Lead Opinion
E.A.H., who was fourteen years of age at the time of the offense, was tried as a juvenile and adjudicated delinquent after having been found guilty at a bench trial of assault with a dangerous weapon and related possessory weapons charges. The case stemmed from the shooting of one Bruce Gaddy. On appeal, E.A.H. contends that the motions judge committed reversible error by denying his motion to suppress incriminating statements which E.A.H. made to police while a search warrant was being executed at his home. The motions judge held that E.A.H. was not in custody when the statements were made, that no Miranda warning was therefore required,
I
The principal facts are undisputed. Detective Donald Gossage, together with a second detective and several uniformed officers of the Metropolitan Police Department, executed 9 search warrant at 8:30 one Friday morning at the home in which E.A.H. lived with his mother and his siblings, including his co-respondent half-brother, S.W. The officers placed all of the occupants of the house in the living room on the ground floor while the warrant was being executed. Armed officers guarded all of the exits, and E.A.H. was obviously “seized” and not free to leave. A pistol was recovered in S.W.’s front upstairs bedroom.
Detective Gossage interviewed the respondents one at a time in the front upstairs bedroom, with the door open, but with no one else present. After speaking with S.W., Gossage called in E.A.H. He showed E.A.H. the search warrant and explained that he was looking for the weapon with which Bruce Gaddy had been shot. He asked if the pistol which police had just found was used to shoot Gaddy. E.A.H. responded in the negative. In response to further questions by Detective Gossage, however, E.A.H. stated that the pistol was his and that he was the person who had shot Gaddy.
E.A.H. was not told that he was under arrest, and he received no Miranda warning during the brief interview, which lasted only about three minutes. Detective Gos-sage did not draw his weapon during the interview, nor did he use any deceptive or overtly coercive tactics of any kind.
After completing the questioning, Detective Gossage and the other officers prepared to leave the house. Before they departed, E.A.H.’s mother asked if anybody would be arrested that morning, and Gossage said that nobody would. He explained that the investigation was continuing, and requested the mother to bring three of her sons, including S.W. and E.A.H., to the police station the following Sunday. When she did so, both respon
Prior to his trial, E.A.H. moved to suppress the incriminating statements he had made to Detective Gossage in the upstairs bedroom. After hearing the testimony, the motions judge found that Detective Gos-sage had used no coercion, “though obviously the officers standing at the doorway were interested (and properly so) to prevent anyone from leaving while the search was executed.” He noted that the respondents had been interrogated in their own home, “within earshot of their family through an open door,” a fact which he viewed as rendering the atmosphere less coercive than that in a police station. Characterizing the Miranda doctrine as a “prophylactic rule” which was “designed to forestall the worst kinds of unconstitutional interrogation [of] people in police custody,” the judge held that E.A.H. had not been in custody and denied the motion to suppress.
II
The sole question on this appeal is whether E.A.H. was in police custody when he made his incriminating statements. In reviewing the motions judge’s decision on that issue, we defer to his findings of evi-dentiary fact, but determine the ultimate question of law de novo. Cf. United States v. Gayden,
The Court stated in Miranda,
As stated earlier, the test for whether a person is in custody is an objective one; “the ... relevant inquiry is how a reason
We conclude that it is unnecessary for us to decide whether the objective reasonable person test for custody may properly include “subjective elements,” In re Owen F.,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Miranda v. Arizona,
.In reaching his decision, the judge stated that "one of [the respondents] (I think it was Mr. H) was expressly told at the outset that he was not being arrested at that time.” This finding was erroneous; Detective Gossage testified that he had made this statement to S.W., not to E.A.H. Since the judge also denied S.W.’s motion to suppress his statements, however, this error obviously did not affect the result.
. But see State v. Brunell,
. "Thus, while seized, appellant was not in custody to the 'degree associated with formal arrest.’ ’’ McIlwain, supra,
. Lucas F. involved a ten-year old who was picked up as a runaway and transported to a police station, where he was interrogated for several hours by police without being advised of his rights or being told that his mother was in the stationhouse waiting room. An officer explicitly referred to the respondent as being in "police custody.”
. E.A.H.'s mother testified that she did not join E.A.H. in the bedroom when he was being interrogated because she believed that she was not supposed to. It does not appear that she asked to be admitted or that E.A.H. requested that she be present. In any event, the fact of her absence does not vitiate E.A.H.'s confession. See In re T., T.,
Dissenting Opinion
I respectfully dissent.
