OPINION OF THE COURT
The United States Supreme Court introduced the now familiar Miranda warnings
For example, it is now well-settled that no “talismanic incantation” of a precise formula is required when law enforcement personnel administer the warnings to a detainee, so long as the meaning of the warnings is fully communicated. (California v Prysock,
Post-Miranda, New York State’s Appellate Division, Second Department, developed what is now established law in a series of decisions that defined and mandated a standard of “greater care” to protect the rights of young detainees who are questioned by the police. In People v Ward (
This standard of “greater care” was subsequently given a more precise definition. In Matter of Chad L. (
The additional requirements of “greater care” also necessarily impacted upon the Second Department’s review of how law enforcement personnel must administer the Miranda warnings
This court must assess the facts of the case at bar against this backdrop of developed precedent in determining the voluntariness, as a matter of law, of the statement made to law enforcement by the 13 year old in question. Preliminarily, at the Huntley (see People v Huntley,
At the conclusion of any pretrial suppression hearing, the court is required to render specific findings of fact, and the conclusions of law to be drawn therefrom. The findings of fact are as follows:
When the respondent and his parents arrived that morning, the detective initially directed them to be seated in the waiting area while she went to retrieve her case folder. A short time later, the detective returned and brought the mother and stepfather to a different room, telling them that the mother’s niece had made an allegation of a sexual nature against the respondent, and that the detective had interviewed her and believed her. The mother then made some indication that she knew her son had done wrong, that during a party the mother had walked into a bedroom and found her son and her niece adjusting their clothing. The mother also offered that she was in the process of getting help for the respondent. The detective, motivated in part by her desire for the mother to cooperate, was solicitous of the mother, indicating she understood she was “going through a hard time.” The mother acknowledged in her testimony that, upon arriving at the police offices, she was aware of, and concerned about, the possibility of her son being sent to “juvenile jail.”
At this point, the detective advised the mother that she was going to read the “juvenile Miranda warnings” to her son and to arrest him. She indicated uncertainty as to whether he would then be able to return home. The detective then told the mother that it was “up to her” in terms of granting the detective permission to speak with the respondent. The mother, at this point, was crying, but indicated her “permission.” The stepfather then proceeded to the waiting area.
The respondent entered the room where the detective was already present with his mother. The detective called this room the “designated juvenile room” in conclusory fashion. She did
The detective then administered the first warning (replicating its delivery testimonially with a fairly flat affect) and the second warning (again simulating its communication, this time in a somewhat halting manner). The detective then testified to administering the remaining warnings in “the same fashion” as she had recreated the delivery of the first two. This conclusory testimony deprived the court of the opportunity to view the manner in which the remaining warnings were given, even in simulation. In any event, the detective then asked the respondent if he was willing to answer questions, and both he and his mother agreed. She did not offer the opportunity for the respondent and his mother to consult, either privately, or even with the detective present.
The mother, at this point, was crying and the detective informed the respondent that she was going to arrest him “because of the allegations.” The detective then asked the respondent if it was “OK” that his mother was present. The respondent indicated a preference to speak with the detective without his mother being present. The mother indicated her assent to that and left the room. There was no conversation between the mother and her son when she did so; she simply left the room. The detective then reiterated to the respondent that he was being arrested, and asked if he knew why he was there. The respondent replied it was “because of’ what happened between him and his cousin. The respondent then offered a lengthy, and inculpatory, verbal rendition of the events at the party.
At the conclusion of that statement, the detective told the respondent that, if he wanted to, he could write it down. The respondent did so, while alone in the room with the door closed and possibly locked. When the detective raised the possibility of the respondent writing out his statement, she did not ask him if
Preliminarily, there is no issue with respect to the nature of the police questioning in this case. It was clearly custodial interrogation, a determination not contested by the presentment agency. Family Court Act § 305.2 (4) (b) requires that any custodial interrogation only take place in a facility designated as suitable for such purpose by the chief administrator of the courts. While the police detective’s testimony was conclusory concerning her use of the “designated” juvenile room, it is well settled by appellate case law that the applicable standard in assessing the suitability of the room used for interrogation is that of substantial compliance. (Matter of Emilio M.,
A second issue involves the propriety of the police questioning the respondent alone, while his mother was voluntarily elsewhere in the police station. The court notes that the Family Court Act does not require the presence of a parent before the police may interrogate a youthful suspect in their custody. Indeed, the statute clearly contemplates the police conducting such interrogation in the absence of a parent/guardian, under certain circumstances. (See Family Ct Act § 305.2 [7], [8].) The issue before this court is whether this was permissible under the facts presented here, to wit: when the police asked the respondent, whose mother was both present and properly administered the Miranda warnings, if he preferred to speak with the detective alone.
This courts finds Matter of Jimmy D. (
The analysis now turns to the key issue in this case: the sufficiency of the administration of the Miranda warnings. This suppression ruling hinges on the sufficiency of warning number 4 contained in presentment agency’s exhibit 1 in evidence (“Miranda Warnings [Simplified]”). On this form, the warning at issue reads:
“4. If you cannot afford an attorney, one will be provided for you without cost.
“Simplifiecl: That means if you want a lawyer but do not have the money to pay for one, the court will give you a lawyer for free.
“Do you understand?”
Preliminarily, since this appears to be a preprinted form, the court commends the New York City Police Department for its genuine attempt to follow through on the Miranda Court’s suggestion that “the States are free to develop their own safeguards for the privilege [against self-incrimination]” (
It is unfortunate that this court was deprived of the opportunity to assess even a facsimile administration of warning number 4 during the detective’s testimony. In and of itself, this failure to recreate this on the witness stand would not be fatal
The Miranda Court, of course, placed great and repeated emphasis on the right to counsel at a police interrogation, calling the right to have counsel present at such questioning “indispensable to the protection of the Fifth Amendment privilege.” (
“[t]his does not mean, as some have suggested, that each police station must have a ‘station house lawyer’ present at all times to advise prisoners. It does mean, however, that if police propose to interrogate a person they must make known to him [or her] that he [or she] is entitled to a lawyer and that if he [or she] cannot afford one, a lawyer will be provided for him [or her] prior to any interrogation.” {Id. at 474 [emphasis added].)
In summarizing the then new protocol for custodial interrogation, the Miranda Court reiterated that a detainee must be warned that “if he [or she] cannot afford an attorney one will be appointed for him [or her] prior to any questioning if he [or she] so desires.” (Id. at 479 [emphasis added].) These repeated and unequivocal admonitions clearly demonstrate the Court’s abiding concerns with respect to the nature of what is now “warning number 4.”
This court is aware of the later United States Supreme Court decision that approved use of more limited language with respect to this warning. (Duckworth v Eagan,
In People v Buckler (
- Taken alone, the questioning of this respondent by himself falls within the acceptable parameters set forth in Matter of Jimmy D., and does not render the respondent’s subsequent admission involuntary as a matter of law.
- Taken alone, the failure of the detective to facilitate consultation between the respondent and his mother, after administering the Miranda warnings and prior to her leaving the room, similarly does not require suppression.
- Taken alone, the failure of the presentment agency to testimonially replicate the manner of the detective’s administration of warning number 4 is also not fatal to the voluntariness of the ensuing statement.
However, when these factors are coupled with and considered together with the clearly defective nature of simplified Miranda warning number 4 in the instant matter, the analysis becomes particularly problematic. The Buckler Court found the almost identical warning to be “deficient” when given to an adult detainee (at 896). This court need not articulate the obviously different levels of maturity between an adult and a seventh grader. For a “reasonable 13 year old,” being advised that assigned counsel would be provided by the court is tantamount to telling that youth that a free attorney would not be available during the police questioning. The conclusion in Buckler is therefore controlling: simplified Miranda warning number 4, as administered in the instant matter, was deficient. While the Buckler Court ultimately found that the claimed inadequacies were “overcome by the other evidence produced at the hearing,” the decision is silent as to the specifics of that “other evidence” (id. at 897). To the contrary, in the case at bar, the “other evidence” before this court not only does not overcome that deficiency, it buttresses it. As a result, the defective and inaccurate nature of warning number 4, when coupled with the other evidence presented here (the detective questioning the respondent alone; the mother leaving the room without any consultation between her and her son; and the failure to attempt to testimonially simulate the way in which this warning was given to the respondent and his mother), takes the analysis beyond “particularly problematic” on the issue of the voluntariness of the respondent’s subsequent statement. Simplified warn
It is therefore ordered, that the respondent’s motion is granted.
Notes
. Essentially unchanged since 1966, these include:
“the right to remain silent, that anything he [or she] says can be used against him [or her] in a court of law, that he [or she] has the right to the presence of an attorney, and that if he [or she] cannot afford an attorney one will be appointed for him [or her] prior to any questioning.” (384 US at 479 .)
. See also Matter of Robert R (
. Soon after the decision in Miranda, the Second Department held that, prior to the commencement of any custodial interrogation, a juvenile detainee, like an adult, must be given all of the Miranda warnings by law enforcement personnel. (Matter of Jose R.,
. The Second Department has recognized that the “emotional and intellectual immaturity of a [15-year-old youth] creates an obvious need for the advice of a guardian . . . at an interrogation.” (Matter of Michelet P.,
. While the Court ultimately ruled that “any claimed inadequacies were overcome by the other evidence produced at the hearing” (id. at 896-897), this in no way undermines the Court’s conclusion that warning number 4, as administered in Buckler, was “deficient.” (Id. at 896.)
