Case Information
*1 I N T H E
Indiana Supreme Court Supreme Court Case No. 19S-CR-336 State of Indiana, Appellant (Plaintiff) –v–
Ernesto Ruiz, Appellee (Defendant) Argued: February 21, 2019 | Decided: June 3, 2019 Appeal from the Jackson Circuit Court, No. 36C01-1510-F4-25 The Honorable Richard W. Poynter, Judge On Petition to Transfer from the Indiana Court of Appeals, No. 36A01-1712-CR-2999 Opinion by Chief Justice Rush Justices David and Goff concur.
Justice Massa concurs in result. Justice Slaughter dissents, believing transfer should be denied.
Rush, Chief Justice.
If police interrogate someone in custody without providing warnings, the person’s interrogated statements are generally inadmissible as evidence against that individual in a criminal trial.
Here, two police officers interrogated Ernesto Ruiz in a secured area at a police station, without providing him Miranda warnings. When the State tried to use statements Ruiz made during the interrogation as evidence against him in a criminal trial, he moved to suppress them as inadmissible. The trial court granted the motion.
The State appealed, arguing suppression was contrary to law because Ruiz—although interrogated—was not in custody. Finding substantial, probative evidence that he was in custody, we affirm the trial court’s decision.
Facts and Procedural History
In a small, windowless room in a secured area of the Seymour Police Department, two police officers tag-teamed an interrogation of Ernesto Ruiz, who had been accused of a crime. Neither officer gave him warnings, and multiple times the officers told Ruiz that he was to “sit tight” in the interrogation room.
Later, the State sought to use a video of the interrogation as evidence against Ruiz in a criminal trial. Ruiz moved to suppress it, arguing his statements in the video were inadmissible because they were made during custodial interrogation in the absence of warnings.
The trial court heard evidence on the matter: testimony from the two officers who interrogated Ruiz, and the audio–video recording of the interrogation. The court also heard arguments, which the court considered overnight along with relevant caselaw. The next day, the court heard more testimony and argument, and then granted Ruiz’s motion to suppress.
In granting the motion, the court recognized—rightly—that whether Ruiz was in custody turns on objective circumstances. [1] It then determined that the environment was “a police setting” in which multiple officers questioned Ruiz in an accusatory and focused way in a room behind several closed doors. The court observed that although Ruiz went to the police station on his own, he “had to be buzzed into the area or taken into the area of a secure room.” And although the first officer told Ruiz he could walk out of the interrogation-room door, the court found that statement, in this specific context, would not make a reasonable person feel free to leave. The court emphasized that after the second officer later entered the room, shut the door, and took on the role of interrogator, Ruiz was not told that he could leave or that the first officer’s initial statement remained valid.
The State claimed that it could not proceed without the evidence that had been suppressed. For this reason, and since a jury had already been empaneled, the court declared a mistrial.
The State appealed the suppression decision,
see
Ind. Code § 35-38-4-
2(5) (2018), and a panel of the Court of Appeals reversed, concluding the
interrogation was not custodial,
State v. Ruiz
, No. 36A01-1712-CR-2999,
Ruiz petitioned for transfer, which we now grant, vacating the Court of Appeals decision. Ind. Appellate Rule 58(A).
Standard of Review
The State brings this appeal under Indiana Code 35-38-4-2(5), which
authorizes the State to appeal an order granting a motion to suppress if
the order ultimately prevents further prosecution of at least one charged
count. This kind of appeal, we have recognized, is one from a negative
judgment.
See, e.g.
,
State v. Brown
,
It is true that Ruiz filed the motion to suppress his statements. But no
matter Ruiz’s burden to support his challenge to the statements’
admission,
[2]
the trial court, in granting his motion, necessarily determined
that the State failed to carry its countervailing burden to prove that the
statements were admissible.
See Colorado v. Connelly
,
So, since the suppression order rested on the State’s failure to carry its
burden to prove the statements’ admissibility, and that decision precludes
the State from further prosecuting a criminal charge, which the State had
the burden to prove, the State appeals from a negative judgment.
Accordingly, the State must show that the trial court’s decision was
contrary to law—meaning that the evidence was without conflict and all
reasonable inferences led to a conclusion opposite that of the trial court.
See Brown
,
Here, the trial court’s suppression decision was proper if Ruiz was under custodial interrogation, which triggers . Because the State admits that Ruiz was under interrogation, we focus our review on the trial court’s determination that Ruiz was in custody.
The custody inquiry is a mixed question of fact and law: the
circumstances surrounding Ruiz’s interrogation are matters of fact, and
whether those facts add up to custody is a question of law.
See
Thompson v. Keohane
,
Discussion and Decision
Under
Miranda v. Arizona
, if Ruiz was under “custodial interrogation,”
the police were required to give him certain warnings about his rights,
and the absence of those warnings precludes the use of his statements to
prove guilt.
The State acknowledges that Ruiz was under police interrogation but
contends that he was not in custody. Custody under
Miranda
occurs when
two criteria are met. First, the person’s freedom of movement is curtailed
to “the degree associated with a formal arrest.”
Maryland v. Shatzer
, 559
U.S. 98, 112 (2010) (quoting
New York v. Quarles
,
We hold that the State did not carry its burden here to show that the trial court’s ruling was contrary to law. The record includes substantial, probative evidence of circumstances that, taken altogether, met both criteria of custody. We’ll address each in turn.
I. The totality of objective circumstances
surrounding the interrogation would make a reasonable person feel not free to end the questioning and leave.
Under , freedom of movement is curtailed when a reasonable
person would feel not free to terminate the interrogation and leave.
Howes
,
Here, the State argues that Ruiz’s freedom of movement was not curtailed and thus he was not in custody. The State points to certain evidence in support: Ruiz provided his own transportation to the police station; the first interrogating officer told him, “you don’t have to talk to me” and “you can get up and walk out that door at any time”; Ruiz sat near the unlocked interview-room door and had not been arrested; the interrogation lasted less than an hour; and Ruiz left unhindered after it was over.
This evidence does indeed point toward no custody. But substantial, probative evidence in the record points in the opposite direction and supports the trial court’s suppression ruling.
To start, the time and place of the interrogation were directed by
Detective Greg O’Brien, who showed up at Ruiz’s home, informed Ruiz of
the allegations against him, explained that he “needed to interview” Ruiz,
and “asked him to come up to the police station.” Importantly, Detective
O’Brien did not inform Ruiz that any other time or place would suffice for
the interview.
Cf. Mathiason
,
Ruiz came to the police station shortly after getting dressed. Detective O’Brien then led Ruiz through various sections of the station house: from the lobby through a door that required a key fob to enter; into a secured area containing the police squad room; “up the elevator and the stairs”; through a second keyed door that was propped open; and into a small interview room with no windows and a single door, which the officers closed for the interrogation. Although he was not handcuffed or locked inside the interrogation room, Ruiz was physically and visually cabined to the small compartment with officers positioned near the single, shut door.
Inside the interrogation room, Ruiz was at first alone with Detective O’Brien, who began the questioning. But after about thirteen minutes, Detective Troy Munson entered, closed the door, and became the primary *8 interrogator. At this time, and through the end of the interrogation, the police outnumbered Ruiz in the room two-to-one.
When Detective O’Brien started to question Ruiz, he told Ruiz—a single time—that he could walk out “that door.” But the trial court did not err in concluding that this statement was not enough to make a reasonable person feel free to leave, for three reasons.
First, the officers told Ruiz to “sit tight” multiple times, belying any prior indication that Ruiz was free to go.
Second, the circuitous path by which Detective O’Brien took Ruiz into the interrogation room drew a labyrinthine exit route with many obstructions to egress. One of the doors Detective O’Brien led Ruiz through required a key fob when heading toward the interrogation room. And nobody told Ruiz that it was unlocked going the opposite direction.
Finally, and most importantly, the police significantly undercut any initial message of freedom when they dramatically changed the interrogation atmosphere. Shortly after Detective O’Brien began the interview, a second officer—whom Ruiz had not yet met—entered the interview room; shut the door; and took over as the main, and more aggressive, interrogator. In this way, the police completely recast the interrogation, subverting the force and applicability of Detective O’Brien’s earlier walk-out-that-door statement. And at no point did either officer say anything to preserve that statement’s validity.
Other statements the officers said or omitted, along with the character
of their questioning, point toward curtailed freedom of movement.
Detective O’Brien did not tell Ruiz that he didn’t have to respond to other
detectives who may question him. Nor did the detectives tell Ruiz that he
wasn’t under arrest; that he could end the interrogation at any time; or
that he was free to leave once Detective Munson suddenly injected himself
into the interrogation and began aggressive questioning.
Cf. Luna v. State
,
The officers did, however, repeatedly tell Ruiz to explain to them what happened, coaxing him to “[t]ell us now so that we know that you’re being honest with us and . . . not lying.” The officers were explicit that they believed Ruiz had engaged in the accused conduct. And their questions were accusatory—not exploratory, like ones to identify suspects in the early stages of an investigation. Detective Munson emphasized this with deception—saying that the person who made the accusations had passed a lie-detector test.
The questioning was also prolonged, lasting almost an hour. Although
the length of an interview, alone, does not determine whether a person is
in custody, the questioning here was sustained and relatively drawn out,
especially compared to roadside traffic-stop questioning.
See Berkemer v.
McCarty
,
Altogether, the circumstances surrounding the interrogation add up to a situation in which a reasonable person would not feel free to end the interrogation and leave. So, the record supports the conclusion that the curtailment-of-movement criterion was met.
As custody turns on the totality of the circumstances, the conditions bearing on the curtailment-of-movement inquiry also factor into the second custody inquiry: whether the person was subjected to coercive pressures that necessitate safeguards.
II. The station-house interrogation included the
coercive pressures that drove .
The second custody criterion asks whether the circumstances exert the
coercive pressures that drove .
Shatzer
,
The State devotes little attention to this specific custody inquiry. But it does argue that Ruiz “was never coerced to cooperate in exchange for freedom.” We disagree, as the record includes substantial, probative evidence to the contrary. And overall, the station-house questioning here both resembles the Miranda paradigm and exhibits the coercive pressures that targeted.
The interrogation here was not brief roadside questioning,
see Berkemer
,
The officers also applied multiple layers of subtly coercive forces that, together and in the absence of ’s safeguards, would impair their suspect’s free exercise of the privilege against self-incrimination.
First, after the interrogation began, the officers kept Ruiz “off balance”
in the already unfamiliar environment.
See
,
Detective Munson then used subterfuge, lying to Ruiz about the accuser having taken a lie-detector test. See id. at 448–57 (describing pressures that create coercion, including use of deceptive stratagems). He also counseled Ruiz that the alleged conduct was “not a big deal” but that Ruiz would “look bad” if he wasn’t forthcoming about it.
And the officers intimated that Ruiz’s fate was in their hands. They
suggested that if Ruiz didn’t talk right then about what he had done, they
*11
would make things worse for him in the future—because they would
worry that he wasn’t honest and that he had done “something more” than
the alleged wrongdoing.
See Illinois v. Perkins
,
Other pressures piled on. The officers said that they “knew” the allegations were true; they engaged in prolonged, persistent, and accusatory questioning that focused on encouraging Ruiz to admit to the officer’s description of the wrongdoing; and they instructed Ruiz to stay put in the interrogation room while the time to pick up his daughter passed.
These types of coercive pressures, applied in a station-house interrogation, are precisely what induced ’s warning requirements. So, the second custody criterion, like the first, was met.
It is true that a person is not in custody simply because he is questioned
at a police station, or because he is an identified suspect, or because he is
in a coercive environment.
See Mathiason
,
Conclusion
The Fifth Amendment secures a suspect’s right against self- incrimination. And to protect this right from the inherently compelling pressures of custodial interrogation, requires police to provide certain safeguards. Here, the police did not provide those safeguards to Ruiz before interrogating him at the station house.
Because the totality of objective circumstances evidenced on this record supports the trial court’s conclusion that the interrogation was custodial, we affirm the suppression of Ruiz’s statements.
David and Goff, JJ., concur.
Massa, J., concurs in result.
Slaughter, J., dissents, believing transfer should be denied. A T T O R N E Y S F O R A P P E L L A N T
Curtis T. Hill, Jr.
Attorney General of Indiana
Henry A. Flores, Jr.
Laura R. Anderson
Tyler G. Banks
Deputy Attorneys General
Indianapolis, Indiana
A T T O R N E Y S F O R A P P E L L E E
Andrew J. Baldwin
Mark E. Kamish
Baldwin Kyle & Kamish, P.C.
Franklin, Indiana
Notes
[1] The trial court also rightly recognized that statements made in coercive settings implicate
Article 1 of the Indiana Constitution. Ruiz made a similar acknowledgment in his motion to
suppress, alleging that his rights under the Indiana Constitution were violated alongside his
federal constitutional rights. But Ruiz did not advance any state constitutional arguments
separate from those based on the Federal Constitution. While the rights protections of the
state and federal constitutions often run parallel, they do not always mirror one another
exactly, and they derive from independent sources of authority. For these reasons, claims
brought under each charter warrant separate arguments.
See, e.g.
,
Litchfield v. State
, 824 N.E.2d
356, 359–64 (Ind. 2005).
See generally
Jeffrey S. Sutton, 51 Imperfect Solutions: States and the
Making of American Constitutional Law (2018). Since Ruiz did not develop any arguments
separate from those resting on the Federal Constitution, he waived any right to suppression
on independent state-law grounds.
Cf. State v. Timbs
,
[2]
See United States v. Artis
, No. 5:10-cr-15-01,
