The State appeals the trial court’s pre-trial decision to suppress statements made by appellee William Clark during a police station interview. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm.
1. This Court has held:
When reviewing a trial court’s ruling on a motion to suppress, an appellate court must construe the evidentiary record in the light most favorable to the factual findingsand judgment of the trial court. This means that the reviewing court generally must accept the trial court’s findings as to disputed facts unless they are clearly erroneous, although the reviewing court may also consider facts that definitively can be ascertained exclusively by reference to evidence that is uncontradicted and presents no questions of credibility such as facts indisputably discernible from a videotape.
(Citation and punctuation omitted.) State v. Allen,
The record from the suppression hearing, including the police detective’s testimony and appellee’s videotaped statement, shows on March 4, 2008, appellee called 911 after assaulting and killing his paramour, Deborah Jeffries, by striking her in the head with a golf club and stabbing her in the chest more than 20 times. The first officer on the scene apprehended appellee and placed him in the back of a police vehicle. Shortly thereafter, Detective J. D. Stephens of the Atlanta Police Department arrived on the scene. Detective Stephens testified that, in the presence of the other police officer,
I then asked him if he lived in apartment number 101. He stated that was his apartment. I then asked him who was the deceased woman lying on the floor. He stated it was Deborah Jeffries and that she was his girlfriend. I asked him who killed her. He stated he couldn’t remember. He stated he blacked out. I told him that this was a — that he was going to be transported to Grady Memorial hospital and that I would like to speak with him after he had been treated. He stated he would like to talk to me. That’s exactly what happened.
After this conversation, police escorted appellee to the hospital for treatment, and Detective Stephens commenced his investigation of the crime scene. Four hours later, after appellee had been released from the hospital and taken to the police station, Detective Stephens interviewed him.
Detective Stephens testified he began video-recording the interview after appellee had already been talking for seven minutes. The video recording is approximately 33 minutes long.
On July 22, 2016, the trial court held a motion to suppress hearing,
2. A defendant’s waiver of the right to remain silent during a custodial interview must be made “voluntarily, knowingly and intelligently.” Miranda v. Arizona,
First, the relinquishment of the right must have been voluntary in the sense that it was the product of a free and deliberate choice rather than intimidation, coercion, or deception. Second, the waiver must have been made with a full awareness of both the nature of the right being abandoned and the consequences of the decision to abandon it.
(Citation omitted.) Moran v. Burbine,
This Court has held that when an accused has received Miranda warnings, but subsequently the police officer affirmatively states that an accused’s custodial statements will be kept confidential, the resulting statements are inadmissible at trial. See Spence v. State,
Here, it was correct for the trial court to rely on Spence u. State.
[C]ertain promises, if not kept, are so attractive that they render a resulting confession involuntary A promise that any statement will not be used against the accused is such a promise. . . . [A]n assurance that a statement would not be used against a suspect goes beyond a direct promise of leniency. If defendant believed that his statement could not be used against him, despite the earlier Miranda warnings, his statement made as a result of that false assurance could not be a free and voluntary one. Stated differently, the improper promise actually induced the incriminating statement.
(Citations and punctuation omitted.) Id. at 273. See also Leger v. Common wealth, supra,
The videotape supports the trial court’s finding that appellee did not fully understand his right against self-incrimination. Detective Stephens’ affirmative agreement to keep the discussion “off the record” had the effect of nullifying the Miranda warning previously given to appellee (see State v. Pillar, supra, 359 N.J. Super, at 268) and rendering appellee’s custodial statement inadmissible as to the State’s case-in-chief (see Phillips v. State,
“off the record,” Detective Stephens should have taken some action to disabuse appellee of the notion that any of his statements could be treated as “off the record.” At a bare minimum, Detective Stephens should have advised appellee that anything he said to police was “on the record.” See, e.g., State v. Henderson,
Since Detective Stephens took no such steps to rectify appellee’s lack of understanding of his right against self-incrimination, his simple affirmation to appellee’s unqualified assertion that he wanted to speak off the record created a false promise which had the effect of inducing appellee to incriminate himself during the interview at the police station. Appellee was not in a frame of mind to resist such an attractive promise in spite of previous Miranda warnings. Here, “the facts fail to establish [by a preponderance of the evidence
The State cites to this Court’s decision in Carswell v. State,
The trial court did not err when it granted appellee’s motion to suppress on the ground that the State failed to prove appellee’s police station statements, which were made following his “off the record” comment, were voluntary.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The State did not present the witnessing officer at the suppression hearing.
In Miranda v. Arizona,
[A suspect] must be warned prior to any questioning that he has the right to remain silent, that anything he says can be used against him in a court of law, that he has the right to the presence of an attorney, and that if he cannot afford an attorney one will be appointed for him prior to any questioning if he so desires.
Id. at 479. See also Dickerson v. United States,
During the recorded interview, appellee was handcuffed and dressed in what appears to be a hospital-issued gown and slippers.
Although appellee responds to some questions posed to him by Detective Stephens during the recorded interview, his narrative is rambling, akin to a stream of consciousness.
The eight-year delay between the incident and the suppression hearing appears to be due to the fact that appellee was found to be incompetent at some point while his case was pending for trial.
The statements made by appellee while sitting in the patrol car and during the seven minutes he spoke with Detective Stephens at the police station just prior to being recorded are not at issue.
We note further that our analysis in this case is not concerned with the statutory voluntariness of a custodial statement under OCGA § 24-8-824.
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/off-the-record (accessed March 29, 2017).
Whether a defendant has voluntarily waived his Miranda rights and whether his resulting confession was given voluntarily are “separate yet interrelated” questions. United States v. Lall,
Detective Stephens’ testimony at the suppression hearing indicates he believed he had fulfilled all obligations under Miranda the moment he read appellee his rights in the patrol car at the crime scene some four hours prior to the interview at the police station. While Miranda warnings need not be repeated in every set of circumstances (see, e.g., Mainor v. State,
See High v. State,
Not only is appellee’s videotaped statement involuntary, but also the statements appellee made during the 40 minutes of the police station interview that was not recorded.
