The defendant’s claim that his statements should have been suppressed based upon the delay in his arraignment is without merit. An unnecessary delay in an arraignment, without more, does not cause the accused’s right to counsel to attach automatically, and such a delay is only one factor to consider in assessing the voluntariness of a confession (see People v Beale,
Here, there is no. evidence that any of the statements made by the defendant were the result of coercive tactics. Rather, they were freely and voluntarily given after the defendant was apprised of and acknowledged his right to counsel. Additionally, the police were involved in investigating and interviewing two other suspects involved in the same homicide. Much of the delay in arraigning this defendant can be attributed to the thorough investigation in which the police engaged regarding those other suspects and the conflicting versions of events given by them. There is nothing in the record before the court to indicate that the police delayed the defendant’s arraignment in order to deprive him of his right to counsel or that the delay was strategically designed to allow the police to continue to
