Defendant’s only assignment of error was the trial court’s admission of defendant’s statements to Officer Ward after her question, “Why?” Defendant answered the question, “None of your damn business,” and then defendant went on, and Officer Ward was allowed to testify in court, “[Defendant] said, ‘I’ll kill him if he lives’ and ‘I’ll kill the m-f-.’ ”
*215
Statements of a defendant made while he is being interrogated and while he is held in custody should be excluded from evidence if the defendant is not warned of and does not understanding^ waive his rights to remain silent and have an attorney present at questioning.
Miranda v. Arizona,
Assuming, without deciding, that defendant’s statements to Officer Ward rise to the protection of Miranda, we consider whether the statements were harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. Statements identical in all material respects were admitted without objection from three other sources. A bystander testified to the same matter that defendant seeks to have suppressed. Further, police officers Crenshaw and Overturf testified, on rebuttal, to almost identical statements made by defendant. Thus we hold that, even if the statements to Officer Ward were erroneously introduced into evidence, their effect was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
No Error.
