Opinion
Wе are asked in this case to extend the “good faith” exception to the Fourth Amendment’s exclusionary rule to salvage a confession obtained in violation of the Fifth Amendment. We decline.
Background
James Powell was at Yvonne Lane’s apartment when Appellant Val Lamar Smith (who is deaf) and four other men (“Howard,” “Vincent” and two others who remained nameless) arrived. Smith and Powell argued. Vincent handed a gun to Smith, who fired three shots at an unarmed Powell (killing him), then gave the gun back to Vincent and left the apartment.
Smith’s wallet was found at the scene and he was arrested. Through a sign language interpreter (Cheryl Fernandez), Smith was told he was being questioned about “the incident that happened, the shooting,” and was advised of his
Miranda
rights.
(Miranda
v.
Arizona
(1966)
Detective Fisk: “Keeping these rights in mind, do you wish to talk to me about this?”
Smith (through Fernandez): “/ don’t really. I prefer to go to court and see what happens. In. In the case. In the case. In the case? What I mean ... is if you sue me, or not sue me, but to have a ... a lawyer, because.” 1 (Italics added.)
Detective Fisk: “OK. And do I understand that he does not want to discuss this at all?”
Fernandez (for herself, not for Smith): “Wait! Wait! Slow down! Excuse me, I have to explain something. Please wait until I finish, because if not. The interpreter is talking right now. If you don’t wait until I finish then . . . it will change the meaning of what they are saying. OK? Go ahead.”
Detective Fisk: “Do I understand him correctly in that he doesn’t want to explain to us what happened?”
Smith (through Fernandez): “Oh! Oh, I get it! OK, yeah. I’ll go ahead and talk.”
Fernandez (for herself, not for Smith): “Excuse me the interpreter wants to say something. Can you please sign, аnd take your hands off me? And you know, I don’t know, but sign real clear, OK? OK.”
Detective Fisk: “Did I misunderstand at first that?”
Smith (through Fernandez): “Yes. Yeah, now I understand clearly. OK, let’s go ahead.”
Smith first told Detective Fisk that one of the other men had fought with Powell and shot him. After Detective Fisk said he knew Smith was the
A complaint was filed charging Smith with Powell’s murder. At Smith’s preliminary hearing, Yvonne Lane (who is also deaf) testified that Smith was the shooter but conceded on cross-examination that she had “mistakenly” told an investigator and at least one friend that Vincent was the shooter. Based on Lane’s testimony and Smith’s statements to the police, Smith was held to answer and an information was filed charging him with first degree murder (with аn armed principal enhancement allegation).
Smith moved to suppress his statements to the police. After a lengthy hearing, the trial court found that Smith understood his rights and unequivocally invoked them by requesting a lawyer — but that Detective Fisk’s further questions to clаrify Smith’s response were pursued in good faith and that, therefore, Smith’s statements should not be suppressed. Accordingly, the motion was denied. Smith then submitted the question of his guilt to the court on the transcript of the preliminary hearing and, pursuant to a negotiated disрosition, the use enhancement was stricken and he was convicted of second degree murder. Smith appeals.
Discussion
Smith contends the police officer’s good faith is immaterial in light of the trial court’s finding that Smith had unequivocally invoked his right to counsel. We agree.
I.
Sign language experts testified at the hearing to determine the admissibility of Smith’s statements. 2 They explained that there are several different types of sign language, that a single sign may have multiple meanings and that, conversely, a single word or conсept may be signed in various ways. They explained the need for specialized training in the legal field and the various problems encountered with minimally educated people and cross-cultural interpretation. Not surprisingly, the People’s exрerts opined that Fernandez’s interpretation at Smith’s interview was accurate, the defense experts that it was not.
II.
We reject the People’s suggestion that the trial court’s factual findings are not supported by substantial evidence.
(People
v.
Clair
(1992)
We also reject the People’s contention that Smith’s response, as interpreted by Fernandez, was sufficiently ambiguous to justify Detective Fisk’s further inquiry to determine whether Smith was, in fact, asserting his right tо
Accordingly, Smith’s assertion of his rights should have put an immediate end to the interview. As the Supreme Court explained in
Miranda
v.
Arizona, supra,
384 U.S. at pages 473-474 [
III.
The continuing validity of Miranda is not questioned in this case. Rather, the issue is whether the trial court was entitled to dilute the rule by applying the “good faith” exception developed in Fourth Amendment cases to this Fifth Amendment violation.
Otherwise admissible evidence, if obtained in violation of a defendant’s Fourth Amendment rights, is generally made inadmissible by the exclusionary rules adopted in
People
v.
Cahan
(1955)
B.
Similarly, statements otherwise admissible as admissions, if obtained in violation of a defendant’s
Miranda
rights, may not be used against him at a criminal trial.
(Oregon
v.
Elstad
(1985)
As noted above, the Fourth Amendment’s exclusionary rules are designed to deter police misconduct. In cоntrast, evidence obtained in violation of the Fifth Amendment rights protected by
Miranda
is excluded to ensure protection of the suspect’s right against compulsory self-incrimination.
(New York
v.
Quarles
(1984)
This fundamental difference in the theoretical underpinnings of the Fourth and Fifth Amendment exclusionary rules persuades against application of the “good faith” exception in Fifth Amendments cases. This is not a nоvel distinction. For example, although a suspect
cannot
waive his Fifth Amendment rights unless he has been told what those rights are
(Miranda
v.
Arizona, supra,
D.
For these reasons, the trial court’s finding that Smith had unequivocally invoked his Fifth Amendment rights is dispositive of Smith’s motion to suppress and it is immaterial whether Detective Fisk was acting in good faith when he pursued the matter further. It follows that the motion to suppress should have been granted and that the trial court’s denial of that motion was error. It also follows ineluctably, on the facts of this case and in light of the negotiated disposition, that the error was prejudicial.
(Chapman
v.
California
(1967)
Disposition
The judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded to the trial court with directions to grant Smith’s motion to suрpress and to set the case for trial.
Ortega, Acting P. J., and Masterson, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied February 16, 1995, and on February 27, 1995, the opinion was modified to read as printed above. Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied April 27, 1995.
Notes
There is no dispute about Smith’s first two statements (the portion emphasized in the text) but Fernandez later testified that Smith had not signed that he wanted “a lawyer, because” but rather that he wanted “a lawyer in court.”
The experts all listened to the audiotape or watched the videotape or both. All of them read the transcript of the audiotape. The defense expert, who is deaf and who testified through an interpreter, watched the videotape but obviously was unable to listen to the audiotape.
The trial court’s findings wеre supported not only by Dr. Fleischer’s testimony but also by (1) Fernandez’s admission that she had difficulty understanding Smith’s response to Detective Fisk’s first question and (2) the testimony of the People’s expert, Marcella Meyer, that Fernandez “had some problems” interpreting the interview.
At the hearing to determine the admissibility of Smith’s statements to the police, the only disputed fact was whether Smith had invoked his right to counsel. As noted in the text, Dr. Fleischer testified that he did so. For reasons we do not understand, however, the parties havе simply ignored the fact that, without any ambiguity at all, Smith clearly invoked his right to remain silent. Detective Fisk asked, “[D]o you wish to talk to me about this?” Smith answered: “/
don’t really. I prefer to go to court and see what happens."
(Italics added.) No more was required.
(People
v.
Pack
(1988)
For yet another example, evidencе obtained in violation of the Fourth Amendment which, in turn, discloses the existence of other evidence may be admissible if it is sufficiently attenuated from the fruit of the poisonous tree.
(Brown
v.
Illinois
(1975)
