OPINION
This сase came before the Court for oral argument on May 14, 2002, pursuant to the appeal of the defendant, Milton Aponte (defendant), from a judgment of conviction for first-degree child molestation sexual assault. The defendant argues that the trial justice erred in denying his motion to suppress incriminating statements he gave to the police in which he admitted to sexually molesting a fifteen-month-old girl. We deny and dismiss the appeal and affirm the conviction.
Facts and Travel
On the evening of August 13, 1997, a young mother, Karen Fedorak (Fedorak), found her fifteen-month-old daughter screaming in her crib, clothed in a blood-soaked diaper. It was subsequently determined by hospital emergency personnel that the baby had suffered a brutal sexual assault, resulting in visible lacerations on her external genitalia, a third-degree peri-neal laceration that ripped through the rear wall of her vagina and extended into the retroperitoneal space behind the abdominal cavity, nearly reaching the rectum with fissures indicative of attempted anal penetration. Three surgeries have already been performed on the little girl, and it is likely that she will need additional surgery to repair these horrific internal injuries.
Immediately after this brutal assault, members of the Woonsocket Police Department began to investigate those individuals who Fedorak identified as having been in her apartment before the assault, including defendant, Fedorak’s boyfriend, who was questioned at approximately 2 a.m. Statements taken from several people the next day revealed that three of the guests at Fedorak’s home had access to the child before the assault. Police re-interviewed two of the three individuals, but none had been singled out as a prime suspect. Detectives Landry and Moreau (Landry and Moreau) were responsible for re-interviewing defendant. Because they did not know where defendant lived, the detectives asked Fedorak to call them if defendant should appear at her home. Upon receipt of Fedorak’s call, plainclothes officers arrived at Fedorak’s apartment in an unmarked police car and askеd defendant whether he would accompany them to the station to answer some additional questions. The defendant readily agreed to do so.
The state’s account of the following events differs substantially from defendant’s version. Landry and Moreau testified that they escorted defendant to their vehicle and took him to the station, but at no time was defendant handcuffed or placed under arrest. The defendant acknowledged during his trial testimony that he was not handcuffed at any point during his trip to the station. According to the officers, they repeatedly advised defendant that he was under no obligation to accompany them to the station and that he was not under arrest. Additionally, when defendant told Landry and Moreau that he
*423
had an appointment with his probation officer later that afternoon, they assured him that he would be able to keep that appointment. Upon arriving at the station, Landry and Moreau again reminded defendant that he was there voluntarily and that he was free to leave at any time. The defendant testified, however, that when he arrivеd at Fedorak’s apartment, he was frisked, grabbed by both upper arms and placed in the unmarked police car, where he was left unattended for about five minutes. He testified that he sat in the backseat with Moreau while Landry drove to the station. The defendant alleges that he was escorted into the station in the same fashion and taken to an interrogation room. Landry and Moreau testified that at 12:35 p.m., they began a general discussion with defendant about the events of the previous evening at Fedorak’s apartment. At this point the discussion was considered by the detectives to be an interview and not an interrogation, so it was neither recorded nor transcribed. The defendant, however, appeared nervous and evasive and continued to deny any knowledge of the sexual assault on the little girl. Additionally, defendant made statements that were inconsistent with his interview the previous evening, leading the detectives to conclude that defendant was lying. As a result, defendant was advised of his rights, including his right to remain silent, pursuant to
Miranda v. Arizona,
During the next few hours, various officers went to the interview room to question defendant. The defendant changed his story several times during the course of the afternoon, leading the detectives to conclude that he was untruthful. In an effort to persuade defendant to tell the truth, the detectives changed tactics. However, during this entire period, defendant never requested an attorney, nor did he attempt to terminate the interview and leave the station, avenues that were available to him at any point. He claims that as a result of the constant questions, accusations of lying and verbal intimidation tactics that he alleges the detectives employed, he felt so intimidated and scared that he did not think he was free to leave. Indeed, Detective Roy (Roy) acknowledged yelling at defendant and pacing around the room, but he flatly denied ever touching defendant or threatening him in any manner. Roy admitted that he was convinced of defendant’s involvement in the assault on the baby, but he lacked sufficient evidencе to arrest him at that time. Later, during questioning by Detective Houle (Houle), defendant agreed to disclose his role in the commission of this crime. At approximately 4 p.m., defendant admitted that when Fedorak left the apartment to go to the store, he went into the baby’s room, pulled off her diaper and inserted two fingers into the baby’s vagina. At this point Roy and Houle asked defendant whether he would give a taped statement. They reminded defendant that he had the right to refuse to speak to them any more. After being reminded of the constitutional rights he had waived earlier that afternoon, defendant agreed to give a taped statement to the detectives. The defendant detailed how he inserted both the index and middle fingers of his right hand “as far as they could go” in and out of the baby’s vagina for two minutes, until the baby woke up, at which point defendant immediately repositioned the same diaper on the child. As the interview continued, the tape was changed to the second side and, although defendant admitted to the truth of the statements he already had made, he stated that hе “[didn’t] want to talk about it anymore” because he was *424 “getting too-too nervous.” The interview immediately concluded at that time.
Issues
The defendant raises four issues in his appeal. ' First, he claims that the trial justice erred in denying his motion to suppress the incriminating statement he gave to the police. He argues that he confessed during a custodial interrogation as the direct result of an arrest made without probable cause. In addition, defendant maintains that the police used coercive tactics to obtain his involuntary confession. Second, defendant argues that the trial justice erred when he instructed the jury that when determining the voluntariness of his confession, the jurors may disregard some of the behavior exhibited by the police. The defendant next assigns error to the denial of a defense motion to pass the case as a result of testimony regarding drug use at Fedorak’s apartment during the evening of the assault. The defendant claims this testimony was not relevant and was highly prejudicial. Finally, defendant argues that the trial justice committed several errors of law in instructing the jury. Specifically, defendant assigns as error the instruction given relative to the intent required for first-degree child molestation sexual assault; second, he assigns as error the failure to instruct the jury on the offense of assault with a dangerous weapon; and the denial of defendant’s motions for judgment of acquittal.
Motion to Suppress
We review the denial of a motion to suppress a confession with “deference to the trial court’s factual findings concerning the historical events pertaining to the confession by using a ‘clearly erroneous’ standard of review.”
State v. Brouillard,
On appeal, defendant argues that the trial justice erred in denying his motion to suppress the incriminating statement as the product of police coercion that was obtained in exploitation of an unlawful arrest made without probable cause. The trial justice referred to
State v. Hobson,
The defendant vigorously has challenged the trial justice’s findings on probable cause to arrest. The state, while arguing that the trial justice’s decision was correct, also argues, as it did to the trial justice, that when defendant voluntarily accompanied the police officers to the Woonsocket police station and spoke with detectives, defendant was not in police custody. We previously have held that in appropriate circumstances, we will exercise our prerogative “to affirm a determination of a trial justice ‘on grounds different from those enunciated in his or her decision.’ ”
Ogden v. Rath,
The defendant admitted that he voluntarily agreed to accompany Landry and Moreau to the station and, the testimony reveals, Landry informed defendant that he “didn’t have to be [at the station] * * * and he could leave if he wanted.” Even Roy admitted that had defendant said that he wanted to leave during the questioning, he would have been able to do so because the police had no physical evidence to arrest him. We have held that “persistent” questioning by the police does not convert the situation into a custodial interrogation.
State v. Ferola,
The defendant argues that a remand is appropriate-to resolve factual disputes surrounding his arrival at the police station in the company of Landry and Moreau, an issue that was not decided by the heаring justice. We deem this to be unnecessary, however, because were we to accept all of defendant’s testimony as true, including his assertion that he was frisked and physically manhandled by the officers as he was led to the police car and again into the station, this evidence still does not amount to a custodial interrogation. According to defendant’s own testimony, Landry and Moreau asked him to voluntarily accompany them to the station, they assured him that he would be able to meet his probation officer later that day and he agreed to go with them. Significantly, defendant was left alone without restraints in the unmarked police vehicle for at least five minutes. This evidence defies the suggestion of an arrest. The defendant was not handcuffed at any point and was advised more than once that his presence at the station was completely voluntary and that he could leave at any time. Thus, even when considered in accordance with defendant’s version of these events, we are satisfied that he voluntarily accompanied the оfficers to the Woonsocket police station and was not placed in custody.
The final consideration is whether a reasonable person would have understood that he was free to leave under like circumstances. The Fourth Amendment prohibits seizures that “ ‘in view of all the circumstances' surrounding the incident, a reasonable person would have believed that he was not free to leave.’ ”
Ferola,
Because we affirm the trial justice’s holding on this alternate basis, we need not reach the issue of whether the police had probable cause to arrest defendant.
Motion to Pass
The defendant asserts that the trial justice erred when he denied the defense motion to pass the case as a result of the unexpected testimony, by a state witness, about marijuana use at Fedorak’s apartment before the assault. The witness stated that he thought “everyone” was “smoking weed” on the back porch of Fedorаk’s apartment on the night of the assault. The defendant argues that this testimony was highly prejudicial and of no relevance. Upon hearing this testimony, defense counsel moved for a mistrial, saying he had no idea that evidence about the alleged use of drugs that night would be introduced at trial. The trial justice agreed with the prosecution that the impact, if any, from the mention of the use of marijuana would be minimal and denied defendant’s motion to pass. He then gave the jury a cautionary instruction stating *427 that the jury “may not draw any inference whatsoever that because someone * * * uses marijuana, that that necessarily predisposes them in any way, shape or form to commit the kind of crime that is being discussed in this case.” No objection was made by defense counsel to this instruction.
The refusal of a trial justice to pass a case is accorded great deference and will not be disturbed on appeal unless it is shown to be clearly wrong.
State v. Tempest,
In a similar case, this Court upheld a trial justice’s denial of a motion to pass because the reference to marijuana by the witness was “inadvertent” and, because it was made without reference to a specific user, was “not sufficient to inflame the jury and require a new trial.”
State v. Botelho,
Jury Instructions
Relative to the issue of the jury instructions given by the trial justice, “General Laws 1956 § 8-2-38 requires the trial justice to instruct the jury on the law to be applied to the issues raised by the parties.”
State v. Lynch,
When a defendant challenges the voluntariness of his statement, a trial justice engages in a two-step procedure in which, as a preliminary matter, the trial justice determines, by clear and convincing evidence, that the statement or confession was lawfully obtained.
State v. Killay,
Having determined, as a matter of law, that defendant’s confession was voluntary, the trial justice submitted the issue to the jury. The defendant challenges the following portion of the trial justice’s jury instruction:
“The police, in questioning a suspect at the station, just that very situation carries with it the notion of some — some pressure or coercion. But, just that mere fact that you’re at the police station and being talked to by police officers, being interrogated by poliсe officers, doesn’t mean that that by itself is coercion. Or even if a police officer speaks in a loud tone from time to time, *428 that by and of itself, does not mean that the will of the person giving a statement has been overridden and now they’re doing something against their — their free will” (Emphasis added.) 2
We are satisfied that this instruction, based on the totality of the circumstances, is appropriate and a correct recitation of the law. As the trial justice stated in his decision on the motion to suppress, “there [is] no fundamental constitutional right [of] which I’m aware, that entitles a suspect in a criminal ease to have on each and every question the police officer speak to him in a kindly, avuncular fashion.” The trial justice specified that while an interrogation “marked only by yelling that goes on for hours and hours” would possibly cause concern, that was not the circumstance here. We agree that the interview in this case was “not especially lengthy” and the yelling or raising of voices was “sporadic.” Further, we are satisfied that the trial justice did not instruct the jurors that they were to disregard evidence of raised voices as part of the environment in which defendant confessed. In fact he specifically told them to consider it. He merely stated that this evidence, without more, is insufficient to establish coercion. Moreover, because we look to the charge as a whole, and do not examine a single portion in isolation,
State v. Fernandes,
Child Molestation Sexual Assault
At trial, defense counsel moved for a judgment of acquittal based upon the prosecution’s failure to establish that defendant committed the crime for the purpose of sexual arousal or gratification. The defendant also challenges on appeal the failure of the trial justice to instruct on the element of sexual gratification, arousal and assault. The trial justice denied defendant’s motions for a judgment of acquittal and concluded that although in cases in which there was no injury “it would be incumbent upon the State to produce some evidence of sexual gratification or arousal being a purpose,” when, thеre is a serious injury requiring multiple surgeries, then “the assault factor, as referenced by the legislative statute is appropriate.” He went on to say that although our case law has not mentioned an intent to commit an assault, it falls into the mens rea required to convict on a charge of first-degree child molestation.
In
State v. Griffith,
Our concern in
Griffith
was that in the absence of an instruction concerning the
mens rea
element of sexual assault, defendants could be convicted for accidental or innocent contact with a child.
Griffith,
Further, we are satisfied that the jury instructions adequately reflect the law to be applied to the evidence in this case. The jury was infоrmed that the state must prove the act was done for sexual pleasure, arousal or assault and that they could consider the very nature of the act and what was done to the child in determining defendant’s intent.
Because we affirm the trial justice’s denial of the defendant’s motion for acquittal and deem that there was no error in the trial justice’s instruction to the jury, we do not reach the issue of the instruction on the lesser included offense of assault with a dangerous weapon.
Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, we deny and dismiss the dеfendant’s appeal and affirm the judgment of conviction. The papers in this case are remanded to the Superior Court.
Notes
. The trial justice defined probable cause as being the "amount of evidence in the possession of a reasonably prudent police officer that would lead him or her to conclude that the suspect in all likelihood or in all probability committed the crime.”
. We are not convinced that counsel's specific objection encompasses the issue raised on appeаl. The objection was:,
"I also object to the court’s instruction relating to the voluntariness of the confession, and saying separate and apart by itself the officers raising their voices, speaking in a loud voice is not anything that they can consider. I object to that instruction. I know of no case law that permits officers to speak in a loud voice to a suspect. Most of the cases relate to misrepresenting facts or lying to a suspect, or — and I’ve not read a case where they allow officers to speak in a loud voice. So I object to that instruction.”
