Joe Schuck and Scott Hiassen were convicted, in a joint trial, of first degree burglary and grand theft. After the theft counts were reduced to petit theft, the defendants received withheld judgments and were placed on probation. On appeal they сontend that evidence, including confessions, was erroneously admitted and that their motion to postpone the trial should have been granted. We affirm.
This case involves an unusual situation. During the relevant period Joe Schuck, then eighteen years оld, lived in Council, Idaho, with Rick Waters, an Adams County deputy sheriff. Schuck is the nephew of Mrs. Waters. Although the Waters were not his legal guardians, they treated Schuck as a member of the family.
On March 27, 1984, Officer Waters was summoned to the Council High School to investigate a break-in. Several rooms had been entered and a camera, a radio/cassette player and other items were missing. On one interior door, which had been kicked open, Waters found a shoe-print. Upon returning home Officer Waters found that he had a pair of tennis shoes with the same print. These shoes had been given to him by Schuck. Waters knew that Schuck had a similar pair. Waters was unaware of any one else with this type of shoe, and was informed by the school coach that this type оf shoe was uncommon in the Council area.
The next evening Waters talked to Schuck alone at the sheriff’s office about the break-in. Waters mentioned the shoe-print evidence and the fact that Schuck had not come home the previous night. Schuck “was advised of his rights” and was told he was a suspect. Waters asked Schuck where he had been the previous evening. Schuck denied being involved in the break-in, and told Waters he had been with Scott Hiassen at the time. Waters then took Schuck’s right shoe. Later Waters spoke with Hiassen who corroborated Schuck’s story.
On April 2 the sheriff called Waters at home and told him that a witness had implicated Schuck and Hiassen. Waters confronted Schuck with the mounting evidence: the witness, the similar shoeprint and the fact that Schuck was not home on the night of the crime. Schuck then admitted that he had made the shoeprint. Two hours later Waters and Schuck went to the sheriff’s office where a taped confession *610 was taken. Later Hiassen also gave a taped confession.
A suppression hearing was held to determine the admissibility of the shoe and the confessions. The district court ruled that the shoe had been illegally seized, but that the relationship between the shoe and the print on the door would have inevitably been discovered and that testimony about that relationship was admissible under
Nix v. Williams,
We first address the defendants’ exclusionary rule argument. Defendants contend that the prosecution violated the court order suppressing the shoe when Waters testified that he owned a shoe with a print “identical” to the print found on the door, that' the shoes were given to him by Schuck, that he knew Schuck had a “similar” pair, and that suсh shoes were uncommon in the Council area. The shoe was not offered into evidence, nor were any tests performed or physical comparisons made between the shoe and the print. Schuck also argues that his confession was thе “fruit” of the illegal seizure and was inadmissible. Because Hiassen’s inculpatory statement was derived from Schuck’s confession, Hiassen argues that his confession also was inadmissible.
We need not decide whether the “inevitable discovery” exemption to the exclusionary rule applies to this case. Before the exclusionary rule is invoked at all, the challenged evidence must be “in some sense the product of illegal government activity.”
Nix v. Williams,
We conclude that it was not error for the trial court to allow Waters to testify about his observations of Schuck’s shoe and his comparison of the shoeprint at the scene of the burglary with the tread pattern on the shoe. It follows that the inculpatory statements made by Schuck to Waters need not have been suppressed as the fruits of an illegal “seizure.”
Schuck next argues that his two inculpa-tory statements were involuntary. He contends that the first such statement, made at the Waters residence, was the product of coercive non-custodial interrogation. Schuck claims that the subsequent taped confession was given as a result of promises for leniency and that his waiver of fifth and sixth amendment rights was inеffective.
In the statement made in the Waters’ home where Schuck was living, Schuck admitted that the shoeprint found in the school was his. Schuck concedes that he was not in custody, therefore the procedural protections of
Miranda v. Arizona,
Under this test, the constitutional inquiry is not whether the conduct of state officers in obtaining the confession was shocking, but whether the confession was “free and voluntary: that is, (it) must not be extracted by any sort of threats or violence, nor obtained by any direct or implied promises, however slight, nor by the exertion of any improper influence____”
Malloy v. Hogan,
We recognize, of course, that non-custodial interrogation might possibly in some situations, by virtue of some special circumstances, to be characterized as one where “the behavior of ... law enforcement оfficials was such as to overbear petitioner’s will to resist and bring about confessions not freely self-deter-mined____” Rogers v. Richmond,365 US 534 , 544,5 LEd2d 760 ,81 SCt 735 (1961). When such a claim is raised, it is the duty of an appellate court, including this Court, “to examine the entire record and make an independеnt determination of the ultimate issue of voluntariness.” Davis v. North Carolina,384 US 737 , 741-742,16 L Ed 2d 895 ,86 S Ct 1761 (1966).
Beckwith v. United States,
Schuck contends that the
de facto
father-son relationship between himself and Officer Waters created a coercive environment falling within the “special circumstances” of
Beckwith.
We do not believe that this relationship renders the statements involuntary. Schuck contends that the manipulation of the relationship constitutes the “improper influence” referred to in the
Bram
line of cases. However, we are not shown what manipulation occurred that resulted in the first statement and we decline the invitation to speculate. By our independent review of the record, we find that a preponderance of the evidence establishes the voluntariness of Schuck’s first inculpatory statement.
Lego v. Twomey,
Between Schuck’s first statement and his second, more detailed taped “confession,” Officer Waters made a promise. Schuck asserts that he was promised treatment similar to that given another suspected burglar in an unrelated case. That burglar had confessed, implicating two others, and was not charged. The state contends Officer Waters promised only that Schuck would not be jailed pending court disposition of the case.
Neither the magistrate nor the district judge made explicit findings as to the extent of the promise. The district judge had the opposing affidavits of Schuck and Waters and no benefit of live testimony. He determined the credibility of the affiants in favor of Officer Waters and ruled the confessions voluntary. Even though we exercise an independent review of the еntire record on the voluntariness issue,
State v. Blevins,
Before Schuck gave the taped statement he was informed of his Miranda rights. He signed a waiver card and confessed. He now claims he did not knowingly and intelligently waive these rights. This claim is not premised on the assertion that Schuck failed to understand these rights; but, rather that he did not know how to exercise them. However, Schuck did not in any manner attempt to exercise his rights to silence and counsel. We hold that Schuck’s waiver of rights was valid and that the confession was voluntary and properly admitted. Whether or not Schuck was in custody when he gavе his taped statement is irrelevant to this holding since the mandate of Miranda was satisfied.
The co-defendant Hiassen claims that his confession was derived by Schuck’s earlier coerced confession. Since we find no violation of Schuck’s rights, we also hold that Hiassen’s сonfession was properly obtained and used.
Next, defendants contend the court erred in denying their motion to vacate and continue the trial. Howard Tyler, the third participant in the school break-in, was called as a witness by the state. The prоsecutor disclosed to the defense late on a Friday that Tyler would testify. The trial was to begin on the following Monday. Counsel requested a continuance in order to interview Tyler in preparation for trial and to determine whether Tyler’s statements wеre illegally obtained. Tyler was returned to Adams County from a detention facility near Cottonwood, Idaho on the same Friday. Counsel for defendants had earlier represented Tyler on the same charges made against Schuck and Hiassen. The district court determined that there could be no surprise and that defense counsel would have an opportunity to interview Tyler.
When a claim of late disclosure, rather than non-disclosure is made, the question is whether the lateness so prejudiced the dеfendants’ preparation that they were denied a fair trial.
State v. Smoot,
Lastly, defendants allege error in the admission of the radio/cassette player into evidence because it was not sufficiently identified as the one taken from the school. This contention is without merit. The radio was admitted upon testimony from a school teacher. Although the teacher could not positively identify it, Howard Tyler, the co-perpetrator, later positively identified the radio as the one taken. Assuming, but not deciding, that a complete foundation for admission of this piece of evidence had not been laid until Tyler testified, no unfair prejudice has been shown to result from its “premature” admission.
See State v. Smoot,
We find no error in the admission of evidence, including the confessions. Accordingly, we affirm the orders .withholding judgment and placing the defendants on probation.
