Defendant appeals his convictions for possession of a controlled substance with intent to distribute, a second degree felony, and unlawful possession of controlled substances without tax stamps affixed, a third degree felony. Defendant’s conviction was affirmed by this court in
State v. Bobo,
131 Utah Adv.Rep. 25 (Utah Ct.App.1990) (per curiam), on the ground the claimed conditional nature of defendant’s guilty plea was not shown in the record.
Id.
at 25.
See State v. Sery,
FACTS
On December 6, 1988, two officers from the Layton City Police Department responded to a private security guard’s report of a loud party involving juveniles, drugs, and alcohol at defendant’s home. Upon arrival, officers heard the familiar sounds of a loud party in progress and knocked on defendant’s door. After the officers explained the purpose of their visit, defendant invited the officers in to verify that there were no juveniles present. Once inside, the officers lost interest in the age of the attendees when they saw a pipe in plain view on a counter, which, upon closer examination, smelled of marijuana. Defendant was placed under arrest. When he was searched incident to the arrest, a small vial containing a white substance was found. Defendant was handcuffed and detained in his living room. The arresting officers asked defendant to consent to a search of his home. Defendant did not respond to this request.
Narcotics detectives were summoned to defendant’s home. The officers also telephoned a deputy county attorney to request that a search warrant for defendant’s home be secured. When the narcotics detectives arrived, one of them repeated *1271 the request for consent to search the home. The detective told defendant that a warrant was being prepared. Defendant told the detective that he had not said they could not search, he had simply not said they could search. The detective repeated his request, telling the defendant that his consent would expedite the process. Defendant then told the detective that he wished to get it over with, and that the officers could search. Defendant was handcuffed throughout the period in which these requests were repeated. 1
Immediately after voicing his consent to the search, defendant told the officers there were two bags of marijuana in the refrigerator. Officers also found cocaine and psilocybin mushrooms in an unlocked safe in the bedroom. At trial, defendant moved to suppress admission of the evidence located in the search of his home, challenging the voluntariness of his consent. The trial court concluded that consent had been freely given and denied the motion to suppress.
CONDITIONAL GUILTY PLEA
In
State v. Sery,
When this court was originally asked to consider defendant’s appeal, the record did not reflect that defendant’s guilty plea was entered consistent with
Sery.
Although the trial court had issued a certificate of probable cause, the record contained no direct indication that defendant’s guilty plea was conditional.
State v. Bobo,
131 Utah Adv.Rep. 25, 25 (Utah Ct.App.1990) (per curiam). A defendant seeking appellate review pursuant to a conditional plea bears the burden of demonstrating that the conditional nature of the plea is unambiguously established in the trial court record.
See Bobo,
On petition for rehearing, defendant presented this court with an affidavit of the trial judge, in which he unqualifiedly stated that defendant’s plea was conditional and that the suppression issue was preserved for appeal. While such should be made to appear of record, defendant cannot be deprived of the benefit of his plea bargain due to an oversight of this nature. The oversight was expeditiously and unambiguously corrected to our satisfaction with the judge’s affidavit. The plea was clearly conditional and we will turn to the merits of the issue preserved for appeal.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review the findings of fact
2
supporting a trial court’s decision on a motion to suppress under a clearly erroneous standard.
State v. Marshall,
While we accord considerable deference to factual findings since the trial court is in the best position to evaluate witness credibility and the like, we examine the conclusions of law arising from those findings under a correction-of-error standard according no particular deference to the trial court.
State v. Arroyo,
CONSENT TO SEARCH
A. State Constitution
Defendant asks us to examine his consent under Article I, section 14, of the Utah Constitution, and argues we should adopt a rule which would require law enforcement officers to inform persons, of whom they request consent to search, of the right to refuse consent. Counsel for defendant vigorously argued before this court that rights granted under the Fourth Amendment and its Utah counterpart ought to stand in equal respect to those granted under the Fifth Amendment, and, therefore, that a Miranda-type warning should be required under the state constitutional provision paralleling the Fourth Amendment.
3
Under the prevailing view, such an explanation is but one factor in determining the voluntariness of consent.
See, e.g., Tukes v. Dugger,
While we welcome argument of the general sort advanced by defendant, we decline to adopt the rule urged by defendant in this case. Defendant’s brief and arguments reflect little more than the “nominal allusion” to state constitutional rights condemned in
State v. Johnson,
B. Federal Constitution
Voluntariness of consent must be decided after consideration of the totality of the circumstances.
State v. Whittenback,
Defendant nonetheless claims the trial court erred in its legal conclusion that defendant’s consent was voluntary, arguing that the officers’ statements to the effect that the county attorney was preparing a warrant, and the repeated requests for consent while defendant was handcuffed and in custody, were coercive, thus precluding a conclusion of voluntary consent. We disagree.
Consent given while in custody does not, per se, render the consent invol
*1274
untary.
United States v. Janik,
Assuming the officers’ tone and tenor implied that a warrant would ultimately be issued and result in a search of defendant’s apartment,
7
we disagree with defendant’s assertion that the implication vitiated the voluntary nature of his consent. The trial court found that the officers had in fact telephoned a deputy county attorney, who was in the process of preparing a warrant application. A truthful declaration of the alternative course of action the officers were simultaneously taking does not amount to coercion.
Kon Yu-Leung,
The trial court considered the factors suggested in Whittenback and resolved four of the five factors in favor of volun-tariness. The trial court then applied the totality of the circumstances test and determined that consent was freely given. We see no error in the court’s legal conclusion of voluntary consent in view of its findings of fact, which enjoy adequate evidentiary support.
CONCLUSION
Defendant properly preserved his right to appeal the denial of his motion to sup *1275 press evidence by entering a conditional plea before the trial court. Defendant has failed to convince us that his consent to search his home was not freely and voluntarily given. Defendant’s conviction is accordingly affirmed.
GREENWOOD and JACKSON, JJ., concur.
Notes
. It is unclear from the record how many separate requests were made, although it may have been as many as five by various officers over a period of 30-40 minutes.
. The trial court’s decision to grant or deny a motion to suppress evidence must be supported by detailed factual findings.
State v. Lovegren,
. Defendant suggests that like the Miranda warnings which must precede custodial interrogation, persons asked to consent to a search should be advised along these lines: You have the right to refuse permission for any search. If you withhold consent, we would be required to request a search warrant from a judge, which warrant would only issue if we could show the judge probable cause to believe [the item sought] will be found. If you consent to the search, any incriminating evidence found can and will be used against you.
. Utah attorneys are by no means unique in their struggle to heed the call nor are Utah courts alone in their insistence that state constitutional issues be meaningfully briefed.
See, e.g., State v. Wethered,
.While the cases cited in the text and many others have made the general call, we are mindful of the concern of some attorneys that we have not been entirely clear about what we are looking for. It may be helpful to note that in most cases where an argument is made for an innovative interpretation of a state constitutional provision textually similar to a federal provision, the following points should be developed and supported with authority and analysis.
First, counsel should offer analysis of the unique context in which Utah’s constitution de *1273 veloped, which is particularly germane in the search and seizure context. See, e.g., Bradley, Hide and Seek: Children on the Underground, 51 Utah Hist.Q. 133, 142 (1983); Crawley, The Constitution of the State of Deseret, 29 B.Y.U. Studies 7 (1989); Flynn, Federalism and Viable State Government — The History of Utah's Constitution, 1966 Utah L.Rev. 311.
Second, counsel should demonstrate that state appellate courts regularly interpret even textually similar state constitutional provisions in a manner different from federal interpretations of the United States Constitution and that it is entirely proper to do so in our federal system.
See, e.g., State v. Hygh,
Third, citation should be made to authority from other states supporting the particular construction urged by counsel.
See State v. Jewett,
We refer counsel to the insightful primer on state constitutional advocacy found in
State v. Jewett,
. Defendant claims the repeated requests for consent, see note 1, supra, during a time when he was handcuffed, instilled a coercive atmosphere precluding voluntariness. We have examined the record and find no suggestion that the requests were not neutrally made; nothing in the record suggests that the officers were menacing or threatening in their requests.
While repeated requests which escalate into demands are inherently more coercive and demand keen scrutiny, repeated neutral requests, by their very nature, may well tend to send the message that a person has the right to refuse consent: Why else would the officers keep asking? On the other hand, the incessant reiteration of even neutrally phrased requests may tend to suggest the officers have not gotten the "right" answer yet from a suspect and that their requests will continue until the suspect gives the response they seek.
Although the factual mix in each case will vary, ordinarily the mere number of requests will be much less relevant than the surrounding circumstances and the way in which the requests are phrased and spoken.
. Notably, the officers did not tell defendant that the warrant would inevitably issue, merely that it was being sought. The implication stemmed, if at all, from the officer's indication to defendant that the process would be expedited if he consented. This was surely accurate. Absent defendant’s consent, the process of searching his apartment would not even begin until the warrant application was completed; one of the officers signed the affidavit which would accompany the application; the county attorney presented the application to a magistrate; the magistrate reviewed it and issued the warrant; and the warrant was then taken to defendant’s home. But even if the implication fairly to be drawn went beyond merely the subject of timing to suggest that issuance of the warrant was inevitable, the implication was not misleading. Given an accurate and complete account of the evening’s events, no magistrate would have had difficulty concluding there was probable cause to believe other drugs would be found in the home, namely the marijuana some of which had recently found its way into the pipe the officers found in plain view. Of course, any indication by officers that issuance of a warrant was inevitable would vitiate an ensuing consent if probable cause was anything less than iron-clad. Thus, officers would be well-advised to refrain from any commentary, direct or by implication, on the likelihood a warrant would actually issue.
