PEOPLE v ELLIOTT
Docket No. 144983
Supreme Court of Michigan
June 25, 2013
Argued March 6, 2013 (Calendar No. 9)
494 MICH 292
In an opinion by Justice MARKMAN, joined by Justices KELLY, ZAHRA, and VIVIANO, the Supreme Court held:
In Miranda, the United States Supreme Court held that the Fifth Amendment‘s prohibition against compelled self-incrimination requires that the accused be given a series of
Judgment of the Court of Appeals reversed; defendant‘s conviction and sentence reinstated.
Chief Justice YOUNG, concurring, agreed with the majority‘s decision to reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals and reinstate Elliott‘s conviction and sentence. Even if the parole officer‘s interrogation of Elliott was a custodial interrogation by a law enforcement officer, defendant waived any right to have counsel present during the interrogation. The parole officer testified at trial that Elliott had submitted a letter to the police indicating that he wanted to speak with them again and that defendant had reiterated that request when speaking with her. Thus, Elliott initiated further communication, exchanges, or conversations with the police, and the parole officer did not violate Elliott‘s Fifth Amendment rights.
Justice MCCORMACK, joined by Justice CAVANAGH, dissenting, asserted that the Court of Appeals correctly reversed Elliott‘s conviction and remanded for a new trial, although she agreed with the majority that the dispositive issue was whether Elliott was subjected to custodial interrogation, not the nature of the relationship between Elliott and the parole officer. Because Miranda applied to the initial questioning of defendant by the police and Elliott had requested counsel, Elliott could not be subjected to further custodial interrogation about the robbery until counsel had been made available to him or he initiated communication. The parole officer‘s questioning of Elliott violated his Fifth Amendment rights under Edwards v Arizona, 451 US 477 (1981), because the custodial environment established at the initial police interview never ceased and defendant did not initiate the conversation with the parole officer. Alternatively, Justice MCCORMACK asserted that the parole officer‘s questioning of Elliott constituted its own custodial interrogation for Miranda purposes. Justice MCCORMACK concluded that Elliott had not waived his Fifth Amendment right to counsel given that Elliott did not initiate the
Bill Schuette, Attorney General, John J. Bursch, Solicitor General, Henry C. Zavislak, Prosecuting Attorney, and Jerrold Schrotenboer, Chief Appellate Attorney, for the people.
Linda D. Ashford, P.C. (by Linda D. Ashford), for Samuel Lee Elliott.
Amicus Curiae:
Bill Schuette, Attorney General, John J. Bursch, Solicitor General, Richard A. Bandstra, Chief Legal Counsel, and B. Eric Restuccia, Deputy Solicitor General, for the Department of the Attorney General.
MARKMAN, J. We granted leave to appeal to consider whether the trial court erred by admitting defendant‘s confession to a parole officer. The Court of Appeals held that the admission of defendant‘s confession violated Miranda v Arizona, 384 US 436; 86 S Ct 1602; 16 L Ed 2d 694 (1966), and Edwards v Arizona, 451 US 477; 101 S Ct 1880; 68 L Ed 2d 378 (1981), because Evans was a “law enforcement officer” for purposes of Miranda. We respectfully disagree because this is not a sufficient condition for the application of these decisions. Even if every parole officer constitutes a “law enforcement officer,” neither an accused‘s right under Miranda to be given a series of warnings nor an accused‘s right under Edwards to have counsel present apply absent “custodial interrogation” by the officer. Because defendant was not subjected to “custodial interrogation” by the parole officer as that term has come to be understood under Miranda and its progeny, neither defendant‘s Miranda nor defendant‘s Edwards rights were violated,
I. FACTS AND HISTORY
In 2006, defendant was convicted of unarmed robbery in violation of
On June 17, 2010, defendant was taken into custody by police pursuant to a warrant for failing to report, and the next day, his parole officer, Jason Golightly, served defendant with a notice of parole violation pertaining to that failure. On the same day, after advising defendant of his Miranda rights, detectives of the Jackson Police Department questioned defendant concerning a robbery that had occurred at approximately 4:00 a.m. on June 16, 2010, at a Jackson gas station. After voluntarily answering several questions, defendant requested an attorney. The police then discontinued the interrogation.
On June 21, 2010, while defendant was still incarcerated, his parole officer was on vacation, so another officer, Cheryl Evans, went to the jail to serve defendant with an amended notice of parole violation that identified three additional parole violations, one of which related to the June 16 robbery.2 Evans testified as follows regarding what occurred at the jail:
Q. And what, exactly does [“serve him parole violation charges and get his statement“] mean? What do you do? What‘s the process when that happens?
A. When a person is served with a parole violation charge, when we determine they—or we believe they have
violated a condition of their parole, we have charges made up. They‘re on a piece of paper.
We then go and meet with the person. We serve them the charges, which means I say “Count I,” “Count II” or, for him, it was Count—it was an additional count, so it was Count III, Count IV, Count V. And then I review it with him. I ask him for a statement. We talk a little bit. And then he decides whether he signs the bottom—not saying he‘s guilty—just signs that he received the charges.
Then he‘s offered a preliminary parole violation hearing, which is a probable cause hearing. And, again, he waived that, but waiving that does not admit he‘s guilty. It‘s just that he‘s waiving the preliminary hearing.
Q. So, did you do all this with the Defendant?
A. Yes.
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Q. And did he give you a statement?
A. Yes, he did.
Q. Did one of the charges have to do with the robbery at the Admiral gas station?
A. Yes.
Q. Did he give you a statement as to those charges?
A. Yes.
Q. And what did he say?
A. We talked generally about everything that was going on and he said that he‘d been having a rough time. He said that he was living with his cousin, Laurie Brooks, who has a couple of kids, and that he felt—he wasn‘t able to get a job and hold a job—and he felt that he was putting a lot of financial stresses on her. And he also said, you know, he, himself, got a little stressed about it and was having a lot of trouble adjusting and he slipped and started using his cocaine again.
And he said he went into the Admiral gas station. He told me that he walked in there to the clerk, asked the clerk
for some cigarettes. The clerk turned around to get cigarettes. As the clerk turned around—he actually showed me what he did—he leaned forward like this onto the counter and told the guy in a low voice to—told him to give him the money and he wouldn‘t get hurt, and then he said the guy gave him the money and he left.
Relevant here, the meeting between Evans and defendant took place in the jail library and lasted approximately 15 to 25 minutes. Evans did not inform defendant of his Miranda rights or tell defendant that he was not required to speak to her absent a lawyer being present. According to Evans, during the meeting, defendant told her that he had submitted a letter indicating that he wished to talk to the police again, and at the end of the meeting, defendant asked Evans to convey to the police that he wished to speak to them.
Defendant was eventually charged with armed robbery for the gas station incident, and he was tried before a jury. At the beginning of trial, defendant moved to suppress Evans‘s testimony regarding defendant‘s confession, arguing that it was improperly obtained because defendant had not been informed of his Miranda rights and because defendant had previously requested counsel. After conducting a hearing, the trial court determined that Evans had not been acting in concert with law enforcement officials and that Evans was not herself a law enforcement officer obligated to give Miranda warnings. Accordingly, the court denied defendant‘s motion and admitted Evans‘s testimony regarding defendant‘s confession. The jury convicted defendant of armed robbery, and he was sentenced as a fourth-offense habitual offender to a prison term of 15-30 years.
Defendant appealed, arguing that the trial court had erred when it denied his motion to suppress Evans‘s testimony regarding his confession and that the error
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
“We review a trial court‘s factual findings in a ruling on a motion to suppress for clear error. To the extent that a trial court‘s ruling on a motion to suppress
III. ANALYSIS
In Miranda, the United States Supreme Court held that the Fifth Amendment‘s prohibition against compelled self-incrimination requires that the accused be given a series of warnings before being subjected to “custodial interrogation.”4 Miranda, 384 US at 444 (“Prior to any questioning, the person must be warned that he has a right to remain silent, that any statement he does make may be used as evidence against him, and that he has a right to the presence of an attorney, either retained or appointed.“). The right to have counsel present during custodial interrogation is a corollary of the right against compelled self-incrimination, because the presence of counsel at custodial interrogation is one way in which to “insure that statements made in the government-established atmosphere are not the product of compulsion.” Id. at 466; see also id. at 470. If the custodial interrogation is not preceded by an adequate warning, statements made during the custodial interrogation may not be introduced into evidence at the accused‘s criminal trial. Id. at 444-445.
There is no dispute that defendant invoked his right to have counsel present during custodial interrogation when he was questioned on June 18 by Jackson police detectives about the gas station robbery and that the invocation triggered certain safeguards pursuant to Edwards, 451 US at 484-485. In Edwards, the United States Supreme Court created “additional safeguards” for when the accused invokes his right to have counsel present during custodial interrogation:
[W]hen an accused has invoked his right to have counsel present during custodial interrogation, a valid waiver of that right cannot be established by showing only that he responded to further police-initiated custodial interrogation even if he has been advised of his rights.... [H]aving expressed his desire to deal with the police only through counsel, [he] is not subject to further interrogation by the authorities until counsel has been made available to him, unless the accused himself initiates further communication, exchanges, or conversations with the police. [Edwards, 451 US at 484-485.]
Edwards concerns only the manner in which the accused, after invoking his right to have counsel present
The pertinent question in this case is not, as the Court of Appeals believed it to be, “whether Evans was
A. “CUSTODIAL INTERROGATION”
In Miranda, the United States Supreme Court defined “custodial interrogation” as “questioning initiated by law enforcement officers after a person has been taken into custody or otherwise deprived of his freedom of action in any significant way.” Id. Custodial interrogation occurs “during ‘incommunicado interrogation of individuals in a police-dominated atmosphere.‘” Illinois v Perkins, 496 US 292, 296; 110 S Ct 2394; 110 L Ed 2d 243 (1990), quoting Miranda, 384 US at 445. “That atmosphere is said to generate ‘inherently compelling pressures which work to undermine the individual‘s will to resist and to compel him to speak where he would not otherwise do so freely.‘” Perkins, 496 US at 296, quoting Miranda, 384 US at 467. “Fidelity to the doctrine announced in Miranda requires that it be enforced... only in those types of situations in which the concerns that powered the decision are implicated.” Perkins, 496 US at 296, quoting Berkemer v McCarty, 468 US 420, 437; 104 S Ct 3138; 82 L Ed 2d 317 (1984).
Where, as here, a parolee is incarcerated for an alleged parole violation, “custodial” means more than
the meeting with the police should necessarily be thought to carry over to the meeting with the parole officer. The only relevant question under Edwards is whether the meeting with the parole officer did or did not constitute custodial interrogation, and we believe that it did not.
In Fields, a Michigan prisoner, Randall Fields, was escorted from his prison cell by a corrections officer to a conference room in which he was questioned by two sheriff‘s deputies about criminal activity he had allegedly engaged in before coming to prison. Fields was questioned for between five and seven hours and was at no time given Miranda warnings or advised that he did not have to speak with the deputies. Fields was told more than once that he was free to leave and return to his cell. The deputies were armed, but Fields remained free of restraints. The conference room door was sometimes open and sometimes shut. Several times during the interview Fields stated that he no longer wanted to talk to the deputies, but he did not ask to go back to his cell. After Fields eventually confessed and the interview concluded, he had to wait an additional 20 minutes for an escort before returning to his cell well after the time when he generally went to bed.
As used in our Miranda case law, “custody” is a term of art that specifies circumstances that are thought generally to present a serious danger of coercion. In determining whether a person is in custody in this sense, the initial step is to ascertain whether, in light of “the objective circumstances of the interrogation,” a “reasonable person [would] have felt he or she was not at liberty to terminate the interrogation and leave.” And in order to determine how a suspect would have “gauge[d]” his “freedom of movement,” courts must examine “all of the circumstances surrounding the interrogation.” Relevant factors include the location of the questioning, its duration, statements made during the interview, the presence or absence of physical restraints during the questioning, and the release of the interviewee at the end of the questioning.
Determining whether an individual‘s freedom of movement was curtailed, however, is simply the first step in the analysis, not the last. Not all restraints on freedom of movement amount to custody for purposes of Miranda. We have “decline[d] to accord talismanic power” to the freedom-of-movement inquiry, and have instead asked the additional question whether the relevant environment presents the same inherently coercive pressures as the type of station house questioning at issue in Miranda. “Our cases make clear... that the freedom-of-movement test identifies only a necessary and not a sufficient condition for Miranda custody.”
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When a prisoner is questioned, the determination of custody should focus on all of the features of the interrogation. These include the language that is used in summoning the prisoner to the interview and the manner in which
the interrogation is conducted. [Fields, 565 US at __, __; 132 S Ct at 1189-1190, 1192 (citations omitted; alterations in original).]
The Court then held that questioning a person in prison does not generally “involve the shock that very often accompanies arrest,” that “when a prisoner is questioned, he knows that when the questioning ceases, he will remain under confinement,” that a prisoner “is unlikely to be lured into speaking by a longing for prompt release,” and that a prisoner knows his questioners “probably lack the authority to affect the duration of his sentence.” Id. at __; 132 S Ct at 1190-1191. The Court found it “important” that Fields “was told at the outset of the interrogation, and was reminded again thereafter, that he could leave and go back to his cell whenever he wanted.” Id. at __; 132 S Ct at 1193. However, it also noted that Fields “was not advised that he was free to decline to speak with the deputies.” Id. at __; 132 S Ct at 1193. Despite this failing, the Court held that Fields was not in custody for purposes of Miranda.
Pursuant to Fields, the first constitutional step is to determine “whether an individual‘s freedom of movement was curtailed....” Fields, 565 US at __; 132 S Ct at 1189. If so, the court should then ask “the additional question whether the relevant environment presents the same inherently coercive pressures as the type of station house questioning at issue in Miranda.” Id. at __; 132 S Ct at 1190. Thus, “[n]ot all restraints on freedom of movement amount to custody for purposes of Miranda.” Id. at __; 132 S Ct at 1189.
In the instant case, the meeting at issue took place in the jail library, it was of short duration (15 to 25 minutes), defendant was not physically restrained, and he was escorted to the library by a deputy, not by the parole officer. We note, as does the dissent, that one
Because he was in prison, respondent was not free to leave the conference room by himself and to make his own way through the facility to his cell. Instead, he was escorted to the conference room and, when he ultimately decided to end the interview, he had to wait about 20 minutes for a corrections officer to arrive and escort him to his cell. But he would have been subject to this same restraint even if he had been taken to the conference room for some reason other than police questioning; under no circumstances could he
have reasonably expected to be able to roam free. [Id. at __; 132 S Ct at 1193 (emphasis added).]
Moreover, much like the prisoner in Fields, a “reasonable person” in defendant‘s “position,” i.e., a parolee,8 would be aware that a parole officer is acting independently of the police who placed him in custody and has no control over the jail, its staff, or the individuals incarcerated there.9 Thus, on balance, we conclude that defendant‘s “freedom of movement” was not “curtailed” during the meeting at the jail library. Id. at __;
Even if defendant could show that his freedom of movement was somehow curtailed during the meeting, he still fails to explain how the meeting “present[ed] the same inherently coercive pressures as the type of station house questioning at issue in Miranda.” Fields, 565 US at __; 132 S Ct at 1189-1190 (“[W]hether an individual‘s freedom of movement was curtailed, however, is simply the first step in the analysis, not the last.... We have ‘decline[d] to accord talismanic power’ to the freedom-of-movement inquiry, and have instead asked the additional question whether the relevant environment presents the same inherently coercive pressures as the type of station house questioning at issue in Miranda.“) (citation omitted; second alteration in original). See also United States v Salyers, 160 F3d 1152, 1159 (CA 7, 1998) (“Custody ‘implies a situation in which the suspect knows he is speaking with a government agent and does not feel free to end the conversation; the essential element of a custodial interrogation is coercion.’ “), quoting United States v Martin, 63 F3d 1422, 1429 (CA 7, 1995) (emphasis added).
In this case, there is no evidence of coercion or any other manner of psychological intimidation. The parole
that defendant could not terminate the meeting. This situation does not represent custodial interrogation because defendant was not subjected to the type of coercive pressure against which Miranda was designed to guard. It is hardly the sort of incommunicado, police-dominated atmosphere involving custodial interrogation and the “overbearing” of the subject‘s will toward which Miranda was directed. Accordingly, in our judgment, there was no “custodial interrogation” as that term has come to be understood under Miranda and its progeny.
The dissent argues that Fields and Shatzer (another opinion that held that imprisonment alone is insufficient to create a custodial interrogation situation within the meaning of Miranda) are significantly distinguishable from the instant case because the defendants in those cases “were both serving sentences for unrelated crimes and living in the prison in which they were interviewed.” Post at 327. However, the dissent fails to recognize that a parolee who is incarcerated as a result of violating a condition of his parole is at that juncture no different than a prisoner who was never paroled in the first place, at least in the sense that both are imprisoned as a result of their underlying offenses. Defendant here was arrested by the police pursuant to a warrant that was issued because he had absconded
In viewing the totality of circumstances in Fields and in the present case, we believe that if there was no custodial interrogation in the Miranda sense in Fields, there was certainly no custodial interrogation in the instant case. In Fields, the defendant was questioned by armed police officers; here, defendant was questioned, if you can even call it that, by an unarmed parole officer. In Fields, the defendant was questioned by armed police officers who were trying to obtain a confession from the defendant; here, defendant met with an unarmed parole officer who was there for the principal purpose of serving defendant with an amended notice of parole violations. In Fields, the defendant was questioned by armed police officers for about 5 to 7 hours; here, defendant met with an unarmed parole officer for 15 to 25 minutes. In Fields, the armed police officers used a “sharp tone” and “profanity” while questioning the defendant for several hours; here, the unarmed
Moreover, the “inherently coercive” attributes of the parolee/parole officer relationship that the Court of Appeals relied on in reaching its conclusions are wholly inapplicable here because Evans was not defendant‘s supervising officer. The Court of Appeals explained:
The rationale for the suppression of statements elicited during a custodial interrogation by a law enforcement officer who does not adhere to Miranda is to “combat” the “inherently compelling pressures which work to undermine the individual‘s will to resist and to compel him to speak where he would not otherwise do so freely.” Miranda, 384 US at 467; see also People v Williams, 244 Mich App 533, 539; 624 NW2d 575 (2001). Such “inherently compelling pressures” exist in the relationship between a parolee and a parole officer. Indeed, this Court has recognized that “both parolees and probationers are under heavy psychological pressure to answer inquiries made by their supervising officers.” People v Faulkner, 90 Mich App 520, 524; 282 NW2d 377 (1979) (quotation marks and
citations omitted). This heavy psychological pressure exists because of the unique relationship between a parolee and parole officer. . . .
[T]he parolee-parole officer relationship often becomes a relationship of trust and confidence, as does the probationer-probation officer relationship addressed by Justice Marshall in Murphy. See Murphy, 465 US at 459-460 (Marshall, J., dissenting). As a parolee develops trust and begins to confide in a parole officer, the parole officer is more likely to elicit from the parolee incriminating statements that the parolee would likely not make to a police interrogator. [Elliott, 295 Mich App at 643.]
However, the Court of Appeals failed to recognize that the parole officer in the instant case was not defendant‘s parole officer and thus that they did not have the kind of “unique relationship” of “trust and confidence” that the Court of Appeals assumed that they did.14 Indeed, much, if not all, of the persuasive authority cited by the Court of Appeals seems inapposite when someone other than the defendant‘s supervising parole officer is conducting the meeting.15
B. MINNESOTA v MURPHY
In Minnesota v Murphy, 465 US 420; 104 S Ct 1136; 79 L Ed 2d 409 (1984), the respondent was given a suspended prison sentence and placed on probation. During the course of a meeting at his probation officer‘s office, the respondent, upon questioning by his probation officer, admitted that he had committed a rape and
The respondent moved to suppress the confession, but the trial court found that he had not been in custody at the time of the confession and that the confession was neither compelled nor involuntary despite the absence of Miranda warnings. The Minnesota Supreme Court reversed, holding that the respondent‘s
failure to claim the privilege when he was questioned was not fatal to his claim “[b]ecause of the compulsory nature of the meeting, because [the respondent] was under court order to respond truthfully to his agent‘s questions, and because the agent had substantial reason to believe that [the respondent‘s] answers were likely to be incriminating.” [Murphy, 465 US at 425, quoting State v Murphy, 324 NW2d 340, 344 (Minn, 1982) (first alteration in original).]
The United States Supreme Court reversed, holding that Miranda warnings are not necessary during the course of a routine probation interview, even when there is a connection between the probation officer-interviewer and the criminal investigative process. The Court rejected the proposition that the fact that the probation officer was consciously seeking incriminating evidence was relevant. Murphy, 465 US at 431 (“[T]he probation officer‘s knowledge and intent have no bearing on the outcome of this case.“). The Court also rejected the argument that the respondent might have reasonably expected that his statements to the probation officer would remain confidential:
[W]e cannot conclude that [the probation officer‘s] actions would have led a reasonable probationer to believe that his statements to her would remain confidential. A probationer cannot pretend ignorance of the fact that his probation officer “is a peace officer, and as such is allied, to a greater or lesser extent, with his fellow peace offic-
ers.” . . . The fact that [the respondent] apparently expressed no surprise on being informed that his statements would be made available to the police, moreover, strongly suggests that he was not misled by any expectation that his statements would remain confidential. [Id. at 432.]
Finally, the Court held that
the coercion inherent in custodial interrogation derives in large measure from an interrogator‘s insinuations that the interrogation will continue until a confession is obtained. Since [the respondent] was not physically restrained and could have left the office, any compulsion he might have felt from the possibility that terminating the meeting would have led to revocation of probation was not comparable to the pressure on a suspect who is painfully aware that he literally cannot escape a persistent custodial interrogator. [Id. at 433 (citation omitted).]16
Some courts have noted that a parole officer‘s questioning can be inherently more coercive than a law enforcement officer‘s questioning because the parole officer can put the parolee in prison more easily than can a police officer.17 However, whatever the merits of this analysis, this concern does not exist to the same extent once the accused is already in jail for a parole
C. ESTELLE v SMITH
Unlike the dissent, we disagree that Estelle v Smith, 451 US 454; 101 S Ct 1866; 68 L Ed 2d 359 (1981), is particularly “instructive” with regard to the question at issue here-- custody. Post at 333. Indeed, Estelle did not even address that issue. Instead, Estelle simply assumed that the respondent in that case was in custody for Miranda purposes because he “was in custody at the Dallas County Jail when the examination was ordered
Moreover, Estelle is also significantly distinguishable because it involved a court-ordered psychiatric examination. In Estelle, the Court held that the admission of a psychiatrist‘s testimony to establish an element of proof necessary to support the imposition of capital punishment violated the respondent‘s Fifth Amendment privilege against compelled self-incrimination. The psychiatrist‘s testimony related to a 90-minute pretrial competency examination that the psychiatrist had administered to the respondent.19 The Court em-
To meet its burden, the State used respondent‘s own statements, unwittingly made without an awareness that he was assisting the State‘s efforts to obtain the death penalty. In these distinct circumstances, the Court of Appeals correctly concluded that the Fifth Amendment privilege was implicated.
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A criminal defendant, who neither initiates a psychiatric evaluation nor attempts to introduce any psychiatric evidence, may not be compelled to respond to a psychiatrist if his statements can be used against him at a capital sentencing proceeding. . . .
. . . [U]nder Miranda v Arizona, we must conclude that, when faced while in custody with a court-ordered psychiatric inquiry, respondent‘s statements to Dr. Grigson were not “given freely and voluntarily without any compelling
influences” and, as such, could be used as the State did at the penalty phase only if respondent had been apprised of his rights and had knowingly decided to waive them. [Id. at 466, 468 (citation omitted; emphasis added).]
Unlike what occurred in Estelle, there was no court-ordered “compulsory examination” to which defendant was “compelled to respond” in this case. As a result, Estelle is wholly inapplicable.20
IV. CONCLUSION
Neither an accused‘s right under Miranda to be given a series of warnings nor an accused‘s right under Edwards to have counsel present apply absent custodial interrogation. Because defendant was not subjected to custodial interrogation by the parole officer, even if she was a law enforcement officer, neither of those rights were violated, and thus the trial court did not err by admitting defendant‘s confession. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals and reinstate defendant‘s conviction and sentence.
KELLY, ZAHRA and VIVIANO, JJ., concurred with MARKMAN, J.
Evans testified at trial that defendant had submitted a letter to police indicating that he wanted to talk with them again and that defendant had reiterated that request when talking with her.2 Because defendant had already sought to discuss the case with the police at the time Evans questioned him about the robbery, he “ini-tiate[d] further communication, exchanges, or conversations with the police.”3 Furthermore, this initiation of communication with Evans (even assuming for the purposes of Miranda that she was a law enforcement
officer) was knowing and intelligent.4 Initially, “defendant was properly advised of his rights and understood them . . . .”5 And his request at the end of the meeting that Evans reiterate to the police his desire to speak with them underscores that his waiver was knowing and intelligent. Moreover, as the majority rightly notes, this request “‘strongly suggests that he was not misled by any expectation that his statements [to her] would remain confidential.‘”6 Therefore, as Evans did not violate defendant‘s Fifth Amendment rights, I concur that his conviction should be affirmed.
MCCORMACK, J. (dissenting). I believe that the Court of Appeals correctly reversed defendant‘s conviction and remanded for a new trial. I would therefore affirm its judgment, although I agree with the majority that the dispositive issue is whether defendant was subject to custodial interrogation, not the nature of the relationship between the questioner and defendant. While the nature of the relationship between the questioner and the defendant may inform the determination of whether custodial interrogation occurred, it is not the lynchpin of the analysis. However, because I conclude in this case that defendant was subject to custodial interrogation by the parole officer, I disagree with the majority that his statements to her were admissible at trial. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
I. APPLICATION
Because the majority correctly sets forth much of the applicable law and determines that custodial interrogation is the decisive issue, I turn right to the case at hand: Did the circumstances surrounding parole officer Cheryl Evans‘s questioning of defendant amount to custodial interrogation, making his statements inadmissible at his later trial for the robbery because the interrogation violated Miranda v Arizona1 and Edwards v Arizona,2 in light of defendant‘s prior request for counsel? Unlike the majority, I conclude that the answer is yes.
A. DEFENDANT‘S INITIAL ARREST AND INTERROGATION
Like the parties, the majority does not dispute that the initial police interrogation concerning the robbery for which defendant was convicted constituted custodial interrogation to which Miranda applies.3 Nor can that conclusion be seriously questioned. Defendant was arrested and taken to jail, depriving him of his freedom of movement, and he was subjected to the precise “station house questioning” by police officers that was found to be inherently coercive in Miranda.4 The officers were thus obligated to, and did, give defendant Miranda warnings. Because Miranda applied, defendant‘s request for counsel triggered Edwards, and he could not
B. DEFENDANT WAS SUBJECT TO CUSTODIAL INTERROGATION WHEN EVANS QUESTIONED HIM
This leaves one issue: whether Evans‘s questioning of defendant three days later violated Edwards. I disagree with the majority that Evans‘s interview of defendant about the robbery can be viewed as noncustodial because custody, for purposes of Miranda and Edwards, was not broken between the initial interrogation by the police and Evans‘s subsequent questioning three days later.
1. EDWARDS, NOT FIELDS, CONTROLS HERE
I conclude that Evans‘s interview with defendant violated Edwards because the custodial environment established at the initial police interview never ceased, and defendant did not initiate this conversation. The United States Supreme Court in Maryland v Shatzer described the “paradigm Edwards case” as one in which “the suspect has been arrested for a particular crime and is held in uninterrupted pretrial custody while that crime is being actively investigated.”5 While defendant was technically arrested for violating his parole, the custodial interrogation that immediately followed his arrest indisputably involved the gas station robbery. Thus, that defendant was not initially arrested for the
These facts stand in stark contrast to those of the defendants in Shatzer and Fields, who were both serving sentences for unrelated crimes and living in the prison in which they were interviewed. In those cases, the defendants were interviewed in their “accustomed surroundings,” and when returned to the general prison population they simply resumed their “daily routine.”8 In this case, defendant did not live at the Jackson County Jail. The majority asserts that defendant “could not be considered anything other than a ‘prisoner,’ as were the defendants in Fields and Shatzer.”9 That argument is untenable given the similarities between this case and the paradigmatic Edwards case and the significant differences between this case and Shatzer and Fields. Defendant had not been placed back into his “normal” correctional facility environment, although he might legally have been a “prisoner” due to his parole status.10 However, and most
Further, the custodial environment established during the initial police interview was not broken merely because it was a parole officer rather than a police officer who later questioned defendant about the same subject. First, the relationship between the questioner and the offender is not decisive. Second, Evans questioned defendant about the very crime for which he was previously questioned by the police officers and had invoked his Fifth Amendment right to counsel. Accordingly, defendant‘s prior assertion of his right to counsel was still in effect when Evans interviewed him in the jail library. Because he did not initiate that discussion, it was in violation of Edwards.
Some of the facts relied on by the majority to support its position, in fact, further illustrate why this case is governed by Edwards and not Fields. For example, the majority notes that, as in Fields, defendant here was not free to leave the jail library by himself and roam free. But the significance of that fact in Fields was to demonstrate that the defendant‘s freedom of movement was curtailed all the time because he lived in a prison as a result of a prior conviction and sentence.11 In other
2. EVEN UNDER FIELDS, CUSTODIAL INTERROGATION OCCURRED
Even assuming that the majority is correct that defendant‘s ongoing Miranda/Edwards status was irrelevant and the Fields framework is applicable here instead, and I firmly believe it is not, a comparison between the facts of this case and Fields demonstrates that defendant was subjected to custodial interrogation. As in Fields, defendant did not invite the interview with Evans or consent to it in advance and he was not advised that he was free to decline to speak with Evans. Unlike in Fields, however, defendant in this case was not told that he was free to leave. Notably, the Fields majority cited the fact that the defendant in that case was told he was free to leave as the “[m]ost important” factor in its determination that the defendant was not in custody.13 The Court went to the trouble to repeat its emphasis on this factor as “especially” important at the
The majority believes that defendant‘s parolee status itself is relevant to the freedom of movement inquiry because it makes him more familiar with law enforcement and the type of environment in which he was interviewed. However, given that Miranda requires an analysis of whether “in light of ‘the objective circumstances of the interrogation,’ a ‘reasonable person [would] have felt he or she was not at liberty to terminate the interrogation and leave,’ ”15 defendant‘s subjective beliefs about his freedom of movement are irrelevant. As the United States Supreme Court has held, “a suspect‘s prior interrogation history with law enforcement has no role to play in the custody analysis because such experience could just as easily lead a reasonable person to feel free to walk away as to feel compelled to stay in place.”16 I see no distinction be-tween a defendant‘s prior history with law enforcement
Also in critical contrast to Fields, when defendant was questioned by Evans, he indisputably had asserted his Fifth Amendment right to counsel. Fields, who had been incarcerated for some time for some other unrelated offense and presumably had become acclimated with his incarceration, was not previously questioned about the subject of his interrogation, nor had he therefore previously asserted his Fifth Amendment right to counsel. Irrespective of the reason for defendant‘s initial arrest, defendant here had been continually incarcerated during the three days after the police had questioned him and he had invoked his right to counsel. The effect of this difference is hard to underestimate.
Because a reasonable person faced with these objective circumstances would not have felt at liberty to terminate the interrogation and leave, the first part of
Estelle v Smith is also instructive in determining whether Evans‘s interview with defendant constituted its own custodial interrogation.22 In that case, a psychiatrist interviewed the defendant in jail to evaluate the defendant‘s competency to stand trial. The United States Supreme Court held that the state could not introduce the defendant‘s statements or the psychiatrist‘s conclusions, which were based on those statements. The Court noted that “[t]he considerations calling for the accused to be warned prior to custodial interrogation apply with no less force to the pretrial psychiatric examination at issue here.”23 The Estelle Court further observed that the defendant was in custody when the examination was conducted, and noted that the fact that he was questioned by a psychiatrist designated by the trial court to conduct a neutral competency examination, rather than by a police officer, government informant, or prosecuting attorney, was
It is not disputed that defendant was in physical custody when Evans conducted the interview, that his interrogation was related to the robbery, or that he had previously asserted his Fifth Amendment right to counsel when questioned by police about the same subject. The role Evans played at the time of the interview is “immaterial” per Estelle.26 The significant issue about Evans‘s role is the one she played at defendant‘s trial when she was directly adversarial to defendant; she testified that he made statements admitting to the robbery at issue, which were presented as substantive evidence of defendant‘s guilt, and the prosecution referred to her as “probably the most crucial” witness. Just like in Estelle, regardless of her previous role in collecting defendant‘s statement in the first place, by providing such testimony, Evans‘s “role changed and became essentially like that of an agent of the State” recounting statements obtained in violation of Edwards.27
II. WAIVER
The Chief Justice joins the majority‘s result on the basis that defendant waived his Fifth Amendment right
III. CONCLUSION
I respectfully dissent from the majority‘s decision to reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals. I would hold that the custodial environment established during defendant‘s initial police interview as well as his invocation of his right to counsel remained in effect at the
CAVANAGH, J., concurred with MCCORMACK, J.
Notes
Edwards v Arizona, 451 US 477, 484-485; 101 S Ct 1880; 68 L Ed 2d 378 (1981). Even though defendant did not initiate the particular conversation with Evans, he nevertheless initiated communication with law enforcement officials and, in doing so, “evinced a willingness and a desire for a generalized discussion about the investigation . . . .” Oregon v Bradshaw, 462 US 1039, 1045-1046; 103 S Ct 2830; 77 L Ed 2d 405 (1983) (plurality opinion); accord id. at 1055 (Marshall, J., dissenting)The parties shall address whether, and, in light of Howes v Fields, 565 US __; 132 S Ct 1181; 182 L Ed 2d 17 (2012), under what custodial circumstances, a parole officer not acting in concert with police is required to provide the warnings prescribed by Miranda v Arizona, 384 US 436; 86 S Ct 1602; 16 L Ed 2d 694 (1966), before questioning an in-custody parolee who, during police questioning, has previously invoked his right to counsel under Edwards v Arizona, 451 US 477; 101 S Ct 1880; 68 L Ed 2d 378 (1981), about an offense giving rise to an alleged parole violation, if the parole officer‘s testimony concerning the parolee‘s responses to such questioning is to be admissible at the trial for that offense. [Elliott, 491 Mich 938.]
The fact that respondent‘s statements were uttered in the context of a psychiatric examination does not automatically remove them from the reach of the Fifth Amendment. The state trial judge, sua sponte, ordered a psychiatric evaluation of respondent for the limited, neutral purpose of determining his competency to stand trial, but the results of that inquiry were used by the State for a much broader objective that was plainly adverse to respondent. Consequently, the interview with Dr. Grigson cannot be characterized as a routine competency examination restricted to ensuring that respondent understood the charges against him and was capable of assisting in his defense. Indeed, if the application of Dr. Grigson‘s findings had been confined to serving that function, no Fifth Amendment issue would have arisen. [Estelle, 451 US at 465 (citation omitted).]The majority attaches great significance to the fact that Evans was not defendant‘s regular parole officer. However, it is significant that Evans testified that she had supervised defendant in the past, that she “couldn‘t even count the number of times” she had been in contact with him, and that she and defendant “have respect for each other for the way he‘s dealt with us in the past and the way that I‘ve dealt with him.” Thus, the majority‘s assertion that no “unique relationship” existed between the two of them is, at the very least, open to debate. Moreover, that Evans was not defendant‘s regular parole officer did not remove or dilute her power over him given that she was plainly a state actor responsible for overseeing his parole violation case at the time of the interview.
Because psychiatric examinations of the type at issue here are conducted after adversary proceedings have been instituted, we are not concerned in this case with the limited right to the appointment and presence of counsel recognized as a Fifth Amendment safeguard in Miranda. See Edwards v. Arizona, 451 U.S. 477, 101 S.Ct. 1880, 68 L.Ed.2d 378. Rather, the issue before us is whether a defendant‘s Sixth Amendment right to the assistance of counsel is abridged when the defendant is not given prior opportunity to consult with counsel about his participation in the psychiatric examination. [Estelle, 451 US at 470 n 14 (citation omitted).]Id. at ___; 132 S Ct at 1191.
