delivered the opinion of the court:
Dеfendants, DeJuan Brown (Brown) and David Lowe (Lowe), were indicted for murder and armed violence in the circuit court of Cook County in connection with the death of Richard Earners on December 22, 1985. Prior to trial, Brown filed a motion to suppress statements and Lowe filed a motion to quash arrest and suppress statements. After an evidentiary hearing, the trial court granted both motions. The State appeals under Supreme Court Rule 604(a)(1) (107 Ill. 2d R. 604(a)(1)).
Chicago police officers John McHugh and James Ward arrested
At about 5 p.m., Officers McHugh and Ward interrogated Brown at Area 6 regarding Earners’ murder. During this interrogation, according to the police, Brown implicated Lowe in Earners’ murder. McHugh, Ward and Area 6 detective Dennis Gray interrogated Brown again approximately half an hour later. Brown was interrogated by an assistant State’s Attorney between 8 and 8:30 p.m. Thereafter, Brown’s mother, who had arrived аt Area 6 sometime earlier, was allowed to see him. After speaking with his mother, Brown declined to give a written statement.
The main issues raised by Brown’s motion to suppress and the evidence adduced thereon were: (1) whether he was advised of his Miranda rights, that he could be tried as an adult, or that he could have a parent, interested adult or youth officer present during questioning; (2) whether he asked to see his mother and, if so, whether the police told him he could not do so; (3) whether he was otherwise mentally or psychologically coerced or scared into giving a statement; and (4) whether his mother was misled as to his whereabouts on the afternoоn of his arrest to prevent her from being present during his questioning.
On the morning of December 28, 1985, McHugh and Ward attempted to interview Lowe, also a 16-year-old at the time, regarding Earners’ murder. They wanted to interview him because Brown had said that Lowe “was the individual with him who had knocked on the door,” apparently, when Earners was shot. When they found that Lowe was not home, the officers informed his mother that he might be a witness to a murder or involved in it and that they wanted to speak to him. The officers interviewed Lowe at his apartment on the afternoon of December 28. Sometime after the interview, the officers searched an apartment at 1157 Cleveland fоr the gun used in
McHugh and Ward next saw Lowe and his uncle at about 7:30 p.m. that day. The officers had either called Lowe’s uncle and askеd him to bring Lowe to Chicago and Orleans or had made prior arrangements with Lowe to meet them there. At any rate, the officers asked Lowe to get out of Wright’s car and told him that he “would have to” go with them to Area 6 for questioning. The police, who had not received any new information since speaking with Lowe earlier in the day, wanted to question him because they did not know whether he was only a witness to Earners’ murder or was actually involved in it. Wright told the officers he would be at Area 6 after picking up his girlfriend. Wright did not see Lowe again on December 28 although he did go to Area 6 and stayed there 60 to 90 minutes. Lowe gave an assistant State’s Attorney an оral statement at about 10:15 p.m. He gave &■ written statement around 12. Later on the morning of December 29, the police called Lowe’s mother and informed her he had been charged with murder.
The main issues raised by Lowe’s motion to quash arrest and to suppress his statements and the evidence adduced thereon were: (1) whether he had been under arrest when he went to Area 6 with McHugh and Ward; (2) if he had, whether they had probable cause to arrest him at that time; (3) whether he was advised of his Miranda rights, that he could be tried as an adult or that he could have a parent, interested adult, or youth officer present during questioning; (4) whether he was beaten or othеrwise mentally or psychologically coerced into making a statement; (5) whether he had asked to see his mother or his uncle during his interrogations and, if so, whether the police had told him he could not do so; and (6) whether James Wright had asked to see Lowe upon his arrival to Area 6 and, if he had, whether the police imprоperly prohibited him from doing so.
TRIAL COURT’S FINDINGS AND CONCLUSIONS
The trial court’s findings and conclusions in ruling upon both motions included the following.
It was undisputed that, after Brown arrived at Area 6 from Chicago Avenue at 1 p.m., he remained alone in an interview room for approximately four hours. Brown’s mother called Area 6 at 5 p.m. and was told he was being questioned аbout a murder. Upon her arrival at the violent crimes office of Area 6, she was told Brown was
Lowe had been arrested when he was placed in the police car at the gas station. When he was interviewed at his apartment, he had denied knowledge of or involvement in Earners’ murder. The police ignored Lowe’s mother’s request to be called if they wanted to talk to him further. The officers made no effort to contact his mother or to notify a youth officer. The police made an elaborate effort “tо maneuver” Lowe “into a street location *** to clean up their arrest and their subsequent actions of isolating him from adult members of his family until they had secured the admissions they sought.” The police also flagrantly violated section 3 — 2 of the Juvenile Court Act (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1985, ch. 37, par. 703 — 2), requiring an officer who takes a juvenile into custody tо make a reasonable attempt to notify a parent, and police department regulations concerning the interrogation of juveniles. It was thus patently clear that they “went far beyond prescribed limits in their efforts to secure a statement” from Lowe. From the totality of the circumstances, Lowe’s arrest wаs illegal and all of his statements thereafter were involuntary.
Opinion
On appeal, the State contends that Brown’s statements were voluntary where: (1) he confessed after his mother and a youth officer had been notified; (2) he was at Area 6 for only an hour before he confessed; and (3) he was not threatened or coerced in any way into making a statement. In asserting that the trial court erred in granting Brox ,’s motion, the State focuses on the allegedly erroneous finding that his mother was being “shunted” between Area 6 and Chicago Avenue.
A reviewing court cannot disturb a trial court’s ruling on a motion to suppress a defendant’s statement or confession unless it is agаinst the manifest weight of the evidence (People v. Davis (1983),
Even assuming the truth of the State’s asserted grounds for a finding that Brown’s statements were voluntary and that his mother was not “shunted” around to prevent her presence during his interrogations, we cannot reverse the trial court’s ruling on Brown’s motion. A reversal of the court’s ruling would also hаve to be based on the conclusion, either explicit or implicit, that the manifest weight of the evidence revealed that defendant was advised of his Miranda rights and knowingly and intelligently waived them. However, the manifest weight of the evidence does not reveal that to be the case.
At the suppression hearing on Deсember 23, 1985, Brown consistently denied that he was ever advised of his rights, including his Miranda rights. The State’s witnesses contended the opposite. However, this merely rendered the evidence on this issue in equilibrium. In this regard, the facts that more witnesses claimed that Brown had been advised of his rights than claimed he had not and that the State’s witnesses were рolice officers and a former assistant State’s Attorney were of no consequence. Obviously, such facts do not and cannot, alone, justify according more weight to the State’s evidence than to a defendant’s evidence.
In reaching our conclusion, we also rely on the undisputed fact that neither the police officers nor assistant State’s Attorney who interrogated Brown obtained his signature on a rights waiver form. Surely, it must be apparent to law enforcement officers that a defendant’s signature on such a form would be of great value in refuting a later claim that he had not knowingly and intelligently waived his Miranda rights before making an inculрatory statement.
By the same token, the failure to obtain a defendant’s signature on such a form carries great weight in support of that allegation. In this regard, we note that the State’s witnesses did not assert that, although he agreed to waive his rights, Brown simply refused to sign
In view of Brown’s denial that he had been advised of his Miranda rights and the fact that he did not sign a rights waiver form, the manifest weight of the evidence does not revеal that he knowingly and intelligently waived those rights. We must therefore affirm the grant of Brown’s motion to suppress.
The evidence with regard to whether Brown had asked to see his mother was also conflicting. As such, we cannot say that the manifest weight of the evidence reveals that Brown had not asked to see her. Neither does the manifest weight of the evidence reveal that Brown’s mother was allowed to see him as soon as it was reasonably practicable to do so. In relying upon this fact, we recognize that a juvenile does not have a per se right in Illinois to consult with a parent before questioning or to have the parent present during questioning. (In re S.D.S. (1982),
Brown’s mother testified that she arrived at Area 6 late in the evening, around 7 o’clock on December 23. It is a reasonable inference from the testimony of the State’s witnesses that they were not aware of her presence at Area 6 until they ended their interrogation of Brown at about 8:30 р.m. However, the fact that the assistant State’s Attorney and police officers who were questioning Brown did not know of his mother’s presence at Area 6 is insufficient to avoid the obligation to allow a parent to see his or her child where, as here, the parent has indicated an interest by her presence at the police station. Under such circumstances, the officers who know of the parent’s presence have an affirmative duty to inform those actually questioning a juvenile of the parent’s presence and request to see her child.
Under the totality of the circumstances surrounding the custodial interrogations of Brown, we believe the trial court’s grant of his motion to suppress was not against the manifest weight of the evidence.
The State next contends that the police had probable cause to arrest Lowe and that his statement was voluntary under all the facts and circumstances of his interrogation thereafter.
Even assuming, as the State asserts, that Lowe’s arrest was legal, i.e., accompanied by probable cause, and that we would therefore reverse the trial court’s ruling on his motion to quash arrest, we cannot reverse the trial court’s ruling on his motion to suppress unless we also find that the manifest weight of the evidence reveаls that his statements were otherwise voluntary. However, as with Brown’s statements, we do not find this to be the case.
At the suppression hearing, Lowe consistently denied having been advised of his Miranda rights after his arrest up to the time of his written statement. He also claimed that he asked about his uncle’s whereabouts but received no answеr from the police and that his request to call his mother was denied. Lowe further claimed that he was beaten and threatened into making a statement to the police and assistant State’s Attorney and that the police directed his answers to the attorney’s questions.
The State’s witnesses contradicted Lowe’s testimony in аll of these respects. Moreover, Lowe’s written statement reflected that he was not made any promises or threatened in exchange for the statement. Additionally, Lowe admitted being advised, at the time of his written statement, of his Miranda rights and that he could have his mother present during questioning. However, the effect of this lаtter fact is diminished by his testimony that he did not understand those rights and by the failure of the written statement to reflect that he was informed he could have his mother present during interrogation. In the final analysis, the contradictions in the evidence on these matters preclude a finding that the trial court’s ruling on Lowe’s motion to suppress was agаinst the manifest weight of all the evidence.
We find that the failure of the police to allow Lowe’s uncle to see him and to be present during his questioning, although he had
For all of the foregoing reasons, the order granting defendants’ motions to suppress are affirmed.
Affirmed.
RIZZI and WHITE, JJ., concur.
