Petitioner Jack Towne was arrested at 1:00 a.m. on December 4, 1984 for loitering and prowling at an apartment complex near his home. The arresting officer, Officer Manning, questioned Towne at the police station about several rapes and burglaries that had recently occurred in the same area. When Towne made some incriminating statements, Officer Manning requested a detective to come to the station to talk to Towne. From approximately 2 a.m. until 5 a.m. Towne talked with Detective Kramig and Officer Manning and made the taped confessions that are the subject of this appeal.
Towne moved to suppress the taped confessions on the grounds that they were the fruit of an unlawful arrest, that they were coerced by promises of leniency and psychiatric treatment, and that they were obtained in violation of his privilege against self-incrimination. After a full evidentiary hearing, the trial court issued a one-page order denying the motion to suppress. The order announced no specific findings of fact, but found that the arrest was lawful and that the confessions were freely, knowingly, and voluntarily given. (Exh. F)
Towne subsequently entered pleas of nolo contendere to four separate charges of battery, sexual battery, armed robbery, and armed burglary, but reserved his right to appeal the denial of his motion to suppress. Towne was sentenced to twenty-two years imprisonment and is currently incarcerated. In his direct appeal, Towne argued that the trial court had erred in finding that the arrest was lawful and that *1105 his confession was voluntarily given. The state appellate court affirmed the trial court, and summarized the evidence presented at the suppression hearing pertinent to the voluntariness of Towne’s confession as follows:
[Towne] was given the Miranda rights, both at the car at the time of the arrest, and again at the police station. [Towne] maintains that he asked to see a lawyer, and the arresting officer told him he could have an attorney but if he elected to go that route the officer would “throw the book at him.” According to [Towne], the officer then told him he recognized that [Towne] had psychological problems. [Towne] said the officer told him he was a “new school” officer, that he was interested in helping [Towne] with his problems, that he would help [Towne] obtain release on his own recognizance, and that he would help [Towne] obtain probation. In addition, [Towne] maintains the detectives and the arresting officer told him that tape recording his statements would not only assist in a court proceeding, but could be used by a psychiatrist to determine the nature of his stress. [Towne] contends he trusted the officers and relied upon their representations.
[T]he officers’ version of the events surrounding the circumstances of [Towne’s] incriminating statements differs from that of [Towne]. The officers note [Towne] was given his Miranda warnings not once, but several times, and he indicated he understood the rights available to him. The officers contend [Towne] did not request an attorney, and though the officers acknowledge the arresting officer promised to do everything he could to help, the discussions concerning offers of psychiatric help and promises to do everything possible to help him occurred in the context of the “entire realm of possibilities” attendant upon disposition of the case. According to the officers, these discussions occurred after [Towne] had made incriminating statements. The officers testified that no promises were given, and note that [Towne] read and signed a form waiving his right to consult an attorney.
The psychiatrist appointed by the court to evaluate [Towne’s] psychological status testified that at the time [Towne] talked with the investigators, he was primarily motivated by his desire to get help. The psychiatrist testified further that [Towne] was peculiarly susceptible to suggestions that psychological counseling could be made available to him. In the psychiatrist’s opinion, [Towne] would not have confessed if he had not been promised psychological help.
Towne v. State,
The state appellate court found that there was sufficient evidence on the record to support the trial court’s implicit finding that any promises of psychiatric or other help were made after Towne confessed. Id. at 899. The appellate court also found that although it was clear that Towne had asked Officer Manning if he thought Towne needed a lawyer, he had not at any time explicitly stated that he wanted to have a lawyer. Therefore, the court held, the evidence supported the trial court’s implicit finding that Towne had not requested a lawyer, and the trial court correctly ruled that his confession was not obtained in violation of the Fifth Amendment. Id.
Towne filed a petition for a writ of habe-as corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 in federal district court on May 24, 1988. The petition raises three grounds for relief: 1) that his conviction was obtained by use of a coerced confession, 2) that his conviction was obtained by evidence acquired pursuant to an unlawful arrest, and 3) that his conviction was obtained in violation of the privilege against self-incrimination. The district court denied relief on all three grounds, holding that 1) there was clear support in the record for the state court’s finding that Towne’s confession was not coerced and was freely and voluntarily given, 2) that
Stone v. Powell
[
We are bound under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d) to afford factual findings of state appellate courts a presumption of correctness.
Sumner v. Mata,
Towne filed a
pro se
appeal in this Court, contending that the district court had erred in all three of its rulings.
1
Finding no errors in the district court’s analysis of the first two issues, we adopt and affirm the portions of the district court’s order in which it concludes that there was sufficient evidence presented at the state court suppression hearing to support the state court’s conclusion that Towne’s taped confessions were not coerced by promises of psychiatric or other help, and that Towne’s Fourth Amendment claim that the confession was inadmissible because it was obtained after an illegal arrest is precluded under
Cardwell v. Taylor,
We cannot agree, however, with the district court’s conclusion that Towne’s Fifth Amendment rights were not violated in this case. The Fifth Amendment requires that when a person requests an attorney during a custodial interrogation, all questioning must stop until an attorney is present, unless the defendant subsequently initiates conversation with the authorities.
Edwards v. Arizona,
The district court held that Towne’s question to Officer Manning regarding whether Officer Manning thought Towne should get a lawyer was not an equivocal request for an attorney. Our review of the record reveals the following about the circumstances surrounding Towne’s taped confessions. Officer Manning testified at the suppression hearing as follows:
Q. [By defense attorney] The subject [of seeing a lawyer] was brought up, wasn’t it, before [Towne] made [the taped confessions] to you?
A. Yes, sir
Q. Who brought it up?
A. He did.
Q. Okay. How did he bring it up?
A. He asked me if I thought he needed a lawyer.
Q. But he didn’t say anything before that like, I think I am in a lot of trouble, I think I need a lawyer, I might need a lawyer, what do you think officer?
A. He basically asked me what—
Q. He just said “officer, what do you think about whether I should get a lawyer?”?
A. Something to that effect, yes, sir.
(Exh. Vol. 5, p. 194) No attempt was made by Officer Manning or any other police officer to clarify or discuss in any way Towne’s inquiry regarding getting a yer. Instead, Officer Manning concedes that he responded to Towne by making accusatory statements regarding the assault, burglary, and sexual battery offenses to which Towne later confessed. Specifically, after Towne asked Officer Manning about a lawyer, Manning said “I believe you are the person I’ve been looking for for the past year.” He also told Towne that he thought Towne’s shoe prints matched those of the suspect and that Officer Reddick was pretty sure that Towne was the same person Officer Reddick had chased in a prior crime. Officer Manning also told Towne that there was a witness who could identify the scar on Towne’s hand. (Exh. Vol. 5, p. 195-97)
After this, Detective Kramig arrived. Officer Manning told Detective Kramig that Towne had made some incriminating statements regarding several rape and burglary cases (Exh. Vol. 6, p. 74). At this point, Detective Kramig asked Officer Manning to assist him in interviewing Towne. Before the interview began, Detective Kramig reviewed the Miranda warnings with Towne one by one. After each one, the detective asked Towne if he understood it, and had him indicate in writing that he understood. Thereafter the officers began to question Towne, Towne confessed and agreed to make the tape-recorded statements that are the subject of this habeas corpus petition. (Exh. Vol. 6, p. 25-38)
In ruling that Towne’s question to Officer Manning did not amount to an equivocal request for an attorney, the district court reasoned that
Miranda v. Arizona,
For example, in
Owen v. Alabama,
The court held that the totality of the circumstances test, which is used to determine whether an accused has knowingly and voluntarily waived his
Miranda
rights,
North Carolina v. Butler,
Two former Fifth Circuit opinions,
Thompson v. Wainwright,
In
Nash v. Estelle,
Although these cases give a broad interpretation to the statements made by the defendants in finding that they made equivocal requests for an attorney, none of them involve a question posed by the defendant, *1109 rather than an affirmative statement about exercising the right to consult with an attorney. However, the Fifth and Ninth Circuits have considered cases involving questions about attorneys posed by defendants. In both cases the court applied the rationale of Thompson and Nash and found that the questions posed amounted to equivocal requests for an attorney.
In
United States v. Cherry,
In
United States v. Fouche,
The question posed by Towne is similar to those posed by the defendants in Cherry and Fouche. In Cherry the defendant said “Maybe I should get an attorney” and then asked, “Why should I not get an attorney?”. The defendant in Fouche asked to be allowed to call an attorney, but returned to the room and told the officer he had called his wife instead, and then asked “What should I do?”. Thus, in both cases, as in the present case, the interrogating officer was asked by the defendant for advice as to whether the defendant should exercise his right to get an attorney. Such questions reveal to the interrogating officer that the defendant is contemplating exercising his right to have an attorney present, and under the rule established in Nash and Thompson, the officer should clarify the defendant’s wishes before proceeding further.
In Owen, Thompson, Nash, Cherry, Fouche and in the present case, a suspect made an ambiguous statement, either in the form of an assertion or a question, communicating a possible desire to exercise his right to have an attorney present during questioning. There is no doubt that in each case, including the present one, the law enforcement officer understood that the suspect was talking about consulting with an attorney. To hold, as the district court did, that a suspect must give “a more definite indication of his desire to have counsel” than that given by Towne’s question would undermine the principles behind the holding in Thompson that equivocal requests must be clarified before interrogation may continue. This clarification rule is designed to preserve the Miranda protections where an accused gives ambiguous, vague, indefinite, or indecisive signals that require follow-up questioning to clari *1110 fy his or her wishes. If, as the district court held, equivocally invoking the right to counsel requires a defendant to make “a more definite indication” at the outset, only requests that are facially unequivocal will ever pass muster. Therefore, we hold that the question posed by Towne to Officer Manning amounted to an equivocal request for counsel that required that further questioning be limited to clarifying whether Towne wanted to consult with an attorney before continuing with the interrogation.
The state argues that even if Towne’s question was an equivocal request for an attorney, Detective Kramig’s subsequent careful repetition of the
Miranda
warning and Towne’s signing of a waiver of rights form served to clarify the request. The state concedes that after a defendant makes an equivocal request for an attorney, merely asking if the defendant understands the
Miranda
warnings that were read to him earlier is not enough to clarify the defendant’s desires to speak with an attorney.
United States v. Porter,
However, in
Cervi v. Kemp,
The state argues that the present ease is similar to
United States v. Gonzalez,
We find that the present case is distinct from Gonzalez. In Gonzalez, the officer’s subsequent reading of the Miranda warnings served to clarify the misperception indicated by the defendant’s statement that it was too expensive for her to have an attorney accompany her to turn herself in. Specifically, the statement “If you would like to have an attorney present during questioning and cannot afford one, one will be appointed for you” served to clear up the defendant’s misunderstanding that she had to provide her own lawyer during questioning. In contrast, Officer Manning and Detective Kramig admit that they did nothing to clarify whether Towne wanted to have an attorney present. They did not, as the officer in Nash did, seek to explain that Towne could talk to them then without a lawyer, but could consult with one later. They also did not, like the officer in *1111 Fouche, tell Towne that they could not give him legal advice and that it was up to him to decide. Instead, Officer Manning further intimidated Towne by making accusatory statements, much as the officer in Cherry further intimidated the defendant by telling him that other soldiers had seen him in possession of the murder weapon.
The state and Towne have stipulated that the state trial court’s initial ruling on the validity of Towne’s taped confessions is dispositive of this case. Therefore, because we find that the confessions were obtained in violation of the petitioner’s Fifth Amendment rights, the district court’s denial of the petition for habeas corpus relief is REVERSED. 3 The case is remanded with instructions for the district court to grant the writ conditioned upon the state’s right to try the defendant within a reasonable time as fixed by the district court.
Notes
. Additional briefs were filed by later appointed appellate counsel which contained arguments only pertaining to the district court's ruling that Towne’s question to Officer Manning was not an equivocal request for an attorney. However, counsel did state in his brief that the brief adopted the petitioner’s pro se arguments. Therefore, we consider all three issues raised by petitioner.
. In
Bonner v. City of Prichard,
. Citing Justice O’Connor’s concurring opinion in
Duckworth v.
Eagan, - U.S. -,
