In Dеcember of 2005, Orlando Perez was arrested for a murder committed in 1996. Because he expressed a limited understanding of English, his interview was conducted by an officer who was fluent in Spanish. After reading Perez his rights and establishing that he understood them, the officer obtained his signature on a written waiver form. During the course of the interview, Perez was shown a photograph of the victim, and the following oсcurred:
Officer: And this was one of your friends. Remember you have a son. Would you like your son to see you like this?
Perez: Mm, no, how, the other thing, in any moment the paper says I can stop the interrogаtory. Right? Or no?
Officer: But you understand? What I, you have to first hear what I am explaining to you. Okay? This is what is going to help. So you need to be intelligent.
Perez: Uh hum.
Officer: First, you should know what we are saying, for you to know, much later, when you talk to your lawyer, what can occur. Okay?
*197 Perez: Uh hum. (nods head yes)
The questioning continued, and Perez made an inculpatory admission.
Perez filed a pre-trial motion to suppress his statement, contending that it was inadmissible because he had asserted the right to remain silent, which was not honored by the officer. After conducting a hearing, the trial court denied the motion, finding, in relevant part, that
[t]here wаs no unequivocal request for counsel or invocation of defendant’s right to remain silent during police question-ing____Defendant’s statement: “I can stop the interrogatory. Right? Or no?” is clearly not an unequivocal request and is not an invocation of any Constitutional right.
The trial court certified its order for immediate review, and Perez applied for an interlocutory appeal. We grаnted the application, in order to determine whether, considering the officer’s lack of response to Perez’s reference to the constitutional right to remain silent, his statement is admissible.
“A person being subjected to custodial interrogation may at any time express his or her desire to remain silent and, thereby, end the interrogation. Any exercise of this right to silence must be ‘scrupulously honored.’ [Cit.]”
Green v. State,
Subsequently, howеver, the Supreme Court of the United States decided
Davis v. United States,
when a suspect makes an ambiguous or equivocal statement it will often be good police practice for the interviewing officers to clarify whether or not he actually wants an attorney. . . . Clarifying questions help protect the rights of the suspect by ensuring that he gets an attornеy if he wants one, and will minimize the chance of a confession being *198 suppressed due to subsequent judicial second-guessing as to the meaning of the suspect’s statement regarding counsel. But we dеcline to adopt a rule requiring officers to ask clarifying questions. If the suspect’s statement is not an unambiguous or unequivocal request for counsel, the officers have no obligation to stоp questioning him.
Some “federal courts have extended that [Davis] rationale to cases where persons have made assertions of the right to silence. [Cits.]” (Emphasis in original.) Green v. State, supra at 572 (2). Thus, the Eleventh Circuit no longer follows the “clarification only” rule of Christopher, so that now
[a] suspect must аrticulate his desire to cut off questioning with sufficient clarity that a reasonable police officer in the circumstances would understand the statement to be an assertion of the right to remаin silent. If the statement is ambiguous or equivocal, then the police have no duty to clarify the suspect’s intent, and they may proceed with the interrogation.
Coleman v. Singletary,
The decisions of the Eleventh Circuit arе not binding on this Court, but they are persuasive authority.
McKeen v. FDIC,
[T]he same rule should apply to a suspect’s ambiguous or equivocal references to the right to cut off questioning as to the right to counsel. [Cit.] Thе Supreme Court’s concern in Davis was to craft “a bright line that can be applied by officers in the real world of investigation and interrogation without unduly hampering the gathering of information.” [Cit.] The Court rejected a rule requiring that police cease *199 questioning a suspect after an ambiguous or equivocal invocation of his Miranda rights out of a fear that the “clarity and ease of application” of the bright line rule “would be lost.” [Cit.] Because this concern applies with equal force to the invocation of the right to remain silent, and because ... the same rule should apply in both contexts, we hold that the Davis rule applies to invocations of the right to remain silent.
Coleman v. Singletary,
supra. The Eleventh Circuit is not alone in reaching the conclusion that the “bright line” rationale of
Davis
also applies to instances of ambiguous reference to the right to remain silent. “[E]very circuit that has addressed the issue squarely has concluded that
Davis
applies to both components of
Miranda:
the right to counsel and the right to remain silent. [Cits.]”
Bui v. DiPaolo,
Based on this persuasive federal authority, “[w]e see no reason to apply a different rule to equivocal invocations of the right to cut off questioning.” Martin v. Wainwright, 770 F2d 918, 924 (II) (A) (11th Cir. 1985), modified on other grounds, 781 F2d 185 (11th Cir. 1986). If there is no basis for drawing a legal distinction between the right to remain silent and the right to counsel, it follows that a “clarification only’ rule for Fifth Amendment purposes
“would transform the Miranda safeguards into wholly irrational obstacles to legitimate police investigative activity,” [cit.] because it would needlessly prevent the police from questioning a suspect... even if the suspect did not wish to [remain silent].
Davis v. United States, supra at 460 (II). While clarification of an ambiguous reference to the constitutional right to remain silent may constitute good police practice, if the “clarification only” rule was a legal requirement, then
[p]olice officers would be forced tо make difficult judgment calls about whether the suspect in fact wants [to end the interrogation] even though he has not said so, with the threat of suppression if they guess wrong. We therefore hold that, aftеr a knowing and voluntary waiver of the Miranda rights, law enforcement officers may continue questioning until and unless the suspect clearly requests [that they cease to do so].
*200
Davis v. United States,
supra at 461 (II). See also
Jordan v. State,
The rеmaining issue for decision is whether Perez’s statement to the officer was an unequivocal invocation of his Fifth Amendment right to remain silent, such that the interrogation should have ceased. Resolution of that question depends on whether he articulated a
“desire to cut off questioning with sufficient clarity that a reasonable police officer in the circumstances would understand the stаtement to be an assertion of the right to remain silent.” ... [W] hate ver the proper definition of a “reasonable police officer” might be, that phrase must contemplate interrogators who are not actively seeking to interrupt and/or ignore the suspect’s assertion of rights.
Green v. State, supra at 573 (2), fn. 10. The officer who questioned Perez testified at the suppression hearing that, rather thаn construing Perez’s comment as an assertion of the right to remain silent, she considered it as simply a rhetorical statement which actually confirmed his understanding of the Fifth Amendment right about which he had already been advised and which he had previously waived. In relevant part, her testimony was as follows:
I — the way that our discussion was going, I didn’t take it as he wanted to stop the interrogation]. He just made a statement, [“]I guess I can stop the interrogation.”] I told him, well, you need to listen to everything that I’m telling you, and then he went, [“]uh-huh[”]____He made a statement. He wasn’t asking me a question, and he said [“]right or no,[”] speaking Spanish. . . .
Perez did not testify and contradict the officer by asserting that he intended to remain silent, the right to which he had only just waived after having been apprised of its availability to him. His comment tо the officer was at least as ambiguous, if not more so, than the suspect’s statement in Coleman v. Singletary, supra at 1423, which was: “ ‘I don’t know [if I want a public defender]. But if he said to stop [the interrogation] I don’t want to do what he said not to do.’ ” If Perez had truly intended to withdraw his waiver and invoke his *201 right to remain silent, he would not have acquiesced in responding to the officer’s further questioning. The right to remain silent must be scrupulously honored if, after previously acknowledging awareness of the availability of that right and waiving it, the suspect changes his mind and unambiguously asserts it. However,
[b]ecause [Perez’s] statement was equivocal, his subsequent statements were admissible. It does not matter whether the [officer] dropped all questions about the crime until [Perez] clarified his intent, because in the wake of the Supreme Court’s decision in Davis, there is no duty to clarify a suspect’s intent after such a statement. The оbligation to cease questioning a suspect arises only when the suspect unambiguously invokes the right to remain silent. That did not occur here.
Coleman v. Singletary, supra at 1426 (II) (A). Therefore, the trial court did not err in denying the motion to suppress Perez’s statement.
Judgment affirmed.
