UPON
Michael Ray Ferguson, Jr., appellant, was convicted of burglary, in violation of Code § 18.2-91, and grand larceny, in violation of Code § 18.2-95.
1
On appeal, appellant contends
that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress statements he made to police officers. Appellant argues that these statements were taken in violation of his Fifth Amendment right to counsel. A panel majority of this Court found that the trial court erred in denying appellant’s motion
BACKGROUND
On July 28, 2005, police officers stopped appellant’s vehicle in the town of Altavista, which is located in Campbell County. These officers detained appellant in his vehicle until police officers from the neighboring jurisdiction responded to the scene, since appellant’s vehicle matched the description of a vehicle involved in a breaking and entering of a home in Pittsylvania County.
When Investigator Hagerman of the Pittsylvania County Sheriff’s Department arrived on scene, he asked appellant to go with the officers to the police department in the Town of Hurt in Pittsylvania County to “talk.” This police department was located approximately one-half of a mile from where appellant’s vehicle was stopped. Appellant drove his vehicle to the police department, followed by five police officers in their police vehicles. Three of those police officers, including Investigator Hagerman, accompanied appellant into the police department. 2
The interview began at 1:25 p.m. Investigator Hagerman told appellant that they were interviewing him “in reference to a B & E that occurred at the Mark Worley residence” the previous day. 3 Investigator Hagerman then asked appellant for permission to search his vehicle. Appellant responded, “Nah, I want a lawyer, you know what I’m saying?” Investigator Hagerman replied, “Okay. But anyway----” Investigator Hagerman then read appellant his Miranda rights, and asked appellant to sign a document acknowledging that he had been read his Miranda rights.
Investigator Hagerman continued the conversation with appellant:
Hagerman: Michael, I’ll just tell you what the offense was that we were talking about uh, do you want to go ahead and talk with me?
[Appellant]: Uh, my moma [sic] said that if I get in any more trouble I need a lawyer.
Hagerman: Okay, well, you don’t have to talk to me. Let me talk to you now.
Investigator Hagerman did not ask appellant any questions regarding his request for counsel, but instead proceeded to talk to appellant about the instant offenses.
Hagerman: I’ve got positive identification of your car as it was pulling out of that house yesterday. Uh, there was about four thousand dollars worth of items stolen. Now, if you’re willing to talk. If you want to go ahead and talk to me about this fine, if you don’t, you know you’re in trouble right now. Uh, I’m not, I’m not playing with you. I’m not, I’m—
[Appellant]: I understand.
Hagerman: [Unintelligible] straight out. Uh, the only hope you’ve got right now is to come clean as you can get. Let me try to get this stuff back that was stolen, that was taken, and uh, if, you know, you’re on probation, I mean you need to think for yourself, you’re twenty years old. [Unintelligible] saw the vehicle come down the hill right behind your car when you was [sic] pulling out spinning wheels.
[Appellant]: I don’t nothing [sic] about that.
Hagerman: Okay. Where was [sic] you at yesterday?
[Appellant]: I was with my daddy up at the house.
Investigator Hagerman then obtained from appellant his address, his father’s name, and whether any of his friends were with him the day before. Investigator Hagerman questioned appellant’s alibi, saying, “[Y]ou think your daddy is going to say that you were
At that point, Investigator Hagerman told appellant that he was going to let him “sit here for a few minutes” and that “this concludes the interview.” Investigator Hagerman then turned off the tape recorder, and told appellant that if he returned to Pittsylvania County in the future, Investigator Hagerman would put him in jail. Investigator Hagerman left the room with Deputy C.W. Glass, asking Chief Brian Marr of the Hurt Police Department to stay in the room with appellant. Chief Marr knew appellant, through appellant’s mother, prior to his interaction with him that day.
For twenty minutes, Chief Marr and appellant sat in silence in the room. Appellant then stated either “I messed up” or “This is messed up.” 4 Chief Marr testified that they then began to discuss appellant’s family and his job status, and Chief Marr told appellant that “he needed to help his [sic] self.” About 10 minutes of discussion occurred between appellant and Chief Marr before Chief Marr asked Investigator Hagerman to return to the room. At that time, Chief Marr began recording the second part of the interview.
The transcript of the second part of the interview indicates a portion of what appellant and Chief Marr discussed before the tape began recording. At one point, Chief Marr stated, “I’ve adivsed [sic] you that you can help yourself, okay.” Later in the statement, Chief Marr acknowledged part of the earlier, unrecorded conversation, “[J]ust like I’ve told you before, we know more than what you’re telling us____Help yourself out. You come [sic] this far man. You want me to help you and you want the investigator to help you.” Chief Marr also alluded to promises made by himself and Investigator Hagerman that were not recorded, saying “The man [Investigator Hagerman] has already given you his word to help you. I’ve give [sic] you my word to help you.”
Chief Marr read appellant his Miranda rights again, and “asked him would he speak with [Chief Marr] rather than Investigator Hagerman, would he feel more comfortable with that.” Appellant indicated that he would. Appellant gave a statement regarding the offenses at approximately 2:00 p.m.
After making these statements, appellant was arrested.
The trial court determined that appellant made a clear and unambiguous request for counsel, and suppressed any statements made to Investigator Hagerman before he left the room. However, the trial court found that appellant “reinitiated the conversation” and “broke the silence.” The trial court denied appellant’s motion to suppress his statements made to Chief Marr. Appellant then entered a conditional plea of guilty pursuant to Code § 19.2-254, preserving for appeal the alleged violation of his Fifth Amendment right to counsel.
This appeal follows.
ANALYSIS
Appellant contends that, after he “clearly asserted his right to counsel,” police officers engaged in “coercive tactics,” failed to provide counsel, and continued to interrogate him, in viola tion of the Fifth Amendment. 5 Appellant argues that, as a result, any statements he made must be suppressed.
On appeal from a trial court’s ruling on a motion to suppress, the appellant must show that the trial court’s decision constituted reversible error.
See Stanley v. Commonwealth,
The Fifth Amendment Right to Counsel
“The right of a criminal suspect to have an attorney present during custodial interrogation was first articulated by the Supreme Court in
Miranda v. Arizona,
In
Edwards v. Arizona,
Thus, the prophylactic protections that the Miranda warnings provide to counteract the “inherently compelling pressures” of custodial interrogation and to “permit a full opportunity to exercise the privilege against self[-]incrimination,” are implemented by the application of the Edwards corollary that if a suspect believes that he is not capable of undergoing such questioning without advice of counsel, then it is presumed that any subsequent waiver that has come at the authorities’ behest, and not at the suspect’s own instigation, is itself the product of the “inherently compelling pressures” and not the purely voluntary choice of the suspect.
Arizona v. Roberson,
Only if the accused initiates further “communication, exchanges, or conversations with the police,” and only if those communications result in the accused changing his or her mind and freely and voluntarily waiving the right to counsel, may the police resume interrogation without violating the
Edwards
rule.
Roberson,
In evaluating the admissibility of a statement under the Edwards rule, we apply a three-part analysis. First, the trial court must determine whether the accused
“unequivocally” invoked his or her right to counsel. Second, the trial court must determine whether the accused, rather than the authorities, initiated further discussions or meetings with, the police. Third, if the accused did initiate further discussions or conversations with police, the trial court must then ascertain whether the accused knowingly and intelligently waived the previously invoked right to counsel.
Giles v. Commonwealth,
Once an accused asserts his or her right to counsel, subsequent waiver of that right is not sufficient to make admissible any incriminating statements thereafter obtained, even if investigators have re-Mirandized the accused, unless the statements are initiated by the defendant and shownto be based on a knowing, intelligent, and voluntary waiver.
Id.
at 531,
Request for Counsel
We must consider the first prong of the Edwards analysis: whether appellant made an unequivocal request for counsel. 6
The Commonwealth contends that appellant’s first request for counsel “related solely to the issue of consent to search” and that appellant’s second request for counsel “was merely a restatement of his mother’s advice.” The Commonwealth argues that neither “comment” would have been “understood by a reasonable police officer under the circumstances to be a request to have counsel present during the interrogation.” We disagree.
“[W]hether an accused ‘clearly requested an attorney during a custodial interrogation is a mixed question of law and fact.’ ”
Medley v. Commonwealth,
“[The Supreme] Court has consistently held that a clear and unambiguous assertion of the right to counsel is necessary to invoke the
Edwards
rule.”
Midkiff v. Commonwealth,
At the outset of the interview, Investigator Hagerman asked appellant for consent to search his vehicle. Appellant responded, “Nah, I want a lawyer, you know what I’m saying?” In context, appellant clearly wanted an attorney before he was interrogated. Police officers told appellant he was being interviewed in connection with a breaking and entering. Further, nothing in appellant’s first statement indicated that he wanted a lawyer only if the police were going to search his vehicle. Appellant denied consent to search his vehicle, and then he stated his request to have counsel present.
We find appellant’s first request for counsel clear and unambiguous. 7 We hold that a reasonable officer under the circumstances would understand that appellant was invoking his right to counsel.
Initiation of Discussion After Request for Counsel
As appellant asserted his right to counsel, we then turn to the second prong of the Edwards analysis: whether police officers or appellant initiated further discussions after appellant invoked his right to counsel.
The Supreme Court in
Miranda
and
Edwards
made clear that “ ‘[i]f the individual states that he wants an attorney, the interrogation
must cease
until an attorney is present.’ ”
Commonwealth v. Gregory,
The facts in the instant case are markedly similar to those in
Hines, 19
Va.App. 218,
When the Hampton detective concluded his interview, he exited the room, leaving Hines with the Newport News detective.
Id.
The Newport News detective then asked Hines if he understood his
Miranda
rights, and Hines stated that he did.
Id.
Hines then made incriminating statements regarding the Newport News offenses, and these statements and offenses were the subject of the appeal.
Id.
at 220,
After finding that Hines made a “specific and unambiguous request to consult with his lawyer,” this Court analyzed the conversation that occurred after his request under the second prong of Edwards. This Court held that
[b]y asking Hines “whether [he was] going to be a witness or a defendant in the matter,” the officer continued the conversation that he was bound to cease. This inquiry was a reinitiation of the dialogue that Hines sought to terminate----Thus, the ensuing “communication, exchanges, or conversation with the police,” Edwards,451 U.S. at 485 ,101 S.Ct. at 1885 was initiated by the police officer’s further inquiry to Hines.
Hines,
In
Hines,
this Court did not evaluate whether the defendant “reinitiated” the conversation with police by asking what the officer meant by “witness,” nor did we parse out the conversa
tions between the two different detectives. Instead, this Court found that, “[w]hen the officer continued the dialogue without first giving Hines access to his lawyer, the statements that he elicited did not follow upon a valid waiver of Hines’s Fifth Amendment rights.”
Id.
at 222,
Any consideration of whether a defendant “re-initiated” the dialogue -with police necessarily presumes that police officers have stopped the interrogation upon a defendant’s request for counsel. Indeed, the analysis under
Edwards
presupposes that police will cease all interrogation after a suspect invokes his right to counsel. When police do not cease interrogation, their statements constitute an “initiation” of further discussions with a suspect, and any incriminating statements gained during that discussion are deemed inadmissible.
Hines,
Here, as in
Hines,
despite appellant’s invocation of his right to counsel, the interview never ceased. Investigator Hagerman and Chief Marr continued questioning appellant as if his request for counsel had never been made. Investigator Hagerman ignored appellant’s initial request, saying, “Okay. But,
Investigator Hagerman’s continued inquiry was interrogation. “[T]he term ‘interrogation’ under
Miranda
refers not only to express questioning, but also to any words or actions on the part of the police (other than those normally
attendant to arrest and custody) that the police should know are reasonably likely to elicit an incriminating response from the suspect.”
Rhode Island v. Innis,
Investigator Hagerman’s questions were clearly “designed to elicit an incriminating response.” Investigator Hagerman told appellant that a witness could place his vehicle at the crime scene at the time of the crime, and then advised appellant that “the only hope” he had was to “come clean as you can get.” Investigator Hagerman told appellant that someone had identified his car leaving the crime scene. Investigator Hagerman said that if appellant did not want to talk to him “about this,” that appellant knew that he was “in trouble right now.” Investigator Hagerman stated that appellant’s “only hope” was to confess, and mentioned appellant’s probationer status. Investigator Hagerman questioned whether appellant’s alibi would hold up, and inquired as to how he had any money when he was not working at the time. 8
Then, as in Hines, Investigator Hagerman left appellant in the company of Chief Marr, who knew appellant prior to their interaction that day. Chief Marr was present during the entire exchange between Investigator Hagerman and appellant, and had heard appellant’s request for counsel. Appellant had the opportunity to consider Investigator Hagerman’s statements while he sat in silence for twenty minutes with Chief Marr.
This period of silence did not suffice as a “break” in the interrogation sufficient to render appellant’s later statements admissible. In
Seibert,
The same rationale applies in the instant case. Investigator Hagerman purposefully exited the interview room, after ignoring appellant’s requests for counsel and cajoling him into making statements, and left him in the company of Chief Marr, a friend of appellant’s mother. After a conversation with Chief Marr about appellant’s family and after Chief Marr and Investigator Hagerman promised to “help” appellant in the case, appellant waived his
Miranda
rights and made incriminating statements. This course of conduct, undertaken by both Investigator Hagerman and Chief Marr, was clearly tailored to “elicit an incriminating response from appellant,” despite his repeated requests for counsel. As in
Seibert,
the Commonwealth cannot rely on a twenty-minute “pause” in the questioning to save the violation of appellant’s right to counsel. Appellant’s incriminating statements were the direct result of Investigator Hagerman’s continued interrogation of appellant after he invoked his right to counsel and the ensuing period of silence in the custody of Chief Marr. “[I]f the accused has invoked his or her right to counsel and has remained in continuous custody, the statement is inadmissible unless the trial court finds that the statement was made at a meeting with the police that was initiated by the defendant or attended by his lawyer.”
Quinn v. Commonwealth,
By questioning appellant in this manner after he requested counsel, Investigator Hagerman and Chief Marr “continued the conversation that [they were] bound to cease.”
Hines,
“If the police do subsequently initiate an encounter in the absence of counsel (assuming there has been no break in custody), the suspect’s statements are presumed involuntary and therefore inadmissible as substantive evidence at trial, even where the suspect executes a waiver and his statements would be considered voluntary under traditional standards. This is ‘designed to prevent police from badgering a defendant into waiving his previously asserted Miranda rights.’ ” McNeil,501 U.S. at 177 ,111 S.Ct. at 2208 [ quoting Michigan v. Harvey,494 U.S. 344 , 350,110 S.Ct. 1176 , 1180,108 L.Ed.2d 293 (1990) ].
Gregory,
At first glance,
Mundy v. Commonwealth,
In
Mundy,
police officers were questioning Mundy at the police department about his involvement in a robbery and shooting.
Mundy,
At the hearing on his motion to suppress his statements, Mundy argued only that he was coerced into making the three statements.
Id.
at 469,
Mundy framed his argument to the trial court, and on appeal, under the third prong of the
Edwards
analysis, namely whether his waivers of his
Miranda
rights were voluntary.
Id.
Mundy did not contend that police officers reinitiated interrogation in violation of
Edwards;
indeed, an argument based on the third prong of the
Edwards
analysis
presumes
that the defendant reinitiated the interrogation.
Giles,
In
Correll,
a Roanoke police officer questioned Correll following his arrest for robbery and murder.
Correll,
On appeal, Correll never alleged that his request for counsel on the first day of interrogation was linked to any subsequent violations of his Fifth Amendment rights. Instead, Correll argued that his conversation with the Franklin County officer on the third day was “an extension of the interrogation that began that morning ... [with] a polygraph test.”
Id.
at 463,
Here, as in
Hines,
Investigator Hagerman and Chief Marr violated appellant’s Fifth Amendment rights by continuing to interrogate appellant after he invoked his right to counsel.
See McDaniel v. Commonwealth,
We need not address whether appellant’s statement to Chief Marr that broke the period of silence “reinitiated” a dialogue with police; Investigator Hagerman’s and Chief Marr’s continued interrogation of appellant after he invoked his right to counsel initiated the dialogue with appellant under the second prong of
Edwards. Hines,
CONCLUSION
We hold that appellant, while in police custody, made a clear and unequivocal request for counsel. Police officers did not cease their interrogation in honor of that request, violating appellant’s Fifth Amendment rights. This violation tainted any subsequent confession made by appellant while he remained in the continuous custody of police officers. 13 We hold that the trial court erred in denying appellant’s motion to suppress the statements he made to the officers. Accordingly, we reverse appellant’s convictions and remand the case for a new trial if the Commonwealth be so advised.
Reversed and remanded.
KELSEY, J., with whom McCLANAHAN, HALEY, and BEALES, JJ., join, dissenting.
I. Reinitiation Following an Edwards Violation
This case illustrates well Justice Frankfurter’s aphorism that “the right answer usually
To begin with, Ferguson does not argue (and I would not accept it if he did) that Chief Marr’s unbroken silence was the functional equivalent of an interrogation. It would take a remarkably potent—and, to date, unprecedented—legal fiction to deem an utterly mute police officer the functional equivalent of an interrogator. Although “staring silently” at a suspect may make him a bit ill at ease, it is hardly the equivalent of an interrogation.
United States v. Thongsophaporn,
Police officers, after all, “do not interrogate a suspect simply by hoping that he will incriminate himself.”
Arizona v. Mauro,
To his credit, Ferguson advances his argument on appeal along a far narrower path. Ferguson admits he “did speak first” and thereby broke the long silence. See Appellant’s Br. at ll. 14 He does not claim his remark was in reply to something Investigator Hagerman may have said prior to leaving the room. Instead, Ferguson contends only that his silence-breaking remark was simply not “a request to waive his rights or to be interrogated.” Id. 15 My response to Ferguson’s argument is equally simple: It does not have to be.
While an accused who clearly invokes his right to counsel is “not subject to further interrogation by authorities until counsel has been made available,”
Edwards v. Arizona,
The reinitiating remark by the suspect need not
itself be
an express waiver of the suspect’s rights. It is enough that the remark evinces “a willingness and a desire for a generalized discussion” about the investigation.
Giles v. Commonwealth,
Under this standard, “a request for a drink of water or a request to use a telephone” would not qualify as a reinitiating remark.
Bradshaw,
In short, Ferguson’s argument on appeal—that his silence-breaking remark did not constitute a “request to waive his rights or to be interrogated,” Appellant’s Br. at 11—assumes too much. Under settled principles, a reinitiating remark need not go that far. It need only express “a willingness and a desire for a generalized discussion” about the investigation.
Bradshaw,
I also find no relevance in the assertion that Investigator Hagerman, prior to leaving Ferguson alone with Chief Marr, continued to question Ferguson after he invoked his
Miranda
right to counsel.
Ante
at 339-44,
Sitting
en banc,
we have reaffirmed that “the
Miranda
case, though requiring suppression of admissions unlawfully obtained, does not require that subsequent statements or their fruits be discarded as inherently tainted.”
Mundy v. Commonwealth,
Properly framed, then, the question we face “is whether a statement made in violation of
Edwards
taints a subsequent confession not made in violation of
Edwards.” See Howard v. Moore,
II. Seibert’s Inapplicable Plurality Opinion
This case also demonstrates how
not
to read plurality opinions of the United States Supreme Court. The majority in our case states
Missouri v. Seibert,
This reasoning, however, collapses upon its first premise. The plurality opinion in
Seibert
was the opinion of four of nine Justices. “Because
Seibert
is a plurality decision and Justice Kennedy concurred in the result on the narrowest grounds, it is his concurring opinion that provides the controlling law.”
United States v. Street,
By citing, quoting, and relying upon the reasoning of the four-Justice plurality in
Seibert
as authoritative—instead of the narrower reasoning of Justice Kennedy’s concurrence— the majority in our case misapplies settled principles of stare decisis.
Ante
at 341-44,
In contrast to
Seibert’s
plurality opinion, Justice Kennedy’s concurrence did not sideline
Elstad
or cast any doubt on its continuing precedential value. Instead, the concurrence recognized a
narrow
exception to
Elstad
“applicable only in the
infrequent
case” where the police have used “a two-step questioning technique based on a
deliberate violation
of
Miranda.” Seibert,
In a footnote,
ante
at 342 n. 9,
In our case, Ferguson did not argue in the trial court that the police deliberately tricked him into confessing by obtaining an incriminating statement in violation of Miranda and then waiting in silence for twenty minutes for his expected reinitiation in order to set up another Miranda waiver opportunity. Nor did Ferguson make that argument on appeal either before the panel or the en banc Court. To be sure, Ferguson has not once cited Seibert in any brief, at any stage, of this case.
In sum, the majority’s misreading of Seibert serves only to compound its error in failing to address the one truly dispositive question in this case: Did Ferguson reinitiate a conversation with police and thereafter voluntarily waive his Miranda rights?
Because he did both, I respectfully dissent.
Notes
. Appellant noted an appeal to the revocation of his suspended sentence. However, he never challenged this revocation before the panel considering the merits of his appeal, and, thus, the panel’s opinion did not address the issue.
In his brief on rehearing en banc, appellant argued that ”[t]he revocation of [appellant’s] suspended sentence was based solely on his convictions for breaking and entering and grand larceny. A reversal of these convictions removes the basis for the revocation and the revocation should therefore be reversed.” Appellant does not provide any argument or reasoning for this conclusion, and he cites no authority for his proposition.
A reversal of an underlying conviction does not necessarily require the reversal of the revocation of a suspended sentence that flows from that conviction.
Resio v. Commonwealth,
It is clear from the record that the trial court considered the conduct underlying the conviction in revoking appellant's suspended sentence. At the time appellant pled guilty to burglary and grand larceny, the Commonwealth recited the factual details of those offenses to the trial court. Appellant agreed with the Commonwealth’s recitation. Thus, the trial court heard evidence of "substantial misconduct,” independent of the criminal convictions, on which to base its revocation of appellant’s suspended sentence. Indeed, the trial court noted in the revoca tion order that it had made its decision based on the "evidence adduced in open court in the presence of [appellant].” As appellant presents no argument as to why we should depart from our reasoning in Resio, we find that the evidence of substantial misconduct was sufficient, independent of the criminal convictions, to revoke appellant's suspended sentence.
. The Hurt Police Department is located in the town hall building, and the interview with appellant occurred in the chamber of the town council.
. The conversation between appellant and the police officers was recorded, and a transcript of that recording was entered into evidence at the hearing on the motion to suppress.
. Chief Marr testified that he did not know exactly what appellant said that broke the silence, and appellant testified at the suppression hearing that appellant had said that he "[didn’t] want to go to jail.”
. Appellant, in his question presented, also argued that his statements were taken in violation of his Sixth Amendment right to counsel. However, appellant did not make any argument, nor did he cite to any authority, in support of his contention. As such, we do not consider this issue on appeal. Rule 5A:20(c);
Buchanan v. Buchanan,
. The trial court found that appellant’s first request for counsel was clear and unequivocal and that, while "his second statement [was] not clear,” it "tend[ed] to support his first statement that he wants a lawyer at that point.”
. Because we find appellant’s first request sufficient to invoke his right to counsel, we need not consider whether his second statement referring to an attorney was clear and unequivocal.
. It is of no consequence that appellant did not make any inculpatory statements during his first discussion with Investigator Hagerman. As the Supreme Court of Virginia observed in
Gregory,
"it is not the fruits of the investigation that are at issue; rather, it is the coercive atmosphere of the custodial interrogation itself.”
Gregory,
. The dissent takes issue with our reliance on
Seibert,
. In fact, the Court in
Mundy
could not consider whether the officers reinitiated the interrogation under the second prong of the
Edwards
analysis, as that argument was not presented to the trial court and was not before them on appeal.
See Belmer v. Commonwealth,
36 Va.App.
448, 458,
. The opinion does not contain any information about the details of the conversation between Correll and Roanoke police officers during either of the first two interviews.
. The federal appellate court considering Correll's federal habeas claim noted that
there is a complete dearth of information in the record concerning the circumstances surrounding Correll’s decision to submit to the polygraph examination or any further information pertaining to the timing or events surrounding the disclosure of the results. Correll simply failed to develop these facts during the state court proceedings.
Correll v. Thompson,
. We do not suggest that the taint of an Edwards violation can never be attenuated under any circumstances; however, it is clear from the case law that the circumstances here could not and did not dissipate the taint in this case.
. This fact alone distinguishes
Hines v. Commonwealth,
. Ferguson’s en banc brief argues: "Although the defendant did speak first, it was not a request to waive his rights or to be interrogated.... A mere statement in the presence of the officer is not a waiver of the right to counsel or an indication that Ferguson wanted to make a statement or that he wanted to engage in conversation with the police concerning the offenses." Appellant's Br. at 11-12. Ferguson’s reinitiation point is simply that he did not reinitiate, not that he was legally incapable of reinitiating.
. I assume arguendo that Ferguson was in custody to the degree required by Miranda, that his request for counsel was clear and unequivocal, and that some (but not all) of Investigator Hagerman's questions after the invocation of counsel could be characterized as continued interrogation.
. Reinitiation by
a suspect
can take place after an
Edwards
violation, even by a suspect held continuously in custody.
See Height v. State,
.
See also United States v. Carter,
.
See also Courtney,
