This appeal from appellant’s convictions for introducing contraband, a pistol, into a penal institution in violation of D.C.Code § 22-2603 (1989), and related weapon offenses, challenges only the admission into evidence of a statement by appellant which he contends was the product of custodial interrogation and obtained without provision of Miranda ** warnings. We affirm.
*685 I
Appellant, an inmate at the Community Correction Center Number One at 1010 North Capitol Street, N.W., returned to the Center from work at about 8:45 p.m. on July 8, 1989. As he entered the office of Zion Beard, a correctional counselor, to sign in, Beard saw that he was carrying two packages, one a plastic bag and the other a shoe box. After signing in, appellant picked up the shoe box and left the office; Beard called to him to come back so the counselor could “check his property.” Appellant returned to the office but had only the plastic bag in his possession, not the shoe box. Beard searched the bag and, finding nothing unusual, allowed appellant to leave. He was suspicious, however, and followed appellant down the hall, where he saw the shoe box on the floor of a bathroom. He and appellant both grabbed for the box, a “tussle” ensued, and Beard took possession of it. The two men returned to the office where appellant grabbed the box again and Beard again took it from him; he opened the box and saw that it contained a handgun, ammunition, and a clip. Beard exclaimed, “Man, are you crazy. You got a gun in here. What the hell are you doing with a gun in here?” Appellant answered, “I need it to protect myself.”
The government introduced appellant’s statement in its case-in-chief after the court denied his motion to suppress it on Miranda grounds. In denying the motion the court stated, inter alia:
I don’t think we need to talk about custody. We need to talk about interrogation. He says, “Man, are you crazy? What in the hell are you doing with a gun in here?” ... I don’t think he was being interrogated. I think ... that was much more the product of a very normal reaction, rather than interro[gation]....
... I don’t see any grounds ... for the Court to suppress the statement. I give you your custody. I think the guy’s in custody because he’s living in a halfway house, but he’s not in police custody and he’s not being interrogated, and so Miranda doesn’t apply....I’m going to rule the statement admissible.
II.
Although appellant was in “custody” in a broad sense at the time of his statement by virtue of his incarceration in a halfway house, there is substantial authority holding that an inmate is not “in custody” for
Miranda
purposes merely because of his status as a prisoner.
E.g., United States v. Conley,
Interrogation is “express questioning or its functional equivalent” designed to “elicit an incriminating response.”
Rhode Island v. Innis,
In
Spann v. United States,
Accordingly, the judgment of the Superi- or Court is
Affirmed.
Notes
Miranda v. Arizona,
