OPINION
This is а habeas petition filed pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 after petitioner, Robert Van Hook, was convicted by a three-judge panel of capital murder and aggravated robbery. We reverse the judgment of the district court and remand on the ground that Van Hook’s constitutional rights were infringed when Cincinnati pоlice started an interrogation anew with Van Hook after he had requested legal counsel in clear violation of
Edwards v. Arizona,
We will briefly recount the facts of the brutal murder that led to Van Hook’s arrest. Petitioner Robert Van Hook went to a Cincinnati bar largely patronized by male homosexuals in February 1985. While there, he drank and talked with David Self. The two left together and Self told the bartender that they were planning to go to Selfs apartment. Once at the apartment, and after Self approached Van Hook in a sexual manner, Van Hook strangled Self into unconsciousness. Van Hook then took a knife from the kitchen, diabolically stabbed Self so that Selfs internal organs were visible and then placed several items in the victim’s body. He stole several items from Selfs apartment and smeared his bloody fingerprints in an attempt to destroy any evidence. He then went to a friend’s house, but eventually left town for Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, where he was arrested two months later. While in custody at the Florida jail, Van Hook made a full and graphic confession, which included an admission to the killing of David Self as well as to the robbery.
See State v. Van Hook,
Van Hook has never denied killing Self, but he maintains he did so in a rage precipitated by the sexual advances of Self and as the result of a severe borderline personality disorder that caused him to lack the requisite intent to make him guilty of aggravated murder or eligible for the death penalty. Temporary insanity was the basis for Van Hook’s defense at trial. The state maintains that Van Hook left the bar with the intention of robbing Self. The three-judge panel that tried Van Hook rejected his defense and convicted him. He was later sentenced to death. *833 After direct and post-conviction review by the Ohio courts and denial of the writ by the district court, Van Hook appeаled to our Court, raising multiple issues, only one of which will be discussed herein.
I.
Our decision to reverse the district court and issue the writ is based on the failure to suppress Van Hook’s incriminating statements after police improperly reinitiated contact with him after he had requested counsel. The district court rendered its initial decision on this issue in response to Van Hook’s motion for partial summary judgment. Van Hook v. Anderson, No. C-1-94-269 (S.D.Ohio Mar.28, 2002). It reaffirmed this decision without substantial further discussion in its final order dated August 7, 2003, from which Van Hook appeals. 1
It is well-settled that once having expressed a desire to law enforcemеnt officials to consult an attorney, an accused is not subject to further interrogation by the authorities until counsel has been made available to him, unless the accused himself initiates further communication, exchanges, or conversations with the police.
Edwards v. Arizona,
The
Edwards
rule finds its genesis in
Miranda v. Arizona,
If the police subsequently initiate an encounter in the absence of counsel, and there has been no break in custody, the suspect’s statements are presumed involuntary and therefore inadmissible as substantive еvidence at trial, even where the suspect executes a waiver and his statements would be considered voluntary under traditional standards.
McNeil v. Wisconsin,
Based on this line of authority, Van Hook filed a motion to suppress all statements he had made to law enforcement subsequent to his arrest, including the taped confession he made to the Cincinnati police in the Florida jail. At the suppression hearing, it was established that Van Hook was given his Miranda rights by a Florida detective after he was arrеsted and in custody at the Florida jail. It was established at the hearing that Van Hook asked for an attorney, whereupon the Florida police ceased asking him questions because they believed he “didn’t want to say anything without an attorney.” Upon their arrival at the Florida jail later that day, thе two Cincinnati detectives knew that Van Hook had invoked his right to counsel and that the Florida detectives had therefore ceased questioning him. Transcript of Suppression Hearing at 15-16, Ohio v. Van Hook, No. B-851389/C-850565 (Court of Common Pleas, Hamilton County, June 17, 1985).
The conversation between the Cincinnati detectives and Vаn Hook began by discussing extradition procedures and informing Van Hook that they intended to return to Cincinnati with him the next day — proper topics of discussion with a defendant who has requested, but not yet consulted, counsel. However, the conversation did not end there. Detective Davis of the Cincinnаti homicide squad testified at the suppression hearing:
*835 [W]e advised [Van Hook] we had a lot to talk to him about. I advised him I had been in contact with his mother, I advised him that we could not talk to him unless he wanted to talk to us and make a statement.
Transcript of Suppression Hearing at 14, Ohio v. Van Hook, No. B-851389/C-850565 (Court of Common Pleas, Hamilton County, June 17, 1985). However, Detеctive Davis also testified that although he did tell Van Hook that “we could not talk to him unless he wanted to talk,” he did not tell Van Hook that he could not question him because Van Hook had requested counsel. Id. at 20. Detective Davis also testified that he had not received any direct communication that would indicate that Van Hook desired to speak with him or any law enforcement official:
Q. Okay. And did you receive any information, either in your phone conversation with Detective Moody [of the Ft. Lauderdale police] or upon your arrival in Ft. Lauderdale indicating that Mr. Van Hook desired to talk to you?
An objection was made and overruled. The question was read again and Detective Davis answered “No.” Id. at 11-12. It was also demonstrated at the suppression hearing that Cincinnati officials had contacted Van Hook’s mother in order to obtain information on Van Hook’s location and to obtain her assistance in inducing Van Hook to talk to police. The state trial court denied the motion to suppress and Van Hook’s taped confession came in at trial.
The Ohio Supreme Court concluded that the trial court had not erred when it rеfused to suppress Van Hook’s statement because “the record demonstrates that appellant himself reinitiated his own interrogation through a third party.”
State v. Van Hook,
The Supreme Court has directed that two elements be examined to determine whether the pоlice have obtained a statement in violation of
Edwards’
“rigid prophylactic rule.”
Smith,
Turning to the requirement under Edwards that the request for counsel be unambiguous, all the courts, state and federal, that have reviewed this case have found no question to exist as to whether Van Hook invoked his right to counsel. As the district court stated, “there is no question that [Van Hook] invoked his right to counsel, that the Cincinnati police knew he had invoked his right to counsel, and at no time prior to speaking with the Cincinnati poliсe was [Van Hook] furnished with counsel.” Order at 7, Van Hook v. Anderson, C-1-94-269 (S.D.Ohio Mar. 28, 2002). Therefore, the sole question before us is whether Van Hook reinitiated contact with the po *836 lice through a conversation with his mother.
There is much speculation of what Van Hook’s mother said to Detective Davis.
2
Under our reading of
Edwards,
it is unnecessary to know what transpired in that conversation. It is undisputed that Van Hook
himself
did not initiate contact with the police: there “is not a scintilla of evidence in the record to show that [Van Hook] initiated further discussion” with police.
The evidence here shоws that Van Hook did not initiate conversation with the police. Rather, he gave a statement only after Detective Davis told him that he, Davis, had.spoken with his mother, and they “need[ed] to talk.” In
Arizona v. Roberson,
II.
Because we hold that it was error to admit Van Hook’s statements, we must “review[] the remainder of the evidence against [him] to determine whether the admission of the confession was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Arizona v. Fulminante,
We reverse the judgment of the district court and remand with instructions that Van Hook be released from state custody if not retried by the State of Ohio within 180 days of the final federal court judgment in this case.
Accordingly, it is so ordered.
Notes
. Van Hook's habeas petition was filed prior to passage of the Anti-terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act, and we, therefore, review his claims under the law as it existed beforе enactment of AEDPA.
Lindh v. Murphy,
. We do not know exactly what was said between Detective Davis and Van Hook's mother because at the suppression hearing the court sustained objections by Van Hook’s counsel relating to the conversation between Detective Davis and Mrs. Van Hook, thereby limiting the amount of information that came in about the conversation. The Ohio appellate courts found this omission to be in error because hearsay is allowed at suppression hearings.
