Opinion
The appellant, Harriot Mier, was indicted for the intentional concealment and conversion of merchandise, valued in excess of $200, without having paid the purchase price, in violation of Code § 18.2-103. She moved to suppress as evidence inculpatory statements made by her to private security agents who had not advised her of her rights pursuant to
Miranda
v.
Arizona,
“On appeal, we review the evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, granting to it all reasonable inferences fairly deducible therefrom. The judgment of a trial court sitting without a jury is entitled to the same weight as a jury verdict and will not be set aside unless it appears from the evidence that the judgment is plainly wrong or without evidence to support it.”
Martin
v.
Commonwealth, 4
Va. App. 438, 443,
On December 10, 1989, Mark Powell, a security guard at Nordstrom department store at Tyson’s Corner, saw the appellant in the store pushing a baby in a stroller and carrying an appar *829 ently empty shopping bag. She was accompanied by Rosario Camancho and a small child. Powell saw the appellant select a sweater. As he moved to obtain a better view, the sweater disappeared. The appellant and Ms. Camancho moved to the Town Square department, where they were observed by Melissa Bridge and Kim Longest, two other security agents of Nordstrom. The appellant selected an item and entered a fitting room. Ms. Longest was able to see into the room and saw the appellant put items into the bottom of the shopping bag. The appellant and Ms. Camancho then moved to the Petite Focus department. There, the appellant picked up two black sweaters and entered a fitting room followed by Ms. Camancho. Looking through slots in the door, Ms. Bridge and Ms. Longest could see hands rolling up merchandise and concealing it in the shopping bag. After the appellant and Ms. Camancho left the dressing room, Ms. Bridge entered and determined that the two black sweaters which the appellant had taken into the room were not there.
The appellant and Ms. Camancho left the Petite Focus department without paying for any merchandise. They then left the store. Outside, they were stopped by Ms. Bridge, Ms. Longest and Powell, who identified themselves as security agents for Nordstrom and asked the appellant and Ms. Camancho to accompany them to the security office.
Inside Nordstrom’s security office, Ms. Bridge recovered from the shopping bag the two black sweaters from the Petite Focus department and a sweater from Men’s Sportswear. Powell asked the appellant why she did it. The appellant replied, “This is my first time. I will never do it again.” This statement, which appellant sought to suppress, was made prior to the arrival of Fairfax County police officers, who came on the scene and took custody of appellant and Ms. Camancho about fifteen to thirty minutes after their apprehension by Nordstrom’s security agents. At no time did the Nordstrom’s agents give to the appellant the advice required by Miranda as a predicate to custodial police interrogation.
The appellant’s statement to Nordstrom’s agents did not result from any coercion exerted upon her. Her statement was freely made in response to a question simply put, without the application or threat of force. The issue raised by this appeal is whether that question was put and the answer given under circumstances amounting to custodial police interrogation. The trial court found *830 that they were not. We agree.
Miranda
is directed toward police conduct.
City of Grand Rapids
v.
Impens,
Appellant has relied upon several cases holding that the Miranda requirement should be extended to investigations by nongovernmental agencies. However, those cases all involve special circumstances such that the non-governmental agents involved were deemed to be police officers.
In
People
v.
Elliott,
Here, there was, in the opinion of this court, coordinated private-public law enforcement involving the investigation of a crime incident. The parking lot investigation and response *831 here, by the hospital security officer, did accommodate police objectives. It should be contrasted with the traditional role of protecting hospital property or keeping order within the hospital, etc.
Id.
at 617,
In
People
v.
Glenn,
In
Tarnef v. State,
The Fifth Amendment guarantees that no person shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself. This proscription is not offended by the receipt into evidence of a confession freely and voluntarily given.
Miranda
does not alter this fundamental principle. It addresses a specific concern. Recognizing the intimidating and coercive influences which naturally flow from official detention and custodial police interrogation,
Miranda
requires, as a prerequisite to such interrogation, that prescribed advice be given to the accused for the specific purpose of ensuring that any statement made by him is made freely and voluntarily. The Fifth Amendment is satisfied if an accused is permitted “to remain silent unless he chooses to speak in the unfettered exercise of his own will, and to suffer no penalty ... for such silence.”
Estelle v. Smith,
The appellant’s confession did not spring from circumstances identified by Miranda. Her interrogation consisted of a single, simple question unaccompanied by force or threat. She was not under the intimidating influence of official custody or police con *832 frontation. Her answer, the subject confession, was freely and voluntarily given.
In
Wansley v. Commonwealth,
Suffice it to say, in rejecting this contention, that counsel overlook or brush aside the fact that Wansley’s spontaneous admission resulted from an unprompted question asked by his mother, not from questioning by [the probation officer] or the police or any other person. None of the Supreme Court cases cited by counsel, or any other Supreme Court case of which we are aware, holds that the Constitution precludes evidence of an admission made by a juvenile or adult under those circumstances.
Id.
at 471,
In
Williams v. Commonwealth,
But Miranda and Dean do not stand for the proposition that once the police have interrogated an unwarned subject, all statements thereafter made by him are inadmissible. Both decisions are limited to statements resulting from the compelling influences of police interrogation, and by police interrogation is meant “questioning initiated by law enforcement *833 officers.”384 U.S. at 444 .
Miranda specifically recognizes the admissibility of a statement if it is made “in the unfettered exercise of [the suspect’s] own will.”384 U.S. at 460 . And Dean recognizes the admissibility of a “statement given freely and voluntarily without any compelling influences.”209 Va. at 668 ,166 S.E.2d at 230 .
Id.
at 611,
Both Wansley and Williams confirm that Miranda's application is limited to interrogation by law enforcement personnel.
Nordstrom was authorized by law to employ security officers to protect its property and to detain apprehended shoplifting suspects briefly until police could be called.
See
Code §§ 18.2-105 and 18.2-105.1. The store’s policy was to prosecute suspects thus apprehended and delivered to police custody. The appellant argues that Nordstrom’s security agents should therefore be considered police officers. However, Ms. Bridge, Ms. Longest and Powell were private agents. Nordstrom, not the government, selected, employed and controlled them. Their duty was to serve Nordstrom and to protect its interests. They had no duty or authority with respect to the general enforcement of public order. While it was Nordstrom’s policy to invoke the protection of the law and the police and to vindicate its rights through public process, the duty of its agents did not necessarily require police involvement or criminal prosecution.
See F.B.C. Stores, Inc.
v.
Duncan,
*834 For the foregoing affirmed. reasons, the judgment of the trial court is
Affirmed.
Duff, J., and Moon, J., concurred.
Notes
Our decision is necessarily based upon the facts as disclosed in the record. We do not comment on whether, or under what circumstances, a private security agent cooperating with the police or working in conjunction with official law enforcement agencies might be required to give the Miranda warnings prior to questioning.
