Petition for Rehearing and Suggestion for Rehearing In Banc
On petition for rehearing, the court withdraws its previous opinion dated May 27, 1988, and substitutes the following opinion. The petition for rehearing is otherwise DENIED and no member of this panel nor other judge in regular active service on the court having requested that the court be polled on rehearing in banc, the suggestion for in banc consideration is DENIED.
I.
On May 27, 1980 two sheriffs deputies arrested petitioner and transported him along with a co-worker to the Jefferson County Courthouse. Petitioner was a suspect in the rape and murder of Lynn McCurry. 1 After the deputies read petitioner his rights, they began to interrogate him. After a few questions, petitioner stated: “Before I talk anymore now, I would like to talk to my lawyer or either my mama or somebody....” After this statement, the deputies asked a few more questions 2 and arranged a lineup. The police then returned petitioner and his coworker to their place of employment. At some point during the day, petitioner agreed to take a polygraph test. 3
The next morning, Sergeant House picked up petitioner at work and brought him to the Sheriffs office for the polygraph test. After the test Dunkins was returned to his job. Later that day House brought petitioner back for more questioning. An hour or so later petitioner signed a waiver of his rights and confessed his complicity in the crime.
A Jefferson County Circuit Court jury convicted Dunkins and sentenced him to death. After unsuccessfully challenging his conviction and sentence on direct appeal and on collateral attack in the Alabama courts, petitioner filed a habeas petition in the district court. The district court denied the petition, and Dunkins brought this appeal.
II.
A.
Petitioner contends that the admission of the May 28 confession violated his fifth amendment right to counsel under
Miranda v. Arizona,
The Supreme Court has held that once a defendant expresses a desire to deal with the police only through counsel, the authorities may not further interrogate the defendant until “counsel has been made available to him, unless the accused himself initiates further communication, exchanges or conversation with the police.”
Edwards,
Respondent argues first that Edwards does not bar the admission of petitioner’s confession because the police honored Dun-kins’ request. Petitioner wanted to see a lawyer or his mother or somebody, and he did in fact see his mother. Respondent argues second that Edwards does not exclude the confession because petitioner was not continually in custody between the time of his assertion of the right to counsel and his confession. While the first argument is probably meritorious, we believe that the second argument is an even more compelling basis for holding that the police did not violate Edwards. 5
Several circuits have required that there be no break in custody before the
Edwards
rule will operate to exclude a confession. In these cases, the courts of appeals have held that even when the police wrongfully ignore a defendant’s request for counsel, subsequent confessions obtained from even police initiated interrogation are admissible if there has been an intervening break in custody.
See McFadden v. Garraghty,
In this case, petitioner made a somewhat ambiguous statement that included a request to see his attorney. Even assuming that this statement triggered Edwards, 7 *398 and regardless of whether or not petitioner initiated further discussion with the police, 8 we hold that petitioner’s release from his initial custody provided him with substantial opportunity to speak with those he wished to consult. The admission of his subsequent confession therefore did not violate his constitutional rights under Edwards.
B.
Petitioner also argues that his waiver of his
Miranda
rights was not voluntary, knowing and intelligent. Petitioner, citing
Hines v. State,
The Supreme Court has held that the inquiry into whether a defendant has waived his rights under Miranda voluntarily, knowingly and intelligently has two distinct dimensions:
First the relinquishment of the right must have been voluntary in the sense that it was the product of a free and deliberate choice rather than intimidation, coercion or deception. Second, the waiver must have been made with a full awareness both of the nature of the right being abandoned and the consequences of the decision to abandon it. Only if the “totality of the circumstances surrounding the interrogation” reveal both an uncoerced choice and the requisite level of comprehension may a court properly conclude that the Miranda rights have been waived.
Moran v. Burbine,
Applying
Burbine
and
Miller
to the facts of this case, we find that petitioner’s waiver was both voluntary and intelligent. Mental retardation does not by itself prevent a defendant from voluntarily waiving his constitutional rights.
See Colorado v. Connelly,
We also hold that petitioner’s waiver was knowing and intelligent. The issue of petitioner’s ability to understand his
Miranda
rights and competently waive them was not specifically raised at trial. Petitioner presented no psychiatric evidence to the trial court.
Cf. Cooper,
We have thoroughly reviewed the totality of the circumstances surrounding both statements given by the defendant, including the facts that he was nineteen years old and almost illiterate. Our assessment of these facts convinces us that both statements were completely voluntarily given after a knowing and intelligent waiver of constitutional rights.
Dunkins v. State,
The claim that petitioner did not make a knowing and intelligent waiver because he was “moderately retarded and functionally illiterate” first appears in his coram nobis petition. Petitioner also introduced for the first time a psychiatric report from Bryce State Hospital. The report stated:
[Mental examination] revealed no delusions or hallucinations, though he did have a preoccupation with his legal situation and the possibility of going to jail concerned him greatly, but in an appropriate way.... [Petitioner’s] judgment and insight were fair; attention span and memory were within normal range; calculations and general information store were within normal range,
The psychological assessment revealed that Mr. Dunkins is functioning at the high mild range of mental retardation with his adaptive behaviors falling within the borderline range. Test results are not suggestive of organic impairment.
At the coram nobis hearing, petitioner’s trial counsel testified that petitioner’s parents told him that petitioner “didn’t have any real problems other than being slow.” Petitioner’s trial counsel also testified: “I never had any real trouble communicating with him. He was able to discuss fully with me the events....” 11
Faced with this evidence, the coram no-bis court ruled that petitioner’s confession *400 was properly admitted at trial. On the second appeal, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals reaffirmed its prior holding that petitioner’s waiver was knowing, intelligent and voluntary. The court explained:
The circumstances surrounding the petitioner’s confession indicate that he did in fact understand and voluntarily waive his rights. Moreover, a person functioning in the high mild range of mental retardation, such as the petitioner, can intelligently waiver their rights. It is the opinion of this court that petitioner did in fact voluntarily waive his rights and his confession was properly admitted.
Dunkins v. State,
Based on these facts and the totality of circumstances surrounding the interrogation,
see Burbine,
Petitioner therefore made a voluntary, knowing and intelligent waiver of his Miranda rights. His subsequent confession was properly admitted at trial.
C.
Petitioner argues finally that he was denied effective assistance of counsel both at the trial level and on direct appeal. After reviewing the record, we believe that petitioner’s counsel in the Alabama state court system performed admirably in formulating and pursuing petitioner's defense strategy at trial and on appeal. We therefore find that petitioner has failed to satisfy both the performance and the prejudice prongs of
Strickland v. Washington,
III.
We conclude that none of petitioner’s contentions has merit. The district court’s denial of the petition for habeas corpus is therefore
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The facts and the procedural history of the case are set out in
Dunkins v. State,
. Respondent characterizes these questions as "personal data questions.” Petitioner alleges that they were designed to connect petitioner to the crime.
.There is some confusion over who initiated the idea of taking a polygraph test: petitioner, petitioner’s co-worker or the sheriffs deputies. The Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals, the Alabama Supreme Court, and the district court all describe petitioner’s decision to take the test differently.
. The fact that the defendant initiated contact with the police is relevant to the determination of whether a subsequent waiver is valid.
See Moran v. Burbine,
. Respondent also argues that by volunteering to take a polygraph examination, petitioner initiated the interrogation that followed. Because we base our decision on the break in custody grounds, we do not need to reach the initiation argument. See infra note 8.
. There is no contention that the break in custody was contrived or pretextual. We do not imply that our holding would be the same in the event of a contrived or pretextual break in custody.
. Dunkins’ statement that he wanted to see his lawyer, his mother or somebody else arguably invoked
Edwards.
Courts have developed conflicting standards for resolving ambiguous requests for counsel.
Smith v. Illinois,
In
Smith
the defendant, responding to police questions as to whether he understood his right to counsel and whether he wished to talk without his lawyer present, stated: "Uh, yeah. I’d like to do that” and “yeah and no, uh. I don’t know what’s what, really.”
. The
Edwards
requirement that the defendant must initiate contact with the police creates the issue of what kind of contact the defendant has initiated. In
Bradshaw
the defendant, at the suggestion of a police officer, agreed to take a polygraph test, and then after the test confessed his guilt.
Federal courts have had some difficulty determining when defendants "evince a willingness and a desire for a generalized discussion" under the initiation prong of the
Edwards
analysis.
See Lamp v. Farrier,
. In his petition for rehearing, petitioner asserts for the first time the existence of police overreaching as a basis for finding his confession involuntary. Because petitioner did not make this argument to the court earlier, it is not before us now.
. There was no evidence of petitioner’s low IQ or any other mental impairment at the suppression hearing or at trial. Although there was testimony that petitioner could not read, he had his rights read to him. Petitioner indicated that he understood his rights and knew he was waiving them in order to tell his version of the events.
.Petitioner’s trial counsel considered raising an insanity defense, but decided against this strategy as potentially inflammatory. We reject petitioner’s claim that his decision constituted *400 ineffective assistance of counsel. See infra Part II.C.
. The ultimate question of the admissibility of a confession is a legal issue requiring plenary federal review.
Miller v. Fenton,
. Petitioner’s reliance on
Hines
is misplaced. In
Hines,
the defendant had an IQ of 39, and there was extensive testimony that the defendant could not have understood his
Miranda
rights as they were read to him.
See
.Petitioner also argues that the district court abused its discretion by failing to conduct a hearing on all aspects of the petition, particularly on the ineffective assistance of counsel claim. We disagree. The state court conducted an evidentiary hearing, which included the ineffective assistance claim. Petitioner identifies no particular need for another hearing except to make sure that the district court “appreciate the magnitude of the ineffective assistance issue.” This is not enough to meet petitioner’s burden of establishing a need for an evidentiary hearing.
See Collins,
