OPINION
A jury convicted appellant, Rodney Monroe Hunter, of murder and, after finding an enhancement paragraph to be true, sentenced him to seventy years’ confinement in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice. In two points of error, appellant claims the trial court erred in admitting his confessions because they were given involuntarily and were taken in violation of his right to counsel. We affirm.
BACKGROUND
On October 14, 2002, appellant was arrested in Senatobia, Mississippi for the murder of his live-in girlfriend, Veronica Colar, in Houston, Texas. Houston Police Officers Curtis Scales and Rick Moreno drove to Mississippi to speak with appellant. Early in the morning on October 15, the officers tape-recorded two interviews of appellant. In the first interview, appellant invoked his right to counsel. In the second, appellant waived his right to counsel and confessed to killing Colar in self-defense. Later, around ten o’clock in the morning, the officers tape-recorded a third interview in which appellant repeated his earlier confession.
In two points of error, appellant argues the trial court erred in admitting the second and third oral statements because they were obtained in violation of his right to counsel and were given involuntarily. We review a trial court’s ruling on a motion to suppress for an abuse of discretion.
Oles v. State,
Shortly after the first interview began, appellant invoked his right to counsel. After appellant invoked his right, the following exchange occurred:
Officer Moreno: To the best of your knowledge, when was the last time that you had sex with [the victim]? Appellant: Seems like a Thursday or something.
Officer Scales: You don’t have to talk with us anymore. We’ll just take your DNA sample.
Officer Moreno: You understand ... that persons or person that was responsible for hiding you out here in Mississippi when you were wanted, and people were advised that you were wanted, can be filed on for harboring a fugitive? You understand that?
The officers then turned the tape-recorder off. The trial court suppressed this first interview. Thus, the jury never heard the question regarding when appellant had last had sexual intercourse with the victim or appellant’s answer to the question. However, the trial court did not exclude the second or third interviews, finding that appellant reinitiated conversation with the police and his confessions were voluntary.
Fifth Amendment Right to Counsel
Appellant contends the trial court’s admission of the second and third interviews violated his right to counsel under the Fifth Amendment because he had invoked his right to counsel during the first interview.
1
Once an accused requests counsel, all interrogation by the police must cease until counsel is provided or until the accused reinitiates conversation.
Dinkins v. State,
Appellant testified at the hearing on the motion to suppress and disputed much of the officers’ testimony. Appellant claimed that he first requested an attorney before the tape was turned on but was told that there was no way they could find an attorney at that time in the morning. Appellant also said that the conversation never ended when the tape-recorder was turned off after the first interview. He claimed that the officers threatened to have his mother’s parole revoked because she was harboring him. Appellant admitted that he had understood his rights and knew he did not have to speak to the officers but did so anyway. He said he gave a statement only because of the threat against his mother.
Although the record contains conflicting evidence regarding whether appellant initiated further contact with the police, the trial court is the sole trier of fact and judge of the credibility of the witnesses and the weight to be given their testimony.
State v. Ross,
VOLUNTARINESS
Appellant raises two challenges regarding the voluntariness of his confessions. First, appellant argues the confessions are tainted as a matter of law because Officer Moreno admittedly continued to speak with appellant after he had invoked his right to counsel. Second, appellant contends the confessions were the product of improper threats.
Appellant argues that Officer Moreno’s continued questioning rendered any subsequent waiver of the right to counsel involuntary.
2
However, the Court
However, appellant also contends that threats made by the officers to revoke his mother’s parole coerced him into giving the confessions. 3 To support his claim, appellant relies upon (1) the comment made by Officer Moreno about harboring a fugitive and (2) additional threats he claims the officers made to him when the tape-recorder was turned off. Appellant points to the short lapse in time between Officer Moreno’s comment and appellant’s purported reinitiation of conversation as evidence of the direct coercive effect of the comment.
The rule that requires interrogation to cease until counsel is provided or until the accused reinitiates conversation seeks to assure “that any statement made in a subsequent interrogation is not the result of coercive pressures.”
Minnick v. Miss.,
In this case, appellant contends that, when the tape was turned off, the officers made specific threats to prosecute his mother and to revoke her parole. The officers testified that no such threats were made. In fact, the officers said they did not know the status of appellant’s mother until they interviewed her later that same day. Because the trial court is the sole trier of fact and judge of the credibility of the witnesses, the trial court could choose to accept the testimony of the officers and disbelieve appellant’s testimony.
Ross,
There was evidence that appellant was told after he had invoked his right to counsel that he did not have to answer any more of the officers’ questions and that, after the comment about harboring a fugitive, the officers terminated the first interview. They took a buccal swab, prepared to leave, and attempted to leave the interview room. After appellant reinitiated conversation by asking about the punishment range for a case of this nature, both officers reminded appellant that he had invoked his right to counsel and did not
Additionally, Officer Moreno testified that he did not make the comment about harboring a fugitive as a threat to obtain appellant’s confession. Officer Moreno said he asked the question because he was unsure whether members of appellant’s family had harbored him, and he was considering the possibility of discussing with a district attorney the filing of charges against appellant’s father when he returned to Houston. There was a question as to whether appellant had talked with his father about what was going on. This was a concern because appellant’s father may have mislead the police when they searched the father’s house and lied about seeing appellant at the victim’s funeral. Officer Moreno said he was trying to get the truth about whether appellant’s father had lied to the police. In this context, there is evidence to support the trial court’s finding that the comment was not an express or implied threat that, if appellant did not cooperate with the police, his family would be prosecuted. The trial court could have concluded that Officer Moreno was merely attempting to find out whether appellant’s father had committed a crime.
In any event, appellant’s activities placed his family members under suspicion, and appellant’s desire to extricate the relatives does not render his self-motivated confessions, involuntary.
Roberts,
Appellant said he confessed only because the officers threatened to revoke his mother’s parole. The trial court could have chosen, as the trier of fact, to believe the officers’ testimony that no threat was made concerning appellant’s mother. Moreover, we are not willing to say as a matter of law that the short lapse in time is dispositive as to whether appellant’s reinitiation was voluntary. The issue of whether coercive pressures overbore appellant’s will turns ultimately on the credibility and demeanor of the witnesses heard by the trial court. Thus, when all of the circumstances are considered, we conclude the trial court acted within its discretion in finding that the confessions were made voluntarily. We will not disturb the trial court’s finding that appellant voluntarily reinitiated conversation with the police.
See Herron,
Sixth Amendment Right to Counsel
Appellant contends that the admission of the two subsequent interviews violated his right to counsel under the Sixth Amendment. “Unlike the Fifth Amendment right to counsel, the Sixth Amendment right to counsel does not attach until a prosecution is commenced, that is, ‘at or after the initiation of adversary judicial proceedings against the defendant.’ ”
Green v. State,
Assuming adversary judicial proceedings had begun, once the Sixth Amendment right attaches, “government efforts to elicit information from the accused, including interrogation, represent ‘critical stages’ at which the [right] applies.”
Michigan v. Jackson,
Here, appellant had not yet retained or been appointed an attorney in connection with the murder charge. The trial court determined that appellant had reinitiated conversation with the police. The officers gave appellant his Miranda warnings during both the second and third interviews. The warnings informed appellant that he could remain silent and request an attorney and that, if he chose to give a statement, the statement could be used against him in a later proceeding. Appellant said he understood his rights and waived his right to counsel. Thus, the trial court did not err in finding that the admission of the statements was not barred by the Sixth Amendment.
We overrule appellant’s two points of error and affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Notes
. In his first point of error, appellant claims his right to counsel under the Fifth and Sixth Amendments was violated. In his discussion regarding the Fifth Amendment challenge, appellant disputes the trial court’s finding that he reinitiated conversation with the police. Appellant also argues that, even if we were to uphold the finding of reinitiation, the reinitiation was involuntary because Officer Moreno asked additional questions before any alleged reinitiation occurred. We will address this later challenge along with appellant’s second point of error attacking the voluntariness of the confessions.
. To support this contention, appellant relies on
United States v. Gomez,
. Because he claims the statements were the product of improper threats, appellant argues the admission of the statements violated his right to due process under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution.
