In the Circuit Court for Charles County, Christopher Alan Buck was charged with first-degree murder, first-degree assault,
In a trial to the court, Buck was found guilty on all counts. The court further ruled that he had failed to prove that he was not criminally responsible for his actions. The court sentenced him to life in prison for first-degree murder and a three-year concurrent term for carrying a deadly weapon. The first-degree assault conviction was merged for sentencing.
On appeal, Buck raises three questions, which we have reordered and reworded:
I. Did the circuit court err in denying his motion to suppress the statements he made to the police?
II. Was the evidence legally sufficient to support his first-degree murder conviction?
III. Did the trial court err in finding him criminally responsible?
For the following reasons, we shall reverse the judgments of the circuit court and remand for further proceedings.
I.
Motion to Suppress Inculpatory Statements to Police
The following facts were adduced at the suppression hearing, or are uncontested and included for context. 1
This case arises out of the stabbing death of Edward Baroody, age 74. On February 28, 2005, at 6:30 a.m., Bonnie Goldsmith, Baroody’s wife, found his body in the driveway of their home at 6769 Amherst Road, in the Bryan’s Road community in Charles County. Officer Patrick McDonald, of the Charles County Sheriffs Office, responded to a call from Goldsmith. 2 He found Baroody’s body lying near the sidewalk in front of the house. The body was “very cold to the touch, and had mild rigor setting in.” There was $1,400 in cash in the victim’s pockets. Nothing appeared to have been taken from the body.
Sergeant Carlson 3 responded to the scene and saw the victim lying on his back in the driveway. He and another officer rolled the body over and saw “a puncture hole in the jacket in the center of the back near the top "with a blood stain around it that appeared fresh.”
Goldsmith told the police she had returned home from work the evening before (February 27), at about 8:00 p.m., and “everything was fine.” Bonnie Carpenter, the neighbor across the street, told the police that at about 8:20 or 8:30 p.m. that same evening, her daughter told her she was in her bedroom in the front of the house when she heard someone cry out for help. Carpenter went outside, but did not notice anything amiss. Melissa Roberts, also a neighbor, reported that, at about 8:15 p.m. that evening she was driving on Amherst Road when she saw an older man walking at a “moderate stroll,” near a stop sign. She noticed another man quickly walk up behind the older man. The second man had his right hand “[t]ucked down into [his] waistband.” He was wearing
On the evening of March 1, 2005, Detectives Tim Minor, James Martin, and Charles Bean were in the neighborhood of the Baroody killing, investigating. Detective Minor noticed a man (Buck) walking about. He fit Melissa Roberts’s physical description of the murder suspect and was wearing a gray hooded sweatshirt.
The detectives approached Buck and asked him if he had heard of any recent incidents in the neighborhood. He replied no, but within seconds added, “Oh, you mean the stabbing?” When asked where he had been on the night of February 27, 2005, Buck said it was his routine every night at about 8:00 p.m. to walk from his house in the Bryan’s Road neighborhood to the BP station, to buy cigarettes; and that is what he had done on February 27. 4
Detective Minor observed that Buck became nervous as the officers were speaking with him. Detective Bean asked Buck if he could take some digital photographs of him. Buck said yes, and the detective took the pictures. Also during this encounter, Detective Minor telephoned Detective Joe Piazza, the lead investigator on the Baroody case, and said, “I think we got him.” That call was made in Buck’s presence and was heard by him.
Buck told the detectives that he was on his way to the BP station to purchase cigarettes. Detective Martin offered to give him a ride, and he accepted. In the meantime, Detectives Bean and Minor drove to the house where Buck, then 21 years old, was living with his parents and two younger sisters. The detectives spoke to his mother, Diane Buck. 5 Mrs. Buck told them she feared that her son might have been involved in the Baroody murder. She explained that Buck had been suffering from “severe depression” for three or four years for which he had been prescribed “a couple” of medications. His behavior was unpredictable. He usually would sleep all day while she and her husband were at work. Often, he would walk around the neighborhood at night. Mrs. Buck also told the detectives that, recently, Buck had not been taking his medications. The detectives also learned that both she and Mr. Buck worked during the day and were gone from the home by 9:00 a.m. on weekdays, leaving their son alone in the house at that time.
On the morning of the next day, March 2, 2005, the detectives investigating the Baroody murder sought and obtained a search warrant for Buck’s house. The warrant authorized the seizure of, among other things, knives and clothing. The detectives did not execute the warrant immediately, however.
In the early afternoon of that same day, Detective Piazza and Detective Shane Knowlan, wearing plain clothes, drove to Buck’s house in an unmarked car. Detective Piazza had talked to Detective Minor previously and knew what Mrs. Buck had told him. Detective Piazza planned to have the search warrant executed when Buck was not at home.
The detectives arrived at about 12:45 p.m. and found Buck at home. He was wearing shorts and a T-shirt. Detective Piazza asked if Buck would be willing to come to the Sheriffs Office Headquarters (“the station house”) in La Plata for an
Buck responded that he had to change his clothes before leaving. Detective Piazza followed him upstairs to his bedroom and watched as he got dressed. Detective Knowlan remained at the bottom of the steps. After Buck had put on clothes, he and the officers went outside. Buck got in the front passenger’s seat of the police cruiser and put his seat belt on. He was not. handcuffed or restrained. Detective Piazza drove and Detective Knowlan sat in the seat behind Buck.
During the 30-minute drive from Buck’s house to La Plata, Detective Piazza asked Buck about his family, friends, and daily activities. Buck answered the detective’s questions. At some point, the conversation turned to the Baroody murder. Buck mentioned that a clerk at the BP station had commented that he (Buck) resembled the suspect the police were looking for. Detective Piazza asked Buck if he thought of himself as a suspect. Buck replied, “I hope I’m not a suspect,” and then paused and said, “because I didn’t do it.” Detective Piazza noticed a faint odor of alcohol and asked Buck how much he had had to drink that day. Buck responded that he had had one beer that morning. Buck said he was not intoxicated, and Detective Piazza did not observe any signs of intoxication.
When the officers and Buck arrived at the station house, Buck was taken to an interview room in a secure part of the building. He was given a pass that permitted him to walk within the station house only if escorted by an officer. The interview room was 10 feet by 10 feet and had two chairs and a table. There were no windows. There was a one-way mirror by which the detectives could see into the room without being seen. There also was a camera in the ceiling that allowed occupants of another room to watch and hear the interview on a monitor.
The interview lasted five hours, from 1:20 p.m. to 6:20 p.m. There were times when Buck was alone in the interview room. Otherwise, he was accompanied by at least one officer, and more often by two. 6 He never was physically restrained and no weapons were displayed or drawn. Buck did not ask to call anyone.
Detective Piazza began the interview. He asked Buck how he felt and inquired about the last time he had taken his medications. Buck responded that he had taken his medications “last night” and that he felt okay, “just anxious.” The detective asked Buck if he “wanted a drink or needed a restroom”; he responded no. Detective Piazza spoke with Buck about his family and friends and then turned his attention to the night of February 27, 2005. Initially, Buck said his
only activity that night was to walk to the BP station to buy cigarettes. Detective Piazza told Buck he had reviewed the BP station’s surveillance tapes from that night and they did not show him there. Buck became “noticeably ... uncomfortable at that point.” Detective Piazza went on to say that the police were at that very moment executing a search warrant for Buck’s house, looking for evidence related to the murder, particularly Baroody’s DNA. The detective asked Buck if he thought the police would find any evidence of the murder at his
Buck asked for a break so he could smoke a cigarette. Detective Piazza instructed Detective Shankster 7 to accompany him. He told Detective Shankster that Buck was not under arrest and that the detective should “let [Buck] out the door and [ ] let him in when he was done” smoking. Detective Piazza further informed Detective Shankster that, if Buck asked to leave, he (Detective Piazza) would give him a ride home. Although the evidence on this point is unclear, it appears that this conversation did not take place in Buck’s presence.
When Buck returned from the cigarette break, he asked Detective Piazza if the police had found anything when they executed the search warrant. The detective responded by asking Buck what he thought the police might have found. Buck responded, “my pants.” Detective Piazza then asked for, and Buck agreed to give, a DNA sample. At that point, Detective Piazza left the interview room.
Soon thereafter, at about 4:25 p.m., Detective Minor entered the interview room and spoke to Buck about signing a consent form for the DNA sampling. Detective Minor used a buccal swab to collect the sample from inside Buck’s cheek. Buck mentioned that, when the police had interviewed him on the street, he had overheard Detective Minor say, “I think we got him.” He said he took that to mean that the officers thought he had killed Baroody. As Detective Minor collected the sample, he told Buck that he had spoken with Mrs. Buck the night before. Detective Minor commented that he himself had thought about killing people before. He asked Buck whether he had ever “thought about killing people.” Buck said he had not.
Detective Minor then asked Buck “how it felt to kill that man,” meaning Baroody. Buck proceeded to confess to the murder. He told the detective that, on the evening of February 27, 2005, he was “pumped up” from listening to rap music all day. He had not taken his medications. He decided to carry a kitchen knife with him on his nightly walk. He stabbed Baroody with the kitchen knife, killing him, because Baroody looked like an “easy target.” His hands had shaken when he stabbed Baroody. He did not rob Baroody. After-wards, he ran home, washed the blood off the knife, and put it back in the knife block where he had found it. He vomited, smoked some cigarettes, and went to bed. Buck told Detective Minor that right then (during the interview) he was wearing the same sweatshirt and shoes he had worn when he stabbed Baroody.
Detective Minor left the interview room and told Detective Piazza that Buck just had confessed to the murder. Detective Piazza directed Detective Bean to begin drafting a statement of charges for an arrest warrant for Buck. Detective Piazza then rejoined the interview. When Detective Piazza walked into the interview room, Buck apologized for lying to him, saying, “I wanted to tell you the truth, but I felt bad.” Buck shook Detective Piazza’s hand. At that point, the detectives took Buck’s sweatshirt and shoes and gave them to another officer. It is not clear from the hearing testimony whether Detectives Minor and Piazza asked Buck’s permission to take his sweatshirt and shoes or whether they directed him to remove those items of clothing. Both detectives testified, however, that during the interview neither one “ordered” Buck to do anything. 8
At about 5:00 p.m., when the detectives and Buck returned to the interview room from the cigarette break, Detective Piazza took a written statement from Buck about the Baroody killing. Detective Piazza would type a question, Buck would answer it, and Detective Piazza would type in Buck’s answer. He and Buck then reviewed the statement, page by page, and signed it. (Detective Piazza signed it as well.)
The first question, to which Buck answered, “Yes sir,” was: “Do you understand that you are not under arrest and are free to leave at anytime?” When asked why he had killed Baroody, Buck said, “I was angry. I wasn’t planning on killing anyone. I just thought if anyone came, I would stab him.” Buck said he had not taken his medications on the day of the stabbing and that “his nerves hurt.” He identified his medications as “Rispodal [sic], Luvox, and Norotin.” He described how he walked up behind Baroody as Baroody was standing looking at a “For Sale” sign and stabbed him in the back. Baroody fell down, with the knife in his back. Buck removed the knife and ran home. He had blood on his shoes. He washed the knife off and put it back inside the knife block. He used toilet paper to wash the blood off his shoes. The second to last question to Buck was: “When I met you at your house earlier today I told you that you did not have to come with me or talk to me. Is that correct?” Buck answered, “True.”
After the statement was signed, Detective Piazza showed Buck a photograph, taken when the search warrant was executed, of the knife block and various cutlery in the kitchen at his house. He asked Buck to point out the knife he had used to stab Baroody. Buck circled one of the knives in the photograph and signed his name next to it.
Detective Piazza told Buck he was not under arrest. He instructed Detectives Minor and Moody to drive Buck home. During the drive, Detective Minor asked Buck to show him where the stabbing occurred. Buck directed Detective Minor to the exact location where Baroody’s body had been found.
The detectives accompanied Buck inside his house. In front of Buck’s family members, Detective Moody asked Buck if he had killed Baroody. Buck nodded yes. At about 6:50 p.m., the detectives left the Bucks’ home. They stayed in the neighborhood, however. Before Buck’s arrival home, at Detective Piazza’s direction, plainclothes police officers had positioned themselves outside the house. Detective Minor called Detective Piazza to say that Buck had been dropped off at home and it was time to submit the application for arrest warrant for approval. An arrest warrant for Buck was issued by a court commissioner at 7:07 p.m. Minutes later, Detective George Higgs, one of the officers staked out near Buck’s house, received a radio communication instructing him to arrest Buck, which he did. Thus, a little less than 20 minutes elapsed from the time the officers left Buck at his house until the time Buck was arrested.
When arresting Buck, Detective Higgs spoke to Buck’s parents. They told him he was on several medications. Buck was
As Detective Higgs was processing Buck’s paperwork, Buck asked if they could speak in private. Detective Higgs escorted Buck to an interview room and advised him of his Miranda rights by reading them to him from a card. 9 This was the first time in the course of the investigation that Buck was given Miranda warnings. Detective Higgs asked Buck if he understood his rights and wanted to answer some questions. Buck responded yes to both questions. He then denied any involvement in Baroody’s death and asked to speak to the investigating detectives. Detective Higgs returned Buck to the processing area.
Detective John Elliott took over processing Buck. He took Buck to an interview room, read him his Miranda rights, and asked him if he understood those rights. Buck said yes and further stated that he knew he had “the right to remain silent.” Detective Bean joined the interview. Buck agreed to speak with the detectives and claimed that he had initially confessed to killing Baroody because “Detective Piazza had hounded him.” Detective Elliott asked Buck if Detective Piazza had threatened him or otherwise treated him unfairly. Buck responded that “he was treated fairly, and that during the interview he knew he was there voluntarily.” Detective Elliott then said, “There’s a lot of other things here other than your statement alone to Detective Piazza. There’s physical evidence and a lot of other things here that indicate that you committed this.” At that point, Buck “put his head down and said, ‘I told the truth.’ ” 10
Detective Elliott then asked Buck whether the details of the demonstration he had given Detective Minor earlier that day were accurate. Buck replied, “yes.” Detective Bean asked Buck whether “he had taken his medications.” Buck responded that he had not taken his medications on February 26 and February 27, 2005. During the interview, Buck asked to take his medications on “several occasions,” but the detectives did not halt the interview to retrieve the medications. Detective Bean further asked whether Buck had told his parents that he had killed Baroody. Buck responded that he had told his parents initially that he did not kill Baroody but later told them that he in fact had done so.
On April 12, 2005, Buck moved to suppress the statements he made to the police in his first interview on March 2, at the station house and during the drive to and from, on the ground that they were obtained by custodial interrogation, but without
Miranda
warnings. He further moved to suppress the statement he made to the police in his second interview that day, after he was arrested, at the detention center, on the ground that, although he was given
Miranda
warnings, his statement was elicited in violation of the principles in
Missouri v. Seibert,
At a suppression hearing on October 19, 2006, the State called Detectives Minor, Piazza, Higgs, and Elliott to testify. The defense did not call any witnesses.
Defense counsel pressed Detective Piazza as to why he had not read Buck his Miranda rights at the outset of or at some time during the interview at the station house. The following colloquy ensued:
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Why did you not read [Buck] his Miranda rights [before or during the initial interview], sir?
WITNESS OFFICER PIAZZA: He came voluntarily.
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Okay. Was that a procedure that had been discussed among the members of the Sheriffs Department on how to conduct interviews in general?
WITNESS OFFICER PIAZZA: I don’t know how that came about. It’s just one of the ... one of the ways we do it, either in custody or voluntary.
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Okay. And, so one of the ways is to, as you’ve already talked about, tell someone that they’re not under arrest; bring them down; interview them without the benefit of Miranda; bring them home; and then arrest him with a warrant. That’s the procedure you follow?
WITNESS OFFICER PIAZZA: It has happened before.
In response to a similar line of questioning as to whether it was standard practice of the Sheriffs Office to allow a confessed killer to “wander free on the streets of Charles County,” Detective Minor said, “We’ve done it in the past.”
The court reserved decision at the close of the hearing and offered counsel the opportunity to submit memoranda of law, which they did. Thereafter, at the outset of the first day of trial, the court denied the motion to suppress. The court ruled that Buck had not been “in custody” during the station house interview, and therefore did not need to be read his Miranda rights. Specifically, the court stated:
I find that Mr. Buck was not in custody; that these officers would not have arrested Mr. Buck if he had begged them to do so under these circumstances. He has no right to be arrested. I do find [the police] took care, almost textbook care, to ensure that he was not in custody....
Having so ruled, the court did not reach the question whether the holding in Missouri v. Seibert applied to exclude Buck’s post-arrest, warned confession. The court also found that Buck’s statements to the police were freely and voluntarily made.
On appeal, Buck first argues that his statements during the initial, unwarned, interview with Detectives Minor and Piazza were the product of custodial interrogation, but without the benefit of
Miranda
warnings, and therefore were inadmissible. Second, Buck argues that the process by which he was subjected to custodial interrogation without
Miranda
warnings, released from custody, and then arrested minutes later was a deliberate two-step police strategy carried out to render ineffective the
Miranda
warnings he then was given before the second interview, and hence was prohibited by
Missouri v. Seibert, supra.
Therefore, his
post-Miranda
warnings state
ments also were not admissible. Independent of those grounds for suppression, Buck also argues that his statements were involuntary because they
(A)
Admissibility of Unwarned Statements— Miranda “In Custody” Issue
In
Miranda v. Arizona,
Whether a person is “in custody” for
Miranda
purposes is an objective inquiry that is to be made based upon the totality of the circumstances.
Stansbury v. California,
In
Owens v. State,
A significant body of law has developed around the questions of what constitutes “custody” and “interrogation” for Fifth Amendment purposes. The Miranda Court defined “custodial interrogation” as “questioning initiated by the law enforcement officers after a person has been taken into custody or otherwise deprived of his freedom of action in any significant way.”384 U.S. at 444 ,86 S.Ct. 1602 . “Custody,” though typically associated with formal arrest or incarceration ..., is not always so clearly a delineated concept. The Supreme Court declared in California v. Beheler that “the ultimate inquiry is simply whether there is a ‘formal arrest or restraint on freedom of movement’ of the degree associated with a formal arrest.”463 U.S. 1121 , 1125,103 S.Ct. 3517 ,77 L.Ed.2d 1275 (1983) (per curiam) (quoting Mathiason,429 U.S. at 495 ,97 S.Ct. 711 ) (emphasis added). In fact, a person is considered “in custody” when “a reasonable person [would] have felt he or she was not at liberty to terminate the interrogation and leave.” Thompson v. Keohane,516 U.S. 99 , 112,116 S.Ct. 457 ,133 L.Ed.2d 383 (1995); see also Yarborough v. Alvarado,541 U.S. 652 , 662,124 S.Ct. 2140 ,158 L.Ed.2d 938 (2004); accord [State v.] Rucker, 374 Md. [199], 209, 821 A.2d 439 [(2003)]; Whitfield v. State,287 Md. 124 , 141,411 A.2d 415 (1980).
^ H« Hi Hi
The question of whether a suspect is “in custody” is determined objectively, to the exclusion of the subjective intent of law enforcement, in light of the totality of the circumstances of the situation. [Yarborough,]
when and where [the interrogation] occurred, how long it lasted, how many police were present, what the officers and defendant said and did, the presence of actual physical restraint on the defendant or things equivalent to actual restraint such as drawn weapons or a guard stationed at the door, and whether the defendant was being questioned as a suspect or a witness. Facts pertaining to events before the interrogation are also relevant, especially how the defendant got to the place of questioning[,] whether he came completely on his own, in response to a police request or escorted by police officers. Finally, what happened after the interrogation whether the defendant left freely, was detained or arrested may assist the court in determining whether the defendant, as a reasonable person, would have felt free to break off the questioning.
(i)
Buck maintains that his mental illness, which was known to the investigating officers through their communications with his mother, was a factor that should have been considered by the court in deciding whether he was “in custody” and, had it been considered, would have militated strongly in favor of a finding that indeed he was in custody. The court erred, he argues, by not considering his mental illness in reaching its ultimate “not in custody” decision.
Buck’s assertion that the circuit court should have considered his mental illness in deciding the issue of custody, and should have concluded that a person in his situation, with his mental illness, would have believed he was not free to leave, is not supported by Supreme Court precedent.
In
Yarborough v. Alvarado, supra,
Alvarado, just short of his 18th birthday, and a friend, Paul Soto, were mingling among a large group of teenagers in a shopping mall parking lot when Soto, who was armed with a handgun, decided to steal a truck. Alvarado agreed to help. Soto approached the driver of the truck, demanding money and the keys to the truck. When the truck driver refused, Soto shot and killed him. Alvarado helped hide the murder weapon.
About a month after the murder, the lead detective on the case “left word” at Alvarado’s house, and with his mother at work, saying the police wanted to speak to him. During a lunch break on a day soon thereafter, Alvarado’s parents drove him to the police station to be interviewed. Alvarado asked for his parents to be able to sit in on the interview, but his request was denied. He was taken to a small interview room.
Questioning started at about 12:30 p.m. The interview, which was recorded, was about two hours long. Alvarado was not advised of his Miranda rights. Only the lead detective and Alvarado were present in the room. The detective asked Alvarado to recount the events of the night of the shooting. Alvarado said he had been drinking alcohol at a party at a friend’s house; and that a few hours later, a part of the group went home and the rest, including him, walked to the mall to use the pay telephones. At first, he ended the story there. When pressed, he eventually acknowledged being present when another person, whom he later admitted was Soto, tried to highjack a truck; that he knew Soto was armed but did not expect him to kill anyone; and that, after the shooting, he helped Soto discard the murder weapon. When the interview was almost over, the detective asked Alvarado if he needed a break. He said no. The detective then returned Alvarado to the lobby, where his parents were waiting. His father drove him home.
A few months later, Alvarado and Soto were charged with first degree murder and attempted robbery. Alvarado moved to suppress his statements to the lead detective on Miranda grounds. In an evidentiary hearing, he agreed that his conversation with the detective was “pretty friendly” and that he “did not ‘feel coerced or threatened in any way’ ” during the interview.
The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals disagreed. It held that the state court had erred by not taking into account Alvarado's “youth and inexperience when evaluating whether a reasonable person in his position would have felt free to leave,” and that “the effect of [Alvarado’s] age and inexperience was so substantial that it turned the interview into a custodial interrogation.”
Id.
at 659-60,
The Supreme Court reversed the Ninth Circuit. It rejected the argument that a defendant’s particular characteristics (in
that case young age and inexperience with the law) must be factored into the decision whether he was “in custody,” under the rule of
Miranda,
when he was interrogated. Emphasizing that its “more recent cases instruct that custody must be determined
Two discrete inquiries are essential to the determination [of custody]: first, what were the circumstances surrounding the interrogation; and second, given those circumstances, would a reasonable person have felt he or she was at liberty to terminate the interrogation and leave. Once the scene is set and the players’ lines and actions are reconstructed, the court must apply an objective test to resolve the ultimate inquiry: was there a formal arrest or restraint on freedom of movement of the degree associated with a formal arrest.
The Ninth Circuit had framed the “objective” custody issue in the case as what a “reasonable 17-year-old, with no prior history of arrest or police interviews,” would perceive.
The holding in
Yarborough
cuts strongly against Buck’s argument that, in deciding whether he was “in custody,” within the meaning of that phrase in
Miranda
jurisprudence, during the initial unwarned interrogation, the circuit court should have taken into account his mental illness, asking, in effect, whether a reasonable mentally ill person in Buck’s position would have felt free to terminate the interrogation and leave. To be sure, the interrogating officers knew that, according to Mrs. Buck, Buck had been suffering “severe depression” for several years and had been prescribed medications for that condition. As we shall discuss,
infra,
that factor is one of many relevant to whether Buck’s confessions were voluntary. Under Supreme Court case law, however, notwithstanding that Buck had been diagnosed with and was being treated for depression, the
Miranda
custody issue before the circuit court remained whether a
(ii)
Buck’s more general
Miranda
“in custody” argument is that, when considered in light of the factors relevant to the
question whether custody exists, the facts in the suppression hearing record cannot reasonably yield the conclusion that he was
not
“in custody” when he made his initial unwarned statements to the police. In other words, applying a strictly objective test, as mandated by the Supreme Court, on the facts as established at the suppression hearing, it is unreasonable to conclude that a reasonable person in his position would have felt free to terminate the interrogation and leave; therefore, he was “in custody” during the initial, unwarned interrogation. In advancing this argument, Buck places most reliance upon
Bond v. State,
Bond is readily distinguishable. There, witnesses saw Bond crash his vehicle into two cars, causing damage, and then leave. The police were called and from information gathered at the scene determined that Bond lived at a particular address in a trailer park. Three uniformed and armed officers went to the trailer and were let in by Bond’s 11 year old nephew, who was the only occupant of the trailer other than Bond. Bond was in his bedroom, undressed and in bed. The three officers entered the bedroom and stood in between the bed and the door. Bond was awake. The officers questioned him about the hit and run incident. They did not give him Miranda warnings or tell him he did not have to speak with them or could tell them to leave. At the end of the interrogation, the officers told Bond they were not placing him under arrest right then and there because, if they did so, there would be no adult to care for the 11 year old.
On appeal after conviction, this Court held that Bond was “in custody,” for Miranda purposes, when he was questioned in his bedroom:
We must determine, from an objective standpoint, and keeping in mind the underlying purpose of the Miranda decision, whether there was a coercive aspect to the circumstances in which [Bond] was questioned, so as to constitute custodial interrogation. We conclude that the factors relevant to this analysis point strongly in favor of [Bond’s] being in custody when he was questioned by [the officer] in the bedroom of his trailer home.
The interrogation ... took place late at night in [Bond’s] bedroom, with [Bond] in bed and partially clothed. To be sure, the questioning did not occur in the potentially coercive atmosphere of a police station, or of a strange and unfamiliar location. It ran to the other extreme, however. Whether [Bond] was awake or asleep when the officers entered his bedroom, the highly private location of the interrogation, the late hour, [Bond’s] state of undress, the number of officers present, and the accusatory nature of the questioning were such that an ordinary person in the circumstances would be intimidated, and would not think he could end the encounter merely by telling the officers to leave.
The interrogation ... was the polar opposite of the questioning that accompanies a traffic stop, which is expected, takes place in a public or semipublic place, and is mutually understood to be brief. The ordinary person does not expect his friends or neighbors, let alone police officers, to appear in his bedroomlate at night. There is a world of difference between a person being questioned during normal daytime hours, at his dining room table, in a relaxed atmosphere (such as in Beckwith [v. United States, supra]), and a person being questioned late at night, in bed, undressed, by three officers blocking the bedroom door (as in this case). Moreover, unlike the routine traffic stop, which is a “known quantity” to most people, the unusual nature of the interrogation in this case was such that [Bond] would have had no way of gauging how long the questioning was going to continue. The atmosphere in which the interrogation in this case was conducted was one of pressure, accusation, and uncertainty that would lead a reasonable person to believe that silence was not an option.
Buck argues that, because Detective Piazza accompanied him to his bedroom when he got dressed, his case is analogous to Bond. We disagree. The detectives went to Buck’s house after already meeting and talking to him on the street the day before. It was mid-day and Buck let them in the house. Detective Piazza did not ask any questions of Buck as Buck was putting on clothes. He told Buck he was not under arrest and did not have to go to the station house with the officers for questioning. Other than the fact that a police officer was present in the defendant’s bedroom, with the defendant present, the circumstances in Bond have little in common with the circumstances in the case at bar.
In arguing that, under the objective totality of the circumstances test, Buck was not in custody, the State relies upon this Court’s opinions in
Minehan v. State,
In
Minehan,
in the course of investigating a string of robberies, the police developed Minehan as a suspect. Minehan also was the alleged victim of a supposed “robbery” of the florist store at which he worked. The police decided to question him about the supposed “robbery” as a means to pursue further questioning about the other robberies. After ascertaining Minehan’s work schedule, three officers in plainclothes appeared at the store at 8:30 a.m. one day and asked to speak with him at the police station about the florist store robbery. He agreed. The officers then “followed him around the shop as he completed his work and walked out with him.”
At the police station, the officers took Minehan to a room used for interviewing victims and witnesses. Another room, designated for suspects, was not used. Minehan sat at the head of a long table, with three officers facing him. The interview, which was taped, lasted one hour and 45 minutes, with a 20-minute cigarette break. Minehan started making incriminating remarks about a quarter of the way into the interview. He was not given Miranda warnings at any time. After he confessed, the officers obtained his consent to go to his house right then to collect evidence. When that effort was not fruitful, the officers drove Minehan back to the florist store, to his car, and let him go. They arrested him one week later.
[TJhere is rarely custody when the person questioned leaves the interrogation unencumbered, only to be arrested at a later time. See Bartram v. State,33 Md.App. 115 , 148-49,364 A.2d 1119 (1976) [aff'd,280 Md. 616 ,374 A.2d 1144 (1977)]; Cummings [v. State], 27 Md.App. [361,] 378-79,341 A.2d 294 [, cert. denied,276 Md. 740 (1975)]; see also United States v. Scully,415 F.2d 680 , 683-84 (2d Cir.1969) (holding that accused was not in custody when asked to go to the police station and left the station freely); United States v. Manglona,414 F.2d 642 , 644 (9th Cir.1969) (holding that accused was not in custody when told he was not under arrest and was free to leave, and did in fact freely leave the interview); State v. Patterson,146 N.C.App. 113 ,552 S.E.2d 246 , 252-54 (2001) (holding that accused was not in custody when asked to “give his side of the story” and then left the station unencumbered).
Minehan, supra,
After reasoning that all of the above factors weighed against “custody,” we noted as well that Minehan had said, at the outset of his interview, that he had come to the police station of his own free will; that the officers had told him at that point that he was free to leave and did not have to answer any questions; and that, before he confessed, he again was told that he was not under arrest and could leave without saying anything. After the confession, Minehan was told he was not under arrest and that the police probably would contact him in the future to “maybe discuss things here.”
Id.
at 443,
Finally, we commented as follows about the intentions of the police in bringing Minehan in for questioning:
We recognize that bringing Minehan to the police station to discuss the [florist store] robbery was clearly a subterfuge for extracting a confession from him. Furthermore, once the officers shifted the interview from the [florist store] robbery to Minehan’s alleged criminality, the pressure in the room increased, a change that was palpable from reading the transcripts and which was captured by Minehan’s anxious question, “What is happening to me?” With a slightly different set of facts, this police action would have jeopardized the admission of the entire confession: it was a risky enterprise. Given Minehan’s unencumbered departure and his statements onthe record, how ever, we uphold admission of the confession, after all.
Id.
In
Ashe v. State, supra,
After Ashe was charged, he moved to suppress the statements, on the ground that they were obtained by custodial interrogation, without Miranda warnings. Specifically, he argued that, when the police told him he was not under arrest and was free to leave, he thought that meant that he could leave after giving a statement. The suppression court found that he was told no such thing and that a reasonable person in his situation would not have thought that his freedom was restricted and that he could not end the interrogation and leave. This Court affirmed on that point.
Another case that bears some similarity to the case at bar is
Allen v. State,
One of the officers asked Allen if he would be willing to discuss the incident at the station house. The officer explained that Allen was not under arrest and was free to leave without discussing the incident. Allen agreed to accompany the officers. He sat in the front seat of the police car, restrained only by a seat belt. Upon arrival at the station house, he was taken to an interview room. At 10:55 a.m., one of the officers entered and repeated to Allen that he was not under arrest, was free to leave, and did not have to discuss the incident. Allen agreed to talk. He answered questions for two hours, in the course of which he confessed to stabbing the victim. During that time, he was given drinks and snacks, when he asked for them. The conversation between the officer and Allen was carried on in normal tones. The police took Allen’s bloody clothing and gave him a prison jumpsuit to wear.
After Allen confessed, he was asked to give a written statement, to which he agreed. The process that was followed was the same as what transpired in the case at bar: the officer typed out the
This Court reviewed the factors that are important in deciding whether a person is in custody, and concluded, “[p]ur
suant to the ‘reasonable person’ analysis ..., that the trial court was entitled to find from the evidence that [Allen] was not in custody during the [interview].”
[T]he Whitfield [v. State, supra,] Court suggested that events after a police interview, such as a formal arrest, may be relevant to the question of whether the suspect was actually in custody during a prior interview. In this regard, we are mindful that when the police transported [Allen] to his home, they already knew that they were going to arrest him as soon as possible. But, our focus concerns [Allen’s] state of mind during the interview. [The interrogating detective] testified that, when he first encountered Allen, he knew little about the circumstances of [the victim’s] death. In other words, [the detective] had not fixed on [Allen] as the culprit when the interview began. Rather, [Allen’s] statements during the interview led [the detective] to believe [Allen] murdered [the victim]. That the sheriffs decided to monitor [Allen] after they drove him to his parents’ house, because of what was learned during the interview, does not establish that a reasonable person would have perceived he was in custody while at the sheriffs office during the interview.
To be sure, there are aspects of the two main cases relied upon by the State, and Allen, that militate in favor of a legal finding that, considering the total circumstances, a reasonable person in Buck’s position would not have thought he was “in custody” when he was interrogated by the detectives as he was being driven to the police station, while at the police station, and on the drive home from the police station. Buck agreed to accompany the officers when they appeared at his house. He was told then, and later confirmed in his written statement that he had been told, he was not under arrest and was free to leave. He was not physically restrained by handcuffs or otherwise. The officers came to Buck’s house in mid-day, in plainclothes, and transported him to the station house in an unmarked car. After confessing, Buck was not arrested at the station house. During his later, warned, interview, he said he knew he had been at the station house voluntarily.
There are other factors within the total circumstances to be considered here that militate in favor of a legal finding that a reasonable person in Buck’s situation
would
have thought he was in custody from the time he was driven to the station
Buck knew, before he was questioned at the station house on March 2, 2005, that the police had targeted him as the murderer in the Baroody case. When the officers encountered Buck on the street, on March 1, 2005, the murder was discussed. In Buck’s presence, Detective Minor telephoned Detective Piazza and said, “I think we got him” — a clear reference to Buck’s being the person the officers thought had committed the murder. During the interrogation at the station house the next day, Buck reminded Detective Minor of that, and said he had taken those words to mean that the officers thought he had killed Baroody. Soon thereafter, Detective Minor asked Buck “how it felt to kill that man,” and Buck proceeded to confess to the murder.
Just as a defendant’s subjective belief as to whether he is in custody does not control whether, under the objective standard, he
is
in custody, neither does a police officer’s subjective belief as to whether the defendant indeed committed the crime control the custody question. However, when an officer
articulates to the defendant
his belief that the defendant committed the crime, the custody inquiry is transformed, and becomes whether a reasonable person in the defendant’s
situation
— ie.,
having been told by the police that they think he committed the crime
— would think he was free to break off the interview and leave. In
Stansbury v. California, supra,
The Court in Stansbury explained its reasoning in Berkemer as follows:
[T]he officer “never communicated his intention to” the motorist during the relevant questioning. The lack of communication was crucial, for under Miranda, “[a] policeman’s unarticulated plan has no bearing on the question whether a suspect was ‘in custody’ at a particular time”; rather, “the only relevant inquiry is how a reasonable man in the suspect’s position would have understood his situation. ”
An officer’s knowledge or beliefs may bear upon the custody issue if they are conveyed, by word or deed, to the individual being questioned. Those beliefs are relevant only to the extent they would affect how a reasonable person in the position of the individual being questioned would gauge the breadth of his or- her “freedom of action. ” Even a clear statement from an officer that the person under interrogation is a prime suspect is not, in itself, dispositive of the custody issue, for some suspects are free to come and go until the police decide to make an arrest. The weight and pertinence of any communications regarding the officer’s degree of suspicion will depend upon the facts and circumstances of the particular case. In sum, an officer’s views concerning the nature of an interrogation, or beliefs concerning the potential culpability of the individual being questioned, may be one among manyfactors that bear upon the assessment whether that individual was in custody, but only if the officer’s views or beliefs were somehow manifested to the individual under interrogation and would have affected how a reasonable person in that position would perceive his or her freedom to leave....
Thus, in the case at bar, one factor in assessing the existence of custody vel non is that, when the officers were interrogating Buck on the drive to the station house, at the station house, and afterward, Buck knew, from what he had heard the officers say the day before, that they had targeted him as the murderer in the Baroody case.
Moreover, while at the station house, Buck gained additional knowledge, again from the police, that he was the focus of their investigation. During the interrogation, Detective Piazza told Buck that the police were in the process of executing a search warrant for Buck’s house to look for evidence, in particular, Baroody’s DNA. Unlike in
Allen,
in which the investigating officers had not identified the defendant as the culprit before interrogating him, and only focused their investigation on the defendant after he made statements that led them in that direction, here, the police were focused upon Buck as the killer before they took him in for questioning; he knew that because he heard them say it; and that knowledge was further confirmed for him when he was told that his house was in the process of being searched for physical evidence connecting him to the murder.
See also United States v. Jacobs,
In addition, Buck did not go to the station house to speak with the detectives completely on his own; nor did he contact them initially (as was the case in Allen). The detectives went to Buck’s house, unannounced, at a time when (based upon their discussion with Mrs. Buck the day before), they knew he would be alone in the house, with his parents at work. They asked him to go to the station house to talk, in a circumstance in which he would not be in a position to have a parent or anyone else drive him to the station house and in which he did not have any other means of transportation. The drive from Buck’s house to the station house in La Plata (and back) was 30 minutes. For six hours, Buck was never let out of a detective’s sight, from the time the detectives entered his house at 12:45 p.m., until he was returned to his house at approximately 6:50 p.m. He was escorted closely at all times.
Buck did not freely leave the station house on his own. Interrogation continued during the drive home, with Buck’s being asked to point out the location at which he stabbed Baroody. The detectives entered Buck’s house when they picked him up and when they dropped him off, never leaving him alone. Indeed, the questioning continued in front of Buck’s parents after he was taken home. Without question, it would have been most logical for the police to have ended the interrogation at the station house by placing Buck under arrest. He was driven home, only to be left with his
The interrogation at the station house lasted for about five hours, during which time Buck was not allowed to move about unescorted and was at all times being watched. He was escorted to and from his cigarette breaks by one sheriffs deputy on one occasion and by two sheriffs deputies on the other occasion. They monitored him during his two cigarette breaks and questioned him about his knowledge of the murder during the second such break. In the course of the five-hour interrogation, Buck was asked accusatory questions, was told his house was being searched for evidence in the Baroody murder, was asked to give a DNA sample, and gave such a sample. He was shown a photograph of his kitchen, taken during the search of his house, and was asked to identify the knife he used to stab Baroody. Buck clearly was being interrogated as a suspect, not a witness, and, as stated above, he knew that and the detectives knew he knew that.
As Professor Wayne LaFave has pointed out in his treatise, Criminal Procedure (3rd ed. 2007), when a suspect has been told by the police, clearly and unequivocally, that he is not under arrest and can leave at any time, but the contemporaneous conduct of the police has the effect of nullifying that advice, the advice “will not carry the day.” § 66(d) at 737 n. 57.
See United States v. Colonna,
The suppression judge found that, before his formal arrest, Buck was not “under arrest”; the detectives were not going to arrest him until after he had been driven home, even if he had asked to be arrested; Buck had no right to be arrested anytime before he actually was arrested; and the detectives took special care “to ensure that [Buck] was not in custody.” As the cases make plain, custody is either a formal arrest or a situation that is tantamount to a formal arrest.
Regardless of what the detectives said about Buck’s not being under arrest and being free to leave, and their efforts to create an interrogation that could be labeled non-custodial by the use of catchphrases and by going through the motions of taking Buck home before formally arresting him, any reasonable person in Buck’s situation before he was formally arrested would have thought he was in police custody and did not have the freedom to cut off his interactions with the detectives. Accordingly, Buck’s statements from the time he was driven to the police station on March 2 through the time six hours later when he was driven home and left (for 20 minutes) •with his parents, were made in response to
(B)
Admissibility of Warned Statements — Missouri v. Seibert
In the circuit court, Buck argued that the inculpatory statements he gave at the detention center after he was
arrested and advised of his
Miranda
rights should have been suppressed from evidence, under
Missouri v. Seibert, supra,
Seibert
is a plurality opinion of the Supreme Court in which the concurring opinion of Justice Kennedy “set[] forth the narrowest grounds on which the case [was] decided” and therefore “represents the holding of the Court.”
Cooper v. State,
We applied the
Seibert
plurality holding in
Cooper.
There, it was undisputed that the defendant was in custody and was interrogated by a detective for 90 minutes without being given
Miranda
warnings. During the initial phase of the interrogation, the detective attempted to elicit an admission from the defendant that he was present at the scene and arguing with a murder victim at the time of the homicide. After 90 minutes, the defendant confessed to being at the scene of the murder when it took place. The detective then stopped the defendant from saying anything more, and for the next 20 minutes, set up an audiotape system, gave the defendant
Miranda
For the Seibert holding to apply at all, there must be an unwarned custodial interrogation followed by a warned custodial interrogation, carried out deliberately as a two-step “question first” process to undermine the effectiveness of the Miranda warnings given at the beginning of the second interrogation. In the ease at bar, the trial court did not rule on the Seibert issue, having found that Buck was not in custody during his initial interrogation at the station house (and the drive to and from), before he was arrested. We have concluded, as explained, that Buck indeed was in custody during that time. On this record, however, it is plain that there was no evidence adduced at the suppression hearing that could have supported a reasonable finding that Buck’s post-arrest warned statements were elicited in violation of Seibert
Buck argues, in effect, that the temporal relationship of his unwarned and warned custodial interrogations, i.e., that the warned interrogation followed the unwarned one in a short period of time, is sufficient to establish a violation of the holding in Seibert. Additionally, without any citation to the record, Buck states that his pre-arrest statements “were obtained as part of a deliberate plan to frustrate [his] right to be advised of his Miranda warnings” and therefore his post-arrest statements, made within an hour thereafter, were inadmissible under Seibert. Also without any citation to the record, Buck asserts that “the Charles County Sheriffs Department employed a plan which was calculated to produce the coercive effect and impact of custodial interrogation without having to risk informing the appellant of his rights under Miranda.”
There is no record evidence that shows that the officers in this case employed a deliberate two-step “question first” policy, of the sort condemned in Seibert and Cooper. As we have explained, the initial interrogation of Buck took place at the station house, with the primary questioners being Detective Piazza and, later, Detective Minor. Once Buck confessed orally to Detective Minor, he was asked to give a written statement, which he did. For the reasons we have explained, Buck was in custody throughout that period. He was not given Miranda warnings at any time — including after his oral confession and before he made his written statement. In other words, there was no single interrogation broken into two phases, unwarned and then warned, which is the hallmark of the “question first” strategy. After Buck had been taken home and the arrest warrant was quickly obtained and served on him, he was transported to the detention center, not back to the station house.
Detective Higgs, who had not been involved in the questioning at the station house, arrested Buck and transported him to the detention center. At the detention center, while being processed, Buck asked Detective Higgs if he could speak to him. Thus, to the extent that questioning that first took place at the station house was resumed at the detention center, the resumption was prompted by Buck, not by
(C)
Voluntariness of Statements
As mentioned above, the trial court also ruled that Buck’s statements to the police were voluntary. Buck challenges that ruling, arguing 1) that the statements made during the interrogation at the station house were induced by an improper promise, contrary to the holding of
Hillard v. State,
A circuit court’s decision as to whether a confession was given voluntarily “is a mixed question of law and fact” that we review
de novo. Knight v. State,
To be voluntary, and therefore admissible in evidence, a confession must satisfy the mandates of the federal constitution, the Maryland constitution and Declaration of Rights, and Maryland non-constitutional law.
Knight,
Upon a proper pretrial challenge, the State bears the burden of “ ‘showing affirmatively that [the defendant’s] inculpatory statement was freely and voluntarily made____’ ”
Winder, supra,
In cases where we are called upon to determine whether a confession has been made voluntarily, we generally look at the totality of the circumstances affecting the interrogation and confession. We look to all of the elements of the interrogation to determine whether a suspect’s confession was given to the police through the exercise of free will or was coerced through the use of improper means. On the non-exhaustive list of factors we consider are the length of the interrogation, the manner in which it was conducted, the number of police officers present throughout the interrogation, and the age, education and experience of the suspect. Maryland law requires that “no confession or other significantly incriminating remark allegedly made by an accused be used as evidence against him, unless it first be shown to be free of any coercive barnacles that may have attached by improper means to prevent the expression from being voluntary.”
Id.
at 307,
When a confession is “preceded or accompanied by threats or a promise of advantage,” however, those factors are “transcendent and decisive,” and the confession will be deemed involuntary “unless the State can establish that such threats or promises in no way induced [it].”
Williams v. State,
We will deem a confession to be involuntary, and therefore inadmissible, if 1) a police officer or an agent of the police force promises or implies to a suspect that he or she will be given special consideration from a prosecuting authority or some other form of assistance in exchange for the suspect’s confession, and 2) the suspect makes a confession in apparent reliance on the police officer’s statement.
The first prong of the
“Hillard
test” is objective. “We determine whether the police or a State agent made a threat, promise, or inducement.”
Winder, supra,
“An improper promise or inducement occurs when ‘an accused is told, or it is implied, that making an inculpatory statement will be to his advantage, in that he will be given help or some special consideration.’ ”
Id.
(quoting
Winder, supra,
Mere exhortations to tell the truth and appeals to a suspect’s inner conscience, in and of themselves, have been held not to be improper promises.
See Ball v. State,
“The second prong of the
Hillard
test triggers a causation analysis to determine whether there was a nexus between the promise or inducement and the accused’s confession.”
Winder, supra,
Returning to the case at bar, Buck contends that Detective Piazza’s “promise” that, if he came to the station house to discuss the Baroody murder, he would not be arrested that day (March 2) was an improper promise of a benefit that induced his confessions. We already have held that Buck’s statements during his station house interview (and the ride to and from the station house) were made during custodial interrogation, without
Miranda
warnings, and therefore are not admissible into evidence. Because, unlike statements
made in violation of the rule in
Miranda,
an involuntary statement may not be used against a defendant for impeachment, as that use would violate his due process rights,
see Mincey v. Arizona,
The trial judge found that the words spoken by Detective Piazza to Buck, that he would not be arrested that day if he came to the station house to give a statement, were not a promise of special treatment or leniency, within the meaning of the Hillard holding. We agree. As Detective Piazza’s uncontroverted testimony made clear, he was not offering a quid pro quo — that in exchange for speaking, Buck would not be arrested that day. Rather, he was explaining that Buck’s coming to the station house to speak would not mean, necessarily, that he would be arrested that day. Indeed, the words were not treated by Detective Piazza or by Buck as a promise, as Buck in fact was arrested later that same day, without protest that he had been promised otherwise. The first prong of the Hillard test was not met. Moreover, the statements that Buck gave after he was arrested could not possibly have been made in response to this so-called promise, as he already had been arrested by the time he made them.
Nor were Buck’s statements to the police involuntary under the totality of the circumstances test described above.
See Winder, supra,
Even when a suspect is experiencing mental impairment from drugs or alcohol, that “does not
per se
render [his] confession involuntary.”
Hof v. State,
In this case, the evidence showed that the interrogating officers knew, from Buck’s mother, that Buck had been diagnosed with depression, that he was taking several medications, and that he had been acting strangely and erratically. The evidence did not show, however, that Buck’s mental state at the time of his interrogations was such that he did not know or understand what he was saying. Indeed, the evidence was to the contrary. Buck raised with Detective Minor, several hours into the interview at the station house, that the detective had told Detective Piazza on the' telephone, the day before, that he (Buck) was the person they thought had committed the murder. He was able to precisely recount the events of the previous four days. He described in detail his motivations in taking the kitchen knife on his walk (“I was angry. I wasn’t planning on killing anyone. I just thought if anyone came, I would stab him.”), his reason for choosing Baroody (“easy target”), and his actions seeking to hide any evidence of the murder (cleaning the knife and washing the blood off his shoes). Buck was cognizant enough to engage in a detailed physical reenactment of the stabbing during a cigarette break, and to apologize for lying to Detective Piazza.
Similarly, in the subsequent post
-Miranda
interview with Detectives Elliott and Bean, while Buck had requested his medications and those medications were not immediately retrieved, there is no evidence that this lack of medication left Buck “so mentally impaired that he d[id] not know or understand what he [was saying].”
Hoey, supra,
These circumstances showed that Buck was in command of his faculties and fully understood the import of his statements admitting guilt. The court did not err in holding that Buck’s pre-Miranda and post-Miranda statements were voluntary. Thus, we reverse the suppression court’s decision to admit Buck’s pre-Miranda statements, but hold that the court did not err in admitting his post-Miranda statements.
II.
Evidentiary Sufficiency
Beyond the facts adduced at the suppression hearing, the only additional material fact elicited at trial regarding Buck’s guilt was that the police seized a kitchen knife from Buck’s house when they executed the search warrant and subsequent testing of the knife revealed the presence of DNA consistent with that of Baroody.
On November 30, 2006, ruling from the bench, the trial judge stated in pertinent part:
[Buck] is charged with first degree murder. And, the elements being [sic] that the conduct of [Buck] caused the death of the victim. I find the State proved that element beyond a reasonable doubt. The physical evidence, coupled with the autopsy report, proved that Mr. Baroody was murdered, and that his death was caused by a single stab wound to the back. The evidence proves, unequivocally, that [Buck] was the person who plunged the knife into Mr. Baroody, causing his death. Furthermore, there was no justification, excuse or mitigation.
The Court must find that the killing was willful, deliberate, and premeditated. Willful means that [Buck] actually intended to kill the victim. [Buck’s] statements to the police were that he did not intend to kill anyone. However, an inference may be made that one intends the ordinary and probable consequences of his behavior. Plunging a knife the size of the one used in this case into a vital area of the body indicates an intent to kill. Willful requires a specific purpose and design to kill. The action that was taken here establishes that.
Deliberate means that [Buck] was conscious of the intent to kill. His actions taken by removing the knife from his kitchen butcher block; sticking it in his pants; carrying it outside; walking in the neighborhood; coming up behind the victim; and plunging the knife into the victim’s back and his later recounting the event in detail indicates he was aware of this intent to kill.
Premeditated. I find that [Buck] premeditated this event. He thought about killing. And, there was enough time before the killing, though it may only have been brief, for him to consider the decision whether or not to kill. And, there was plenty of time to weigh the reasons for and against the choice. Clearly this action by [Buck] was premeditated. He waited until his parents left the house to take a deadly weapon, a large butcher knife from the house and leave the house. He planned that if he encountered a person he would stab them. He had ample time to consider the decision whether or not to kill Mr. Baroody. After he encountered him [and] Mr. Baroody was marked or vulnerable, ... he acted upon this impulse to kill.
On appeal, Buck contends the trial court erred in finding the evidence adduced sufficient
The State counters that the evidence presented was sufficient to allow the trial court to find beyond a reasonable doubt that Buck had formed the specific intent required for a conviction of first-degree murder.
In an action tried without a jury, the scope of our review is dictated by Rule 8-131 (c): we “will not set aside the judgment of the trial court on the evidence unless clearly erroneous, and will give due regard to the opportunity of the trial court to judge the credibility of the witnesses.”
See State v. Raines,
A conviction for murder in the first degree requires a finding that the defendant’s actions were “deliberate, premeditated, and willful.” Md.Code (1957, 2002 Repl.Vol., 2007 Cum.Supp.) § 2-201(a) of the Criminal Law Article (“CL”). To find willfulness, there must be evidence adduced at trial “that the defendant actually intended to kill the victim.”
Pinkney v. State,
In Maryland, it is well established that “under the proper circumstances an intent to kill may be inferred from the use of a deadly weapon directed at a vital part of the human body.”
Smallwood v. State,
In the case at bar, regarding the willfulness of Buck’s actions, the court found as follows:
[Buck’s] statements to the police were that he did not intend to kill anyone. However, an inference may be made that one intends the ordinary and probable consequences of his behavior. Plunging a knife the size of the one used in this case into a vital area of the body indicates an intent to kill. Willful requires a specific purpose and design to kill. The action that was taken here establishes that.
Buck offers no viable legal argument to support his assertion that no reasonable trier of fact could have inferred that he intended to kill Baroody under these circumstances. Contrary to Buck’s assertion, the trial court did not
presume
from his actions that he intended to kill Baroody.
See Thornton v. State,
III.
Trial Court’s Finding that Buck was Criminally Responsible
As mentioned previously, Buck pleaded not criminally responsible for his conduct by reason of a mental defect or disorder (“NCR”). Buck’s first witness on the issue of criminal responsibility was his father, John Buck. Mr. Buck recounted Buck’s psychiatric history dating back to an adolescence in which he experienced hallucinations, social isolation, limited mental abilities, and multiple hospitalizations. During the hospitalizations, Buck was diagnosed with major depression. Mr. Buck produced numerous medical reports and documents to support his testimony, including at least one report showing that Buck has an IQ of 74.
Mr. Buck further stated that Buck’s behavior in the period leading up to the Baroody homicide was strange and delusional. Yet, on cross-examination, Mr. Buck testified that, on the day of the homicide, Buck was not acting particularly strange. He ate dinner with the family that evening before the rest of the family members left at 7:00 p.m. for a sporting event. Immediately before the family left the house, Mr. Buck saw Buck lying on his bed, fully clothed. When Mr. Buck returned at 9:00 p.m., he again saw Buck lying on his bed, fully clothed.
Buck’s second witness, Carol Kleinman, M.D., was called as an expert in forensic psychiatry, to testify about Buck’s mental state. Dr. Kleinman reviewed Buck’s medical history and interviewed him for about two hours on July 2, 2005. She concluded that Buck suffered from “schizoaffective disorder depressive type,” “major depressive disorder,” and borderline intellectual functioning. She opined that Buck was “unable to continue functioning” as a normal human being. He would frequently “hear voices when no one is there ... or see visions ... [and] constantly feel that people are after [him].... ”
Dr. Kleinman further opined that, notwithstanding that Buck appreciated the criminality of stabbing Baroody, he “lack[ed] substantial capacity to conform
Angela Kim Lee, M.D., of Clifton T. Perkins Hospital, testified for the State as an expert in forensic psychiatry. Dr. Lee had reviewed Buck’s medical history and conducted five interviews with him, lasting a total of approximately ten hours. She agreed with Dr. Kleinman that Buck was suffering from “schizoaffective disorder depressed type,” but concluded that a “a diagnosis of borderline intellectual functioning could not be definitively made.” She also opined that Buck exhibited a number of “antisocial traits,” including repeated “fantasizing about harming other people and even killing other people.” Buck had told Dr. Lee that he had put these thoughts into action at least twice before in assaulting other neighbors.
Dr. Lee testified that Buck had given her two different accounts of his mental status on the day he killed Baroody. In the first version, he said that “hallucinations of mushroom men [told] him to kill and to stab” Baroody. In the second version, however, Buck said he had experienced a chronic hallucination of someone screaming in his ear, but acknowledged that this was not a “command hallucination” in which he was being ordered to do some act. In recounting this second version of his mental status on the day of the murder, Buck told Dr. Lee that he had taken the kitchen knife with him in order to hurt someone because he was angry and frustrated that his life was not “going anywhere.”
Dr. Lee concluded that Buck’s second version of the events was the most likely to have occurred because
[Buck’s] behavior [on the day of the murder] in my opinion was not disorganized. It was consistent with his original thoughts which began at least one or two weeks prior to the offense, again desire to harm someone related to a situation not psyehotically related. He took steps to carry out that desire to harm someone by taking the knife; concealing his identity; by doing it at night after his parents left; and then his behavior afterwards.... And then when the police questioned him. Very strategic in my view, directed ... goal directed behavior, especially focused on trying to avoid responsibility for what he had done.
While Buck may have “decompensated” into more severe episodes of mental illness at times both before and after Baroody’s killing, his account of his behavior on the day of the killing, as well as his post-homicide behavior, led Dr. Lee to conclude that, on the day of the murder, he “did not lack substantial capacity either to appreciate or conform his conduct to the requirements of the law.”
To rebut Dr. Lee’s testimony, Buck called Dr. Christopher Lange, also a psychiatrist. Dr. Lange had worked with Dr. Lee as an intern and had interviewed and evaluated Buck. Dr. Lange testified that Dr. Lee told him that Buck’s case was “close” and so she was going to hold a “case conference” to present it to a group of forensic psychiatrists at the hospital. According to Dr. Lange, at the conference, half of the psychiatrists thought Buck was criminally responsible and half did not. Dr. Lange further testified that Dr. Lee closely questioned him about his finding
On cross-examination, Dr. Lange admitted that, in the end, he wrote a report opining that Buck indeed was criminally responsible for Baroody’s killing. Although, at first, he doubted that Buck was “malingering” about the mushroom men voices telling him to kill Baroody, he ultimately concluded that Buck had invented that story.
From the bench, the court made the following findings of fact and legal ruling:
There is no dispute that [Buck] suffers from a mental disorder ... he needs care and treatment. He suffers from schizoaffective disorder. That this illness has severely affected his life. He is not able to take care of himself. He is not able to live independently. He has not been able to hold a job----
However, the presence of a mental disorder does not, by itself, mean that a person lack[s] criminal responsibility. A person is not criminally responsible only if, as a result of the mental disorder, he lacks a substantial capacity to appreciate the criminality of his conduct, or to conform his conduct to the requirements of the law.
In this case, [Buck] clearly understood and appreciated the criminality of his conduct....
* * * *
To lack substantial capacity means to lack the power or ability to a material or substantial degree. In this case, the Court would have to find [that it] is more likely so than not that the mental disorder caused [Buck] to lack substantial capacity to be able to conform his conduct to the requirements of the law.
The court went on to recount the testimonies of Mr. Buck and Dr. Kleinman. The court took issue with Dr. Kleinman’s opinion that Buck’s mental disorder affected his ability to conform his conduct to the law, observing that Buck “was apparently rational enough to deny his involvement originally. He was rational enough to then change his story after the police say they had DNA evidence linking him to the crime.” The court further observed, “There was nothing told to Dr. Kleinman by [Buck] that indicate[d] he was hallucinating at the time of the crime. Simply that his nerves hurt, whatever that means.” Finally, the court noted that Dr. Kleinman had agreed, on cross-examination, that “anger, which [Buck] stated was the reason he took the knife out that evening, was not a mental disorder and could be a motive for his actions. And, [Dr. Kleinman] stated, however, that his anger was a part of his illness.”
After reviewing the testimonies of Drs. Lee and Lange, the court noted that, despite the “very negative relationship between the two doctors,” “they do agree that [Buck] was malingering and that he was exaggerating or inventing the command hallucinations that he described.” The court concluded that Buck “was criminally responsible at the time of this event.”
Buck contends the trial court “erred in failing to find [that he] was not criminally responsible for his conduct.” He urges this Court to reverse the trial court’s NCR ruling as “against the weight of the evidence.” Specifically, he maintains that the trial court erred by ignoring “the impact of Doctor Lange’s testimony” showing that Dr. Lee had improperly tried to “dictate a result” without “objective evaluation” in his case.
The State responds that a determination as to criminal responsibility is “committed
As discussed in section II of this opinion, our review of the trial court’s findings of fact is necessarily limited to whether such findings were “clearly erroneous.” In conducting this review, we “give due regard to the trial court’s opportunity to ‘judge the credibility of the witnesses.’ ”
White v. Pines Comty. Improvement Ass’n,
Md.Code (2001, 2007 Cum.Supp.), section 3-109 of the Criminal Procedure Article, (“CP”) provides in pertinent part:
(a) ... A defendant is not criminally responsible for criminal conduct if, at the time of that conduct, the defendant, because of a mental disorder or mental retardation, lacks substantial capacity to:
(1) appreciate the criminality of that conduct; or
(2) conform that conduct to the requirements of law.
The defendant bears the burden of proving, by a preponderance of the evidence, that he was not criminally responsible.
See
CP § 3-110(b) & (c);
Treece v. State,
In the case at bar, the trial court’s thorough recitation of the evidence related to the issue of criminal responsibility demonstrates that the court considered all of that evidence and credited the testimony of Dr. Lee over that of Dr. Kleinman. The court acknowledged Dr. Kleinman’s testimony regarding the general state of Buck’s mental health and his mental capabilities, but then focused on Buck’s mental state at the time of the homicide, as CP section 3-109 requires. As the court found that, on the day of the homicide Buck was not delusional; he had eaten dinner with his family immediately before the homicide; and he had the presence of mind to lie about his acts to the police and then to give the police a detailed description of his actions. The court credited the testimony of Dr. Lee that Buck was acting out of anger and not at the command of imaginary voices.
Further, contrary to Buck’s current assertion, the court did take into account the testimony of Dr. Lange. The court noted in particular that, although Dr. Lange and Dr. Lee disagreed professionally on a number of issues surrounding Buck’s diagnosis, both ultimately agreed that Buck had “mal ingered.” about the supposed command hallucinations on the day of the murder, and that he was criminally responsible for his actions on that day. We have reviewed the entire record in this case and conclude that these findings were not clearly erroneous. 16
Notes
. As noted infra, all of the witnesses at the suppression hearing were law enforcement officers called by the State.
. All of the police officers involved in investigating this case were with the Charles County Sheriff's Office.
. The record does not reveal Sergeant Carlson's first name.
. The gas station in question is referred to at various times in the transcripts as a BP station or an Amoco station. For the sake of clarity, we shall call it a BP station.
. Mrs. Buck died on May 4, 2005, of a pulmonary embolism that developed after an ankle fracture.
. According to Detective Minor, Buck would not have been accompanied by an officer to the restroom. The record does not reveal whether he used the restroom, however.
. Detective Shankster's first name does not appear in the record.
. The record does not reveal whether Buck was given replacement clothing.
.
Miranda v. Arizona,
. It appears from the record that Detective Elliott did not specify for Buck the “physical evidence” and “other things” he was speaking of. At trial, the State introduced evidence that DNA found on the knife Buck indicated he had used to kill Baroody was consistent with Baroody’s DNA.
. The State does not argue harmless error in its brief. Any such argument would be without merit, however. “In Maryland, an error is harmless if 'a reviewing court, upon its own independent review of the record, is able to declare a belief, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the error in no way influenced the verdict.’ ”
Fields v. State,
. In one paragraph of his brief, without any legal citation, Buck argues that he was not properly Mirandized when he actually was given the Miranda warnings, because Detective Higgs quickly read the warn ings from a card. At the suppression hearing, Detective Higgs testified as to precisely the advice he gave when Mirandizing Buck, and it is clear from that testimony that all of the warnings that are supposed to be given under Miranda in fact were given. It is of no moment that Detective Higgs read those rights from a card.
. Of course, as discussed above, the dictates of Miranda also must be satisfied.
.
See also Taylor, supra,
.
See also Wiggins v. State,
. We do
not
affirm, however, the trial court's finding that Buck was criminally responsible. Because the admission of a confession is such an "integral part of the trial,” on reversal of the suppression court’s admission of a confession, the defendant is entitled to an entirely new-trial so that the court may consider all of the remaining evidence "as a composite whole before making the ultimate determination of whether the accused is guilty or innocent.”
Lodowski v. State,
