When this case first came before this Court, appellant’s conviction was reversed because his confession was obtained in violation of his Sixth Amendment right to counsel.
Hatcher v. State,
While driving by the victim’s home, an uncle of the victim noticed a red station wagon with a gray, primer-colored fender and door in the victim’s driveway. He could not determine if anyone was in the car. Because he drove by the victim’s residence on nearly a daily basis and had never seen the car, he suspected that something was amiss. He called the Mitchell County sheriff’s office and related this information to the investigators. They came and determined that a burglary had taken place at the residence. Photographs of a set of four distinctive tire marks in the dirt driveway were taken.
A relative of appellant was interviewed by the investigators as a crime victim in an unrelated case. She was asked, incidentally, if she knew of a car that fit the description of the car the victim’s uncle had seen at the victim’s residence. She told the investigators that appellant, his brother, and their father drove a car matching that description. The investigators then went to a mobile home park on Highway 82 in Dougherty County, in an attempt to locate the vehicle. There they spotted a red station wagon matching the description given by the victim’s uncle. This was six days after the burglary. They left and called Dougherty County authorities to request assistance. When they returned to the trailer park, the car was gone. A few minutes later, the investigators saw it heading east on Highway 82 near the residence and pulled it over. The tire tread appeared to match. The investigators explained to appellant, his brother, and the other occupants that the car had been involved in a burglary. Appellant and his brother were placed under arrest without a warrant and were taken to the Dougherty County sheriffs department. After Miranda warnings were given, the appellant and his brother admitted they had each been driving the red station wagon early in the day of the burglary. The victim’s uncle identified the station wagon as the same vehicle he saw parked in the driveway of the victim’s house the morning of the burglary. The distinctive tire marks in the photographs taken by the investigator matched the vehicle’s tire tread.
Whether appellant’s confession should be excluded from evidence depends on whether it was obtained as the result of an illegal warrantless arrest made without probable cause, upon application of the standard in
Durden v. State,
This Court will not reverse the trial court’s order on a motion to suppress unless it represents an abuse of discretion.
State v. Harris,
Judgment affirmed.
