record shows that the house was ransacked at the time Brown arrived. During the course of his attack on her, Johnson not only robbed Brown but also repeatedly demanded that she tell him where Whitehead kept her money. Johnson told Brown that Whitehead would need her assistance later, thus indicating that Whitehead was still alive at that time. Most significantly, evidence regarding Whitehead's autopsy reveals that she had a high level of carbon monoxide in her blood and sooty deposits in her lungs; from this, the jury could properly infer that Whitehead was breathing when Johnson set the house ablaze, after he had robbed Brown. The jury could further infer that Johnson intended to rob Brown when she entered the house and that Whitehead's death occurred in the course of Johnson's attempt to execute this robbery. Accordingly, we find no merit in Johnson's argument regarding the sufficiency of the evidence.
In view of the foregoing, the judgment of the Court of Criminal Appeals is reversed and this cause is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
HORNSBY, C.J., and MADDOX, SHORES, ADAMS, HOUSTON and KENNEDY, JJ., concur.
