OPINION
Case Summary and Issues
The State of Indiana appeals the trial court’s grant of Ruth Hicks’s motion to suppress evidence against her. The State raises the sole issue of whether the trial court improperly suppressed the evidence. Concluding the trial court’s grant of the motion to suppress was contrary to law, we reverse and remand for further proceedings.
Facts and Procedural History
On August 2, 2005, at roughly 2:45 a.m., Officer Kevin Sherman, of the Franklin Police Department, was dispatched based on the report of a vehicle stopped on railroad tracks. When Officer Sherman ar *240 rived on the scene, he observed a group of people standing roughly fifteen feet from the truck, which was unoccupied and stopped on the railroad tracks. Officer Sherman spoke with Christina Shinn and three other individuals, who stated that they did not know who had been driving the truck, and were outside to help get the truck off the tracks. During this conversation, Hicks pointed at Shinn and stated that Shinn had been driving the truck. Officer Sherman, who was standing within a few feet of Hicks, smelled alcohol and noticed that Hicks had bloodshot eyes, slurred speech, and unsteady balance.
Officer Sherman then asked Hicks a series of questions, as indicated by the following statement, which Officer Sherman confirmed to be accurate at the hearing:
and once again [Hicks] said she wasn’t driving and then [Officer Sherman] asked her who the vehicle belonged to. She told [Officer Sherman] it was Kenny Wilkins. Then [Officer Sherman] asked her again who was driving and she pointed to Christina Shinn and said “The girl with the blond hair.” And then [Officer Sherman] asked her what her name was and she said she didn’t know. Then [Officer Sherman] asked her again if she was driving and she said that [“]we[”] were driving the vehicle. And the [Officer Sherman] asked her who [“]we[”] was, and she said “Okay, the girl with the blonde hair.” And then [Officer Sherman] asked her again if she drove the vehicle. And then finally she admitted that she did.
Transcript at 7. Officer Sherman then conducted field sobriety tests, all of which Hicks failed.
On August 15, 2005, the State charged Hicks with operating a vehicle with a blood alcohol content of more than .15 percent, a Class A misdemeanor, and operating a vehicle while intoxicated, a Class A misdemeanor. At some point, Hicks filed a motion to suppress the statements she made to Officer Sherman, arguing that they were made in violation of her rights under Miranda. On July 25, 2007, the trial court held a hearing on this motion and granted the motion. At the hearing, the trial court made the following statement revealing its reasoning:
There are times when the law can be murky and I.understand in this situation clearly the officer’s first intent was the safety of the situation, as it should have been. At a certain point it did become a criminal investigation and that occurred before those questions were asked. Ms. Hicks couldn’t have walked away and it was probably clear to her and probably clear to the officer that she couldn’t walk away. So, I have to suppress the statement.
Tr. at 20-21. The State now appeals. 1
Discussion and Decision
I. Standard of Review
When reviewing a trial court’s ruling on a motion to suppress, we must determine whether substantial evidence of probative value supports the trial court’s decision.
State v. Quirk,
II. Trial Court’s Grant of Motion to Suppress
A person must be informed of the right to remain silent and to an attorney, and that what he says may be used against him any time “law enforcement officers question a person who has been ‘taken into custody or otherwise deprived of his freedom of action in any significant way.’ ”
2
Luna v. State,
Hicks points to Officer Sherman’s testimony that had Hicks attempted to leave after he 'asked her who had been driving the truck, he would not have allowed her to do so. However, “[a]n officer’s knowledge and beliefs are relevant to the question of custody only if they are conveyed — through words or actions — to the person being questioned.”
Morris,
Hicks also makes much of the facts that Officer Sherman suspected that Hicks had committed the crime of driving while intoxicated, and therefore focused his questions on her. In support, Hicks cites
Moore v. State,
Hicks points to nothing in the nature of the encounter that indicates the questioning “was conducted under circumstances of intimidation.”
Zook v. State,
Although Indiana authority is sufficient to reverse the trial court here, we note that courts in other jurisdictions have addressed factual situations substantially similar to the one at bar and found that the defendants were not subject to custodi
*243
al interrogation when officers questioned them as to who was driving a vehicle.
See State v. Castellano,
Also, we point out that the encounter in this case was substantially similar to a traffic stop. In
Berkemer v. McCarty,
We conclude that all the reasonable inferences from the evidence indicate that Hicks was not in custody when she told Officer Sherman that she had been driving the vehicle. Therefore, the trial court’s grant of Hicks’s motion to suppress that statement was contrary to law.
Conclusion
We conclude the trial court’s grant of the motion to suppress was clearly erroneous. We therefore reverse and remand for further proceedings.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. The Slate is permitted to appeal "an order granting a motion to suppress evidence, if the ultimate effect of the order is to preclude further prosecution.” Ind.Code § 35-38-4-2(5).
. We note that "a defendant is entitled to the procedural safeguards of
Miranda
only if subject to custodial
interrogation." Lawson v. State,
