OPINION OF THE COURT
Defendant appeals, by a grant of leave from a Judge of this Court, and raises one issue. The question is whether inculpatory statements relating to the murder indictment involved here, taken by the police from defendant after a waiver of and in the absence of counsel, should be suppressed. Defendant made the statements after arrest on a parole violation, and they were unrelated to a pending misdemeanor case against him as to which counsel had previously been assigned. County *498 Court suppressed the statements; the Appellate Division reversed, denied suppression and remitted for proceedings on the indictment.
We hold that suppression is not required. Defendant-appellant’s right to counsel is not violated
(People v Rogers,
On March 21, 1993, defendant was arrested and charged with criminal possession of a controlled substance in the seventh degree and resisting arrest, charges not at issue on this appeal. Defendant falsely identified himself and a warrant check on the name given revealed no outstanding warrants. While waiting to be processed on the misdemeanors, defendant volunteered information to the police pertaining to an unrelated homicide. Officers interviewed defendant, and he freely gave a statement containing significant information about the homicide.
The following day, defendant was arraigned in Syracuse City Court on the misdemeanors. Because he appeared without counsel, the court entered pleas of not guilty and recorded the assignment of counsel from the Hiscock Legal Aid Society under his alias name. Defendant was then released on his own recognizance.
A few days later, the police learned defendant’s true identity and he was arrested on a separate parole violation. After being advised of his Miranda rights, defendant waived his right to counsel and agreed again to discuss the homicide with the police. By this time, the interrogating officers were aware that defendant, under the given alias, had been assigned counsel in the pending misdemeanor case. During this concededly custodial interview — the one at issue on this appeal — defendant contradicted some of his earlier statement to the police about the homicide, but also made inculpatory statements. Based partly on these statements, defendant was then charged with two counts of murder in the second degree and other crimes associated with the homicide. This appeal relates solely to the inculpatory statements made in connection with this homicide indictment.
Following a Huntley hearing, Onondaga County Court granted defendant’s motion to suppress his statements based on its conclusion that defendant’s right to counsel was violated. The Appellate Division, Fourth Department, reversed and *499 denied suppression, holding that the defendant was not actually represented on any pending charge at the time he made the challenged statements.
The sum and substance of appellant’s argument is that
People v Rogers
(
In
People v Rogers (supra),
this Court held that "once an attorney has entered the proceeding, thereby signifying that the police should cease questioning, a defendant in custody may not be further interrogated in the absence of counsel”
(supra,
at 169).
People v Bartolomeo
(
The
Bartolomeo
right to counsel was properly characterized as "derivative” because the right piggy-backed solely on a defendant’s prior representation in unrelated proceedings; it did not hinge on or relate to the matter for which a defendant was then in custody and being questioned
(see, People v West,
Soon after the promulgation of the
Bartolomeo
extension, this Court found it necessary to start reining it in
(see, e.g., People v Bertolo,
In
People v Bing
(three separate cases decided under one rubric) as in
Bartolomeo,
the defendants sought suppression of their otherwise voluntarily offered statements given after they had received
Miranda
warnings and waived their right to counsel in the absence of counsel. We held that the unworkability and lack of doctrinal justification for the
Bartolomeo
rule proved the need for its abandonment
(People v Bing,
The defendant grasps at the express preservation of
Rogers
in
Bing
as the basis for asserting the continued existence of a derivative right to counsel. On that basis alone, he urges suppression. This argument is not supportable, because
Bing
unequivocally eliminates any right to counsel derived solely from a defendant’s representation in a prior unrelated proceeding
(People v Bing,
*501
Indeed,
People v Cawley
(
The facts of the instant case contain significant similarities and even produce an a fortiori application to those resolved in Cawley as part of the Bing analysis. Defendant here was released on his own recognizance after providing an alias and was later arrested for a parole violation unrelated to the pending drug charges. Defendant not only failed to assert any right to counsel, but freely and voluntarily waived all such rights.
Thus, the salient facts of this case fit readily within Bing’s control, and the statements made by the defendant should not be suppressed based on any surviving derivative right to counsel. The reason is simple. There is no such right after Bing, because there was none before Bartolomeo; Rogers, as a precedent within its own class of counsel cases, never was about a derivative right to counsel.
Importantly,
Rogers
establishes and still stands for the important protection and principle that once a defendant in custody on a particular matter is represented by or requests counsel, custodial interrogation about any subject, whether related or unrelated to the charge upon which representation is sought or obtained, must cease
(People v Rogers,
Defendant’s attempt to extend those important representational protections with another artificial derivative right to
*502
counsel, by making
People v Rogers
something it never was, is based on a serious misreading of
Bing.
Indeed,
Bing
carefully differentiated the holdings of
Bartolomeo
and
Rogers:
"In
People v Rogers (supra),
the right to counsel had been invoked on the
charges on which defendant was taken into custody and he and his counsel clearly asserted it.
* * * In
People v Bartolomeo (supra),
however, defendant was taken into custody for questioning on a new, unrelated charge. He was not represented on that charge and freely waived his right to counsel”
(People v Bing,
In sum, we hold that in a subsequent custodial interrogation about matters unrelated to the charge upon which a defendant was assigned counsel in a prior separate proceeding, the suspect is competent to waive the right to counsel in the absence of counsel as to such matters. Defendant did just that here, and the Appellate Division, therefore, correctly ruled that suppression should be denied and the matter should proceed on the indictment.
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed.
Chief Judge Kaye and Judges Simons, Titone, Smith, Levine and Ciparick concur.
Order affirmed.
