¶ 1. Richard Hassel appeals a judgment of conviction for arson and an order denying his postconviction motion for reconsideration of the court's earlier decision to deny his motion to suppress. Hassel had filed the suppression motion claiming that police had obtained his inculpatory statements in violation of his
Miranda
right to remain silent.
See Miranda v. Arizona,
Background
¶ 2. On May 7, 2002, around 7:30 p.m., sheriffs investigator David Hake and New Richmond police chief Mark Samelstad spoke to Hassel at his home about recent fires. Several times, Hassel told the officers "I can't talk to you." Hake testified that he did not consider this an invocation of Hassel's Miranda rights, since the parties mutually continued conversing. "He asked us questions and we asked him." Hake further testified that he did not read Hassel his Miranda rights since Hassel was not in custody at that time. At the conclusion of the conversation, Hake and Samelstad arrested Hassel, taking him to jail. Hake told him that they would be back to talk to him the next morning.
*640 ¶ 3. At 9 a.m. on May 8, Hake and Samelstad returned with special agent Michael Van Keuren from the Wisconsin Department of Justice to interview Has-sel. The officers indicated they wanted to speak to Hassel about his chemical dependencies and his problem of starting fires. At 9:20 a.m., Hake read Hassel his Miranda rights, and Hassel signed an acknowledgement and waiver form. He also stated something to the effect of "I don't know if I should talk to you," but during the subsequent three-hour interview, he never asked to stop the questioning. During the interview, he made incriminating statements.
¶ 4. Hassel was charged with ten felonies: five counts of arson to a building, contrary to Wis. Stat. § 943.02(l)(a); one count of arson to property other than a building, contrary to Wis. Stat. § 943.03; and four counts of setting fire to land, contrary to Wis. Stat. § 26.14(8). 1
¶ 5. Hassel filed a motion to suppress his incriminating statements, contending he had invoked his right to silence on May 7 and that this right was violated by the continued questioning on May 8. The trial court denied the motion. Hassel then entered a plea pursuant to an agreement with the State. In exchange for his no contest plea to the first count of arson to a building, the State dismissed and read in the remaining nine counts, along with two pending charges from Polk County, for purposes of sentencing and restitution. Hassel was convicted and sentenced to twenty years' initial confinement and thirty years' extended supervision.
¶ 6. Hassel filed a motion for reconsideration, asking the court to revisit his sentence and the suppres *641 sion motion. The court adjusted the sentence to reflect Hassel's eligibility for the Challenge Incarceration Program but otherwise denied the motion. Hassel appeals the portion of the order denying reconsideration of the suppression motion.
Discussion
¶ 7. Whether Hassel's right to remain silent has been violated presents a question of constitutional fact, which presents a mixed question of fact and law.
State v. Ross,
Whether Hassel Invoked His Rights on May 7
¶ 8. Hassel contends he invoked his Miranda rights by saying "I can't talk to you" when police interrogated him at his home on May 7. We disagree.
¶ 9. It is true that police must cease questioning when
Miranda's
right to remain silent — or right to counsel — is invoked.
See Ross,
¶ 10. Indeed, Hassel has never argued he was in custody on May 7. Instead, he suggests we must apply the holding in
State v. Fencl,
¶ 11. Fencl was suspected of first-degree murder and the police had several meetings with him. At the first meeting, he denied knowing anything about the victim. Id. at 225-26. During the second meeting, Fencl said he wanted to talk to his attorney but would get back to the detective. Id. at 226. Half an hour after that meeting, Fencl went to the police station and spoke very briefly with the investigator, who was called away. Id. Later that same day, Fencl again returned to the police station, this time with his attorney. Only the attorney, not Fencl, spoke to the investigators. Id. Fencl was given his Miranda rights, but was allowed to leave. He was arrested the next day. Id.
¶ 12. During the trial, the State referred several times to Fencl's silence both before and after he had been given his Miranda rights. Id. Prior jurisprudence prohibited the State from affirmatively using at trial a defendant's silence during a custodial interrogation, id. at 233-34, but the court had never previously been called upon to consider whether the State could use *643 prearrest, pre-Miranda silence. Id. at 237. Ultimately, the court concluded in part:
The state contends that, unless silence is compelled by arrest or a custodial interrogation, it is not protected by the Fifth Amendment. We disagree. The Fifth Amendment protects a person from compelled self-incrimination at all times, not just upon arrest or during a custodial interrogation. Any time an individual is questioned by the police, that individual is compelled to do one of two things — either speak or remain silent. If both a person's prearrest speech and silence may be used against that person, as the state suggests, that person has no choice that will prevent self-incrimination. This is a veritable "Catch-22." Thus the state's theory places an impermissible burden on the exercise of Fifth Amendment rights. We hold that a person is entitled to the protection of the Fifth Amendment even prior to arrest or a custodial interrogation.
Id. at 237-38.
¶ 13. Hassel now argues that the officers' disregard of his purported invocation of Miranda during his precustodial, prearrest discussion offends the Fifth Amendment in the same way as the State's affirmative use of the defendant's prearrest silence in Fencl. We disagree.
¶ 14. At the heart of the Fifth Amendment is the idea that no individual "shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself." U.S. Const. amend. V. As Fencl explains, when both silence and statements can be used against a defendant as evidence of guilt, the right against self-incrimination becomes impossible to invoke because anything the accused does is evidence for the State. Fencl, 109 Wis. *644 2d at 237. The State was therefore precluded from relying on Fencl's silence as prima facie proof of his guilt. Id. at 236-37.
¶ 15. What
Fencl
emphasizes, however, is the protection from
compelled
self-incrimination.
Id.
at 237. Hassel has not suggested the State used his recalcitrance as evidence of his guilt — the sort of compelled self-incrimination present in
Fencl.
Indeed, our jurisprudence tells us that a noncustodial interrogation normally fails to create circumstances that compel self-incrimination which is why
Miranda
does not apply in those situations.
See Pheil,
Whether Hassel Invoked His Rights on May 8
¶ 16. Hassel made his inculpatory statements on May 8. He contends that either he invoked his right to remain silent after he was arrested or, alternatively, the police knew on May 7 he intended to invoke the right, so they failed to "scrupulously honor" this prior invocation on May 8. We disagree with both arguments.
¶ 17. Hassel first contends that he invoked his right to remain silent when, after he was advised of his Miranda rights, he told the officers "I don't know if I should speak to you." We disagree.
¶ 18. In
Davis v. United States,
¶ 19. We conclude that Hassel's statement, "I don't know if I should speak to you," is ambiguous — and Hassel actually concedes as much — and not a clear invocation of the right. It does not indicate Hassel's desire to remain silent, only his uncertainty as to whether he should.
¶ 20. Alternatively, Hassel contends that the police failed to "scrupulously honor" his prior May 7 invocation of his right to remain silent. We have already held, however, that Hassel could not preemptively invoke that right because he was not subject to custodial interrogation. Therefore, there is no prior invocation with which the police should have been concerned. 2
*646 ¶ 21. Hassel was not entitled to anticipatorily invoke the right to remain silent on May 7 because he was not in custody. Hassel also failed to unambiguously articulate his invocation of the right to remain silent on May 8 — his statement was ambiguous. The trial court therefore correctly denied the suppression and reconsideration motions.
By the Court. — Judgment and order affirmed.
Notes
All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2001-02 version unless otherwise noted.
Even if Hassel could and did invoke his right to remain silent on May 7, the police honored that invocation. Once a defendant invokes the right to remain silent, the State may again interrogate him after the invocation if the right is "scrupulously honored."
State v. Hartwig,
*646
Assuming without deciding that "I can't talk to you" was sufficiently clear to invoke the right to remain silent, police did not promptly terminate the May 7 interview. However, the inculpatory statements the State utilized did not arise in that conversation. In light of the remaining
Mosley
factors and their flexibility, this failure is not fatal. More than twelve hours passed between Hassel's arrest and the resumption of the interrogation. In
Mosley,
just two hours was sufficient.
Mosley,
