delivered the Opinion of the Court.
This is an interlocutory appeal of the district court’s order suppressing statements of the defendant, Jeffrey Pease, pursuant to C.A.R. 4.1. The district court suppressed Pease’s statements from use at trial because the police deliberately faded to tell Pease that they had a warrant for his arrest. We reverse and hold that Pease’s waiver of Mi randa 1 rights was valid even though the police deliberately failed to tell Pease that there was a warrant for his arrest.
I.
In September 1994, Colorado Springs Police Detective Richard Hunt obtained information concerning Pease’s alleged sexual activity with a minor. Detective Hunt interviewed the minor and confirmed parts of the minor’s account. He investigated Pease’s prior criminal history, and prepared affidavits in support of an arrest warrant for Pease and a search warrant for his home. A judge signed both warrants on September 13, 1994.
Detective Hunt and several other officers went to Pease’s home the next morning. They explained why they had come and began executing the search warrant. They did not tell Pease they had a warrant for his arrest. Pease agreed to go to the police station for an interview, in order to tell his side of the story. He was allowed to get fully dressed and was transported, in an unmarked police car and without handcuffs, to the police station.
Pease was led through a number of security doors into an interview room in the station, where he was given Miranda warnings and signed a written Miranda waiver form. Pease acknowledged that he understood his right against self-incrimination and his right to be represented by an attorney. Detective Hunt then questioned Pease for several hours, until the detective suggested that Pease take a polygraph test.
Pease, a college-educated professional, had prior experience with the process of arrest and with the criminal justice system. He testified that the police were polite and cordial throughout the encounter. Pease stated that he never felt pressured or uncomfortable. He did not feel that he was under arrest until the end of the interview. The interview ended when Detective Hunt asked Pease to take the polygraph test. Pease responded that he would not submit to a polygraph without first consulting an attorney. Detective Hunt then produced the arrest warrant that he had obtained the day before and formally placed Pease under arrest.
Pease was not informed of the arrest warrant until the end of the interview. 2 He testified that if he had known that the police had already obtained a warrant for his arrest, he would not have signed the Miranda waiver and consented to the interview, but would have asked to see an attorney immediately.
The district court ruled from the bench that “it’s not acceptable for police to have an arrest warrant, then to seek information, to ask questions without informing that individual that he or she’s under arrest.” The court relied on language from
Commonwealth v. Jackson,
*1377 We think that where police pursue a course of conduct aimed at improperly convincing a defendant to relinquish the right to remain silent, the Commonwealth has neither “scrupulously honored” that right nor has it sustained its burden of showing a knowing, intelligent and voluntary waiver of that right.
Id.
The district court did not explicitly determine when Pease was placed in custody for Miranda purposes. However, the court found that the police were required to give Pease Miranda warnings before interviewing him at the station. Consistent with this conclusion, the court stated that ordinarily suspects are handcuffed while in transit to the police station and that the fact that Pease was not handcuffed would have given him the impression that he was not in custody during the ride to the station. The district court’s discussion of this ride suggests that the police intentionally wished to create a noncustodial atmosphere in order to encourage the subsequent Miranda waiver and interview at the police station.
Upon arriving at the police station Pease was taken through a number of “electrically controlled doors” to a “very secure area,” and could not have simply gotten up and walked out of the interview room. These facts strongly suggest a custodial environment and support the court’s conclusion. Thus, while the district court did not explicitly hold that Pease was in custody during the interview, we infer from its ruling that Miranda warnings were required before the interview that the court applied the correct standard and implicitly found that Pease was in custody once he was taken into the locked interview room. Also, the district court would not have reached the question of whether the failure to inform Pease of the arrest warrant prevented a knowing, intelligent, and voluntary waiver of Miranda rights had the court not implicitly found Pease was in custody.
The constitutional requirement to give a criminal suspect
Miranda
warnings applies when the suspect is subject to custodial interrogation.
See People v. LaFrankie,
II.
In order for a waiver of
Miranda
rights to be considered valid, the prosecution must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the waiver was knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily made.
See People v. May,
“voluntary in the sense that it was the product of a free and deliberate choice rather than intimidation, coercion, or deception. Second, the waiver must have been made with a full awareness, both of the nature of the right being abandoned and the consequences of the decision to abandon it.”
Id.
(quoting
People v. Hopkins,
The district court did not find, and the evidence of record does not suggest, that the Miranda waiver was not knowingly and intelligently made with awareness of the nature of the right being abandoned and the consequences of the decision to abandon that right. The district court held that Pease’s waiver was involuntary only because of Detective Hunt’s failure to inform Pease about the existence of the arrest warrant. Thus, the district court regarded the failure to tell Pease about the arrest warrant as a deception, and Pease’s waiver as the product of this deception. The court therefore based its suppression order on the prosecution’s failure to satisfy the voluntariness prong of the waiver test. We disagree with the district court’s conclusion that the failure of police to inform a suspect that they have obtained a warrant for his arrest is a deception which will render a waiver involuntary.
The prohibition on the use of deceptive tactics to obtain a waiver of constitutional rights stems from language in
Miranda
that a suspect may not be “threatened,
tricked,
or cajoled into a waiver” of constitutional rights.
Miranda v. Arizona,
In
Moran v. Burbine,
Nothing in any of our waiver decisions or in our understanding of the essential components of a valid waiver requires so incongruous a result. No doubt the additional information would have been useful to respondent; perhaps even it might have affected his decision to confess. But we have never read the Constitution to require that the police supply a suspect with a flow of information to help him calibrate his self-interest in deciding whether to speak or stand by his rights. Once it is determined that a suspect’s decision not to rely on his rights was uncoerced, that he at all times knew he could stand mute and request a lawyer, and that he was aware of the State’s intention to use his statements to secure a conviction, the analysis is complete and the waiver is valid as a matter of law.
Id.
at 422-23,
Similarly, in
Colorado v. Spring,
Finally, in
United States v. Washington,
Guided by this authority, other courts have consistently held that the failure of police to inform an individual that they have obtained a warrant for his arrest has no effect on the individual’s ability to voluntarily waive his
Miranda
rights.
See United States v. McVeigh,
Here, the sole reason the district court suppressed Pease’s statements was its conclusion that Detective Hunt was “not playing fairly” when he chose not to inform Pease that he had already obtained an arrest warrant before allowing Pease to waive his
Miranda
rights. The district court’s reliance on
Commonwealth v. Jackson, 371
Mass. 319,
The use of affirmative misrepresentations to break down a defendant’s will is fundamentally different from the mere failure of police to provide information which concerns only the wisdom and not the voluntariness of a defendant’s waiver decision.
See Spring,
Because the failure to inform Pease that an arrest warrant had been issued was the sole basis for suppression, we reverse. We hold that the deliberate failure to tell a defendant that there is a warrant for his arrest does not by itself make a custodial statement involuntary if the statement is made after a proper Miranda advisement and a voluntary, knowing, and intelligent waiver of rights.
III.
Accordingly, the district court’s order suppressing defendant’s statements is reversed, and this case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
.
Miranda v. Arizona,
. This was the only disputed fact. Detective Hunt testified that he informed Pease about the existence of the arrest warrant at the very beginning of the interview, before the defendant signed the Miranda waiver. The trial court specifically found to the contrary, consistent with the testimony of the defendant that the arrest warrant was not mentioned until the end of interview. We are, of course, bound by diis finding of fact which is supported by the record.
. Several states have declined to follow the holding in
Moran
on various state law grounds.
See, e.g., People v. Bender, 452
Mich. 594,
