OPINION OF THE COURT
Harold S. Alston appeals the denial by the district court of his petition for writ of habe-as corpus. He argues that his present incarceration by the state of Delaware is illegal because his conviction was bottomed on self-incriminating statements taken in violation of his constitutional rights. More specifically, Alston claims that he was interrogated by the authorities in violation of his right to counsel as established by the Sixth Amendment and by
Miranda v. Arizona,
I.
In the summer of 1985, police officers were investigating a number of robberies that had taken place in and around Wilmington, Delaware. At the scene of the robbery of Allen Medkeff and Michelle Sands (the “Medkeff-Sands robberies”), police recovered a fingerprint from an item touched by the robber. Acting upon information provided by a confidential informant linking petitioner Harold S. Alston to the Medkeff-Sands robberies, the police compared the recovered fingerprint to Alston’s known prints, and established that the prints matched. A warrant for Alston’s arrest issued, charging him with first degree robbery and second degree conspiracy, and he was arrested in North Carolina on August 19th. Waiving extradition, he was brought to Delaware on August 23rd, and was interrogated that same day by Delaware State Police. The police gave Alston his
Miranda
warnings, as required by
Miranda v. Ari
zona,
Three days later, on August 26, 1985, Alston was interviewed by a person from the Public Defender’s office, who Alston assumed was an attorney. 1 See App. at 227. During the course of the interview, Alston signed a form letter, addressed to the warden of the Gander Hill facility:
Dear Sir:
I am presently a detainee in this institution and I will not speak to any police officer, law enforcement officers, their agents, or representatives from the Department of Justice, of any jurisdiction, without a Public Defender being present at such a meeting.
I further do not wish to be removed from my [cell] and brought to a meeting with the above-mentioned officers for the purpose of discussing a waiver of my constitutional rights in this regard.
Signed /s/ Harold S. Alston
Date 8-26-85
App. at 4. The letter was never actually delivered to Gander Hill’s warden, since the *1241 established practice at Gander Hill was that someone from the warden’s office would call the Public Defender's office when officers sought to question a prisoner, and inquire whether such a form letter had been executed. If a prisoner wished to speak to the authorities notwithstanding his prior execution of the invocation of counsel form letter, he would be asked to sign a form waiving his previous request to have counsel present during an interrogation. Alston never signed this second form.
On August 28th, Alston was indicted for the Medkeff-Sands robberies. On August 29th, he was taken from Gander Hill to the Wilmington police department for processing on the new charges stemming from the six other robberies to which he had confessed on the 23rd and for further questioning. The warden’s office made no inquiry of the Public Defender’s office regarding whether Alston had signed the invocation of counsel form. At the police station, after the police read Alston his Miranda rights and he waived them, Alston was questioned for a second time, six days after his first interrogation on August 23rd. During this second interrogation, Alston confirmed his prior confessions, and, after prompting by one interrogator, confessed to another robbery that he had not mentioned before. It is the legality of the use of this second confession at his trial that forms the core of petitioner’s appeal.
Due to Alston’s perceived lack of candor, the police informed the prosecutor of the promise made, but declined to recommend that Alston be charged with one count of robbery. The grand jury subsequently delivered a superseding indictment against Alston and a number of other defendants, indicting Alston on nine counts of first degree robbery and nine counts of second degree conspiracy.
Before trial, Alston sought to suppress the statements he gave to the police on the 23rd and the 29th, claiming that both of his statements were involuntary and, further, that his second statement was taken in violation of his Sixth Amendment right to counsel. The trial court denied the suppression motion. See App. at 117-21. Alston proceeded to trial, where the state introduced, inter alia, the fingerprint evidence, the confessions, and the testimony of Medkeff and Sands, both of whom identified Alston. Alston was found guilty on seven of the nine robbery counts and on all of the conspiracy counts, including the Medkeff-Sands robberies.
On direct appeal, the Delaware Supreme Court agreed with Alston that the statement made dining the August 29th interrogation concerning the Medkeff-Sands robberies was taken in violation of his Sixth Amendment right to counsel, but ruled that the error was harmless, since there was substantial evidence supporting the conviction.
See Alston v. State,
Alston petitioned the district court for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254, claiming, inter alia, that his execution of the invocation of counsel form letter was sufficient to trigger his Miranda right to counsel, thus rendering inadmissible at trial any statements made during the August 29th interrogation. The petition was referred to a magistrate judge, who recommended that the petition be denied. The district court, after a de novo review of the record, adopted the magistrate judge’s Report and Recommendation and denied the petition for habeas relief. A motions panel of this Court issued a certificate of probable cause. See Fed.R.App.P. 22(b).
II.
The matter was properly before the district court, and this Court has jurisdiction
*1242
over petitioner’s appeal.
See
28 U.S.C. §§ 1291, 2253. The claims raised in the petition were properly exhausted, having been fairly presented to the Delaware Supreme Court.
See Castille v. Peoples,
III.
Petitioner argues that his execution of the form provided to him by the Public Defender’s office was sufficient to invoke his right to counsel and to thwart any further police-initiated questioning, thereby rendering inadmissible the statements he gave at the August 29th interrogation. Our analysis of this claim must begin with a review of Miranda and its progeny.
A.
In
Miranda v. Arizona,
He must be warned prior to any questioning that he has the right to remain silent, that anything he says can be used against him in a court of law, that he has the right to the presence of an attorney, and that if he cannot afford an attorney one will be appointed for him prior to any questioning if he so desires. Opportunity to exercise these rights must be afforded to him throughout the interrogation.
Miranda,
In
Edwards v. Arizona,
The remedy for a violation of
Miranda
or
Edwards
is straightforward — any statement given in violation of the rules established in these cases cannot be introduced into evidence in the state’s ease-in-chief.
See Miranda,
The notion that custodial interrogations, in and of themselves, have an inherent coercive effect on an accused is the essential predicate to the prescription contained in the
Miranda-Edwards
line of cases, that counsel be present, if one is requested, when an interrogation occurs in a custodial setting. “In essence,
Miranda
counsel is a buffer against the power of a state tempted to force incriminating statements from an unwilling suspect.” James J. Tomkovicz,
Standards for Invocation and Waiver of Counsel in Confession Contexts,
71 Iowa L.Rev. 975, 989 (1986);
see also Miranda,
B.
In the instant case, the magistrate judge found, and the district court agreed, that petitioner’s execution of the invocation form was insufficient to trigger his Miranda right to counsel. The magistrate found that the attempt to invoke the right to counsel was made outside of the context of custodial interrogation, and was thus ineffective. Petitioner argues that this case satisfies both prongs of Miranda, pointing out that he was already in custody, he was a suspect in a number of robberies, and he had already been interrogated at the time that he made his request for counsel. All of these circumstances taken together, concludes petitioner, created the “atmosphere of coercion,” Br. at 18, that Miranda and progeny seek to protect against, and mandates a finding that his invocation of his right to counsel was proper. We disagree.
*1245
As evidenced by the Supreme Court’s repeated rehearsal of the issue, the term “custodial interrogation” defies easy definition, We have recognized that such a determination requires individualized analysis on a ease-by-case basis.
See United States v. Mesa,
C.
In essence, Alston asks this Court to adopt, as an extension of the reach of
Miranda,
a rule allowing a suspect to invoke the right to counsel in cases where the suspect is in custody, has already been interrogated, and may be reinterrogated at some point in the future. We decline the invitation. As did the district judge, we find the Supreme Court’s opinion in
McNeil v. Wisconsin,
*1246
Of particular interest to the ease
sub judice
is the majority’s reply to the dissent’s prediction that the decision would be circumvented by the explicit invocation of the
Miranda
right to counsel at preliminary hearings.
See id.
at 184,
We have in fact never held that a person can invoke his Miranda rights antieipatorily, in a context other than “custodial interrogation” — which a preliminary hearing will not always, or even usually, involve. If the Miranda right to counsel can be invoked at a preliminary hearing, it could be argued, there is no logical reason why it could not be invoked by a letter prior to arrest, or indeed even prior to identification as a suspect. Most rights must be asserted when the government seeks to take the action they protect against. The fact that we have allowed the Miranda right to counsel, once asserted, to be effective with respect to future custodial interrogation does not necessarily mean that we will allow it to be asserted initially outside the context of custodial interrogation, with similar future effect.
Id.
at 182 n. 3,
The antipathy expressed in
McNeil
towards the anticipatory invocation of the
Miranda
rights is consistent with
Miranda’s
underlying principles. The
Miranda
right to counsel is a prophylactic rule that does not operate independent from the danger it seeks to protect against — “the compelling atmosphere inherent in the process of in-custody interrogation” — and the effect that danger can have on a suspect’s privilege to avoid compelled self-incrimination.
Miranda,
The
McNeil
footnote also reflects the general proposition, consistent with recent Supreme Court jurisprudence,
8
that the rights guaranteed by the Constitution of the United States are primarily negative in character, standing guard as vigilant sentinels at the perimeter of permissible state conduct.
See Jackson v. City of Joliet,
Our decision also finds support in the Ninth Circuit’s opinion in
United States v. Wright,
The Ninth Circuit rejected the claim, holding that a request by counsel, during a plea hearing, to be present at any further “interviews” with a suspect did not trigger Edwards. See id. at 956. As explained by the court, McNeil compelled this conclusion:
McNeil strongly suggests that Miranda rights may not be invoked in advance outside the custodial context. Wright’s request through his attorney would do just that if it were more broadly effective than to assure counsel’s presence at interviews having to do with the robbery. The Court has never held that Miranda rights may be invoked anticipatorily outside the context of custodial interrogation; we see no reason, apart from those already rejected in McNeil, to do so here.
Id. at 955. Though arguably distinguishable, since Wright was at a plea hearing, not “in custody,” when he made his request for the presence of counsel at future interviews, the opinion is an affirmation of the principle expressed in footnote three of McNeil that there must be both custody and interrogation before the right to counsel can be invoked.
We recognize that some courts, post-
McNeil,
have found a proper invocation of the
Miranda
right to counsel when a suspect has requested counsel prior to interrogation or to the reading of the
Miranda
rights. In
United States v. Kelsey,
The Tenth Circuit held that the request by Kelsey for his lawyer was sufficient to invoke the protections of
Edwards,
even thought the request was made before questioning or the reading of
Miranda
rights.
See id.
at 1198-99. Mindful of the requirement that there be “some statement that can reasonably be construed to be expression of a desire for the assistance of an attorney in dealing with custodial interrogation by the police,”
McNeil,
In
State v. Torres,
On appeal, Torres argued that her interrogation violated Edwards, since she had made a request for counsel before the police initiated her interrogation. The Court accepted her argument, finding that Edwards had been violated even though she was not being questioned at the time she requested an attorney:
... [T]he State argues that defendant could not have invoked her right to counsel because she was not being questioned at the time she inquired about an attorney.
... If defendant “at any stage of the process” indicates her desire to consult with counsel, all questioning must cease.... [Although an individual cannot waive her right to counsel prior to receiving Miranda warnings, a suspect in custody can certainly assert her right to have counsel present during her impending interrogation prior to Miranda warnings and the actual onset of questioning.
Id. at 25 (citations omitted). The Court distinguished footnote three in the McNeil opinion by noting that “[t]he examples of ‘anticipatory invocation’ cited by the Court in that ... footnote ... make clear that the Court had in mind situations in which a person was not in custody at the time of her invocation.” Id. Thus, for the Torres court, it was sufficient for Miranda and Edwards purposes that the suspect was in custody and awaiting interrogation when she invoked her right to counsel. See id. at 26 (“It would make little sense to require a defendant already in custody to wait until the onset of questioning or the recitation of her Miranda rights before being permitted to invoke her right to counsel”).
The decisions in Kelsey and Torres are distinguishable from our decision in this case. The suspects in both of those cases, though not being interrogated when they requested counsel, were faced with
“impending
interrogation.”
Torres,
*1250 D.
Even if we were to conclude that Alston could invoke his
Miranda
right to counsel when an interrogation was impending or imminent, we cannot conclude that the method used by Alston, i.e., advising the
warden
of his decision, was sufficient to trigger the protections of
Miranda-Edwards
and of
Arizona v. Roberson,
In addition to the fact that Edwards focuses on the state of mind of the suspect and not of the police, custodial interrogation must be conducted pursuant to established procedures, and those procedures in turn must enable an officer who proposes to initiate an interrogation to determine whether the suspect has previously requested counsel.... [W]hether the same or different law enforcement authorities are involved in the second investigation, the same need to determine whether the suspect has requested counsel exists. The police department’s failure to honor that request cannot be justified by the lack of diligence of a particular officer.
Roberson,
The Supreme Court’s opinion in
Roberson
focused on multiple interrogations concerning different crimes, principally holding that the
Miranda
right to counsel was not offense-specific.
See
Petitioner cites to no case law, other than
Roberson
itself, supporting his contention that the knowledge of his putative invocation on the 26th must be imputed to the officers who interrogated him on the 29th, and the Court’s research has likewise failed to unearth any such support. On the contrary, the courts that have applied
Roberson
were dealing with defendants who were reinterro-gated notwithstanding earlier requests for counsel that were made to law enforcement officers.
See, e.g., United States v. Lucas,
We decline to extend the reach of
Mi-randar-Edwards
to encompass a suspect sitting in his cell, free of any interrogation, impending or otherwise. As the Supreme Court stated in rejecting the
McNeil
petitioner’s proposal to expand
Miranda,
“[i]f a suspect does not wish to communicate with the police except through an attorney, he can simply tell them that when they give him the
Miranda
warnings.”
McNeil,
IV.
Petitioner also argues that the magistrate and district judges erred in concluding that the admission of the statements taken in violation of his Sixth Amendment right to counsel was harmless error. Before the Delaware state courts, and before this Court, the respondents have acknowledged that the statements of August 29th concerning the Medkeff-Sands robberies were impermissibly taken, since Alston’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel had attached once the indictment of August 28th was returned, and he was interrogated without his lawyer being present.
See Michigan v. Jackson,
In Deputy v. Taylor,
The evidence at trial concerning the Med-keff-Sands robberies was substantial. Both victims identified Alston as the perpetrator, Alston’s fingerprint was recovered at the scene, and Alston confessed to the crime during the interrogation of August 23rd. The evidence introduced concerning the August 29th confession, consisting of the testimony of one of the interrogators as well as a transcript of the confession, which had been recorded, was in essence cumulative. Viewed in relation to the other evidence in the case as to the Medkeff-Sands robberies, the Court finds that the August 29th statements did not have a “substantial and injurious effect” on the jury’s verdict, and their introduction into evidence was therefore harmless error. 17
V.
Petitioner’s final point of appeal is that the interrogation of August 29th somehow denied him “fundamental fairness,” and was therefore violative of the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process clause. In support of this argument, petitioner states that he “could not resist the pressures of custodial interrogation,” and argues that this is the only possible conclusion “because, otherwise, it is incomprehensible why a 28 year [old] literate man with three prior felonies would so readily incriminate himself.” Pet.Br. at 32. Petitioner apparently claims that his waiver of his
Miranda
rights at the beginning of the August 29th interrogation was somehow faulty, and he was therefore deprived of his right to counsel.
See Miranda,
“[T]he voluntariness of a defendant’s waiver of
Miranda
rights is a mixed question of law and fact, subject to plenary review by federal habeas courts.”
Ahmad,
The Delaware courts found that Alston understood his
Miranda
rights when he signed the waiver form proffered to him at the beginning of the August 29th interrogation.
See
App. at 118, 254. This finding has a basis in the record, given defendant’s execution of the waiver form and the testimony of the interrogating officers concerning their recitation of the rights and Alston’s acknowl-edgement that he understood them.
Cf. Collins v. Brierly,
As to the question of voluntariness, the only indication in the record of any coercion on the part of the interrogators is the offer to Alston to make a plea recommendation to the prosecutors if Alston cooperated fully in the interrogation. “That a law enforcement officer promises something to a person suspected of a crime in exchange for the person’s speaking about the crime does not automatically render inadmissible any statement obtained as a result of that promise.”
United States v. Walton,
The Delaware Supreme Court made the following findings of fact concerning Alston’s background:
Alston was 28 years old at the time of his arrest and had previously been convicted of three felonies. Alston had completed the tenth grade and was able to read and write. At the time his statements were made he was alert and did not appear to be under the influence of alcohol or drugs. *1254 The interviews were during the day, and each interview lasted approximately one to one and one-half hours. Although in custody, Alston was not handcuffed during either session.
Alston,
As to the promise, the investigators promised Alston during the interrogation of August 23rd that they would recommend to the prosecutor that Alston be allowed to plead to one count of first degree robbery, a promise conditioned on Alston’s full cooperation. The promise was made with the caveat that the recommendation was in no way binding on the prosecutor. App. at 41-42, 54-55. During the course of the first interrogation, Alston did not mention a robbery that the police suspected him in, a robbery to which Alston confessed during the second interrogation after the police prompted him. Due to this failure to cooperate, as well as the police’s strong belief that Alston had been involved in other crimes as to which he did not confess at either interrogation, the police informed the prosecutor of the proposal made to Alston, but did not make the recommendation. App. at 102-03. As already noted, Alston was then indicted on nine counts of first degree robbery and nine counts of second degree conspiracy.
In light of AIston's age, literacy, and prior experience with the criminal justice system, as well as the limited nature of the promise made by the investigators, a promise to make a non-binding recommendation to the prosecutor, the Court finds that Alston’s written waiver of his
Miranda
rights on August 29th was not coerced. Alston’s three prior convictions indicate that he was not “an ‘uninitiated novice,’ susceptible to coercive pressure or threats by law enforcement officers.”
Cruz Jimenez,
As Chief Justice Burger noted in his concurrence in
Edwards,
the Supreme Court “consistently has ‘rejected any paternalistic rule protecting a defendant from his intelligent and voluntary decisions about his own criminal ease.’ ”
Edwards,
VI.
This petition has raised some significant questions concerning the efficacy of the procedures used in Delaware’s Gander Hill prison facility. Perhaps if this Court were charged with crafting a procedure for the recordation and maintenance of a suspect’s invocation of his right to counsel, we would devise a less cumbersome system than the one applied to the petitioner. But it is not our task to develop such a system, nor do we sit as an ecumenical overseer of the state’s detention procedures. We are solely charged with determining whether petitioner is being held in violation of his constitutional rights. Limited as we are to this jurisdictional grant, we find that there was no deprivation of Alston’s constitutional rights, and will affirm the district court’s denial of Alston’s petition.
Notes
. The testimony by an investigator from the Public Defender’s office at the suppression hearing held in the state trial court suggested that the individual who met with Alston was an investigator, and not an attorney. See App. at 71-72. The outcome of this appeal, however, does not turn on the identity or the status of the individual with whom Alston spoke.
. As this Court stated recently, there are “four prerequisites for giving deference to state court findings: 1) a hearing on the merits of a factual issue, 2) made by a state court of competent jurisdiction, 3) in a proceeding to which the petitioner and the state were parties, 4) evidenced by a written finding, opinion or other reliable and adequate written indicia.”
Reese v. Fulcomer, 946
F.2d 247, 254 (3d Cir.1991) (citing 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)),
cert. denied,
- U.S. -,
. In contrast, the
Miranda
Court could have completely forbidden custodial interrogation, or could have required that all such interrogation be conducted with a judge present.
Cf. Davis v. United
States,-U.S.-,-,
. As the Supreme Court has repeatedly noted, the
Miranda
safeguards are not constitutionally mandated and serve only to protect the privilege against compelled self-incrimination in the context of custodial interrogation.
See, e.g., Connecticut v. Barrett,
. Hence, the focus in much of the Court's
Miranda
jurisprudence on the legal contours of “custody,”
see, e.g., Stansbury v. California,
- U.S. -, -,
. When he signed the request for counsel form on August 26th, Alston was obviously in custody in the physical sense, given that he was being held in a prison. However, "[w]hile
Miranda
may apply to one who is in custody for an offense unrelated to the interrogation, incarceration does not
ipso facto
render an interrogation custodial.”
Leviston
v.
Black,
. Petitioner points to language in Miranda itself that, read in isolation, would seem to allow invocation of the right to counsel in the manner he proposes:
If, however, [the defendant] indicates in any manner and at any stage of the process that he wishes to consult with an attorney before speaking there can be no questioning.
. In the context of the Due Process Clause, the negative nature of constitutional rights is viewed as imposing on the state no positive obligation to act absent some special circumstance such as custody.
See Collins v. City of Harker Heights,
- U.S. -, -,
. In fact, the entire Fifth Amendment is written in similar vein:
No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a Grand July, except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the Militia, when in actual service in time of War or public danger; nor shall any person be subject for the same offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb; nor shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself, nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.
U.S. Const. amend. V.
.That
Miranda
imposes an affirmative obligation on interrogators to inform a suspect of his rights, indeed, to provide the suspect a lawyer if one cannot otherwise be afforded, does not change the basic negative nature of the
Miranda
protections, because the true protection of
Miranda,
the suppression of statements given without a valid waiver by the suspect of her
Miranda
rights, only arises if the state chooses to question a suspect without providing the
Miranda
warnings and attempts to introduce those statements in evidence.
See Miranda,
. Additionally, we note that the extension of
Miranda
and
Edwards
implicitly requested by petitioner, i.e., allowing him to invoke the right to counsel outside of the context of custodial interrogation, would diminish the “bright-line” nature of the Supreme Court's
Miranda
jurisprudence, often cited by the Court as one of the qualities of that body of law.
See Jackson,
. Because the Delaware Supreme Court rested its decision on this point, i.e., that the warden never had knowledge because he had no possession, we feel compelled to address it. We believe that basing the decision in this case on these grounds goes too far. If the state puts into place a record-keeping system that, as an essential element, contemplates that records will be maintained by a third-party, e.g., the Public Defender's office, it would be inequitable to allow the state official charged with administering the system to disclaim at least constructive knowledge of the information contained in those records. We therefore do not find the warden’s lack of actual possession of Alston's letter to be disposi-tive.
We also note in passing that petitioner neither here nor below argued that the state should be estopped from questioning the validity of his
pro forma
invocation, due to the warden's establishment of and participation in the procedure employed in Gander Hill. While we do not reach the issue, we do not mean to diminish any due process considerations that may accompany official conduct that actively misleads an accused in the exercise of her
Miranda
rights.
Cf. Tukes v. Dugger,
. With the caveat that someone acting as an investigatory official’s agent in conducting an interrogation would likely assume the status of her principal.
. Petitioner's focus on
Roberson's
admonition that
Edwards
"focuses on the state of mind of the suspect,”
. Alston's argument that the absence of a waiver of counsel form on file in the warden's office is notice of an invocation of the right to counsel is also without merit. The presence or absence of forms in a custodial state agent's files cannot suffice for the imputation of knowledge to investigatory officials.
. Under
Maine v. Moulton,
. The Delaware Supreme Court applied the higher standard announced in
Chapman v. California,
