OPINION
T1 Defendant Ralph Levin appeals his convictions for possession or use of marijuana with a prior conviction, a class A misdemeanor, see Utah Code Ann. § 58-37-8(2)(a)(1) (1998), and possession of drug paraphernalia, a class B misdemeanor, see id. § 58-87a-5(1) (1998). This is the second time this court has considered this case. See State v. Levin,
claim that he was subjected to custodial interrogation at the time he made inerimina-ting statements and that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress such statements. 1 We affirm.
BACKGROUND
12 Both this court and the supreme court previously set forth the relevant facts, and thus, we simply include the supreme court's recitation here. 2
13 "Levin's convictions for drug offenses are based on evidence gathered during an approximately one-and-one-half hour traffic stop on the Provo Dike Road in a rural area near Utah Lake. Deputy Wayne Keith of the Utah County Sheriff's Office was on patrol when he noticed a convertible bearing expired registration tags parked on the side of the road. Three occupants were sitting in the convertible with the roof down. Without activating his lights or siren, Deputy Keith parked behind the convertible He approached on foot and saw several open containers of alcohol in plain view inside the convertible." Levin II,
4 "Deputy Keith asked the convertible's occupants for identification. Levin was in the driver's seat, Michael Winger was a passenger in the front seat, and Richard Johnson was sitting in the backseat. Deputy Keith had all three men step out of the vehicle and notified them that he was going to search for more open containers. [Due to Winger's physical disability, Deputy Keith 'recollect[ed] that he had some trouble getting [Winger] out of the vehicle.] [Deputy Keith's] search of the vehicle's center console *181 uncovered an odor of marijuana and a metal 'socket' tool that had been fashioned into a pipe, which appeared to contain burnt and unburat marijuana. Deputy Keith also found several small bags of marijuana in a backpack claimed by Johnson." Id. at 18.
[5 "There is some dispute over the precise chronology of the following events, but the record establishes that Deputy Keith called in two deputies who were certified drug ree-ognition experts. Because the vehicle belonged to Levin and he had been sitting in the driver's seat, Deputy Keith pulled Levin aside and personally subjected him to a sobriety test designed to identify alcohol impairment. He passed. The drug recognition experts then subjected Levin to additional field sobriety tests. Those officers determined that Levin had a fast pulse rate and a lack of convergence of the eyes. They informed Deputy Keith that they believed Lev-in was under the influence of marijuana. At some point, either before or after these tests, Deputy Keith asked Levin at least once about the socket, and Levin asserted that he knew nothing about it and had not smoked marijuana. Deputy Keith also patted Levin down but found no martjuana and no seent of marijuana on him." Id. at 19.
16 "However, after the drug recognition experts presented their conclusions to Deputy Keith, Deputy Keith pulled Levin aside and stated: 'There's no doubt in my mind that you've been smoking marijuana.' Deputy Keith's accusation was not phrased in the form of a question, and Deputy Keith was not 'in Levin's face' Deputy Keith testified that he did not expect a response because Levin had already denied using marijuana. Nevertheless, Levin answered by saying that 'he had taken a couple of hits' with Richard Johnson but that Michael Winger had not used any marijuana. He also added that they had smoked out of a pipe that the officers had not located. At no time was Levin formally arrested, handcuffed, or given a Miranda warning, although he was issued a citation." Id. at T 10.
T7 "In addition to the investigation of Levin, the officers questioned the two passengers. The officers briefly questioned Winger about smoking marijuana. They read Johnson his Miranda rights and questioned him about the marijuana found in his backpack. Johnson admitted that he had been smoking with Levin, but later said that he had smoked the marijuana alone. When the officers had completed their investigation, they allowed Levin and his passengers to leave in the convertible. As the convertible started to drive away, one of the officers spotted a pipe located directly under the convertible. The officers stopped the convertible, and Deputy Keith asked if this was the pipe they had used to smoke. Johnson stated that it was." Id. at T 11.
18 "Levin was later charged with possession and use of marijuana, possession of drug paraphernalia, and with having an open container in a vehicle. Levin pleaded no contest to the open container charge. With regard to the drug offenses, he pleaded not guilty and then moved to suppress the incriminating statements he had made to Deputy Keith, arguing that despite being subjected to custodial interrogation, he had not been given the required Miranda warning. The trial court denied the motion. It determined that Levin had not been in custody or subject to interrogation. At the commencement of trial, Levin renewed his motion, which the trial court again denied. Following the trial, a jury found Levin guilty of both possession of marijuana with a prior conviction and possession of drug paraphernalia" Levin II,
I 9 Levin appeals.
ISSUE AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
110 The only issue for our reconsideration on appeal is whether the trial court properly determined that Levin was not subject to custodial interrogation. As the court in Levin II recently instructed, "nondeferen-tial appellate review of custodial interrogation determinations is mandated[,] ... [and] we review ... these determinations for correctness." Id. at TM 42-48.
ANALYSIS
T11 Under the Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution, "[njo person ... shall be compelled in any criminal
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case to be a witness against himself." U.S. Const. amend. V. To protect a person's constitutional right against compulsory self incrimination, see id., courts prohibit the admission of statements made to police in the course of custodial interrogations if police fail to deliver Miranda warnings. See Levin II,
Generally, custodial interrogation consists of questioning or use of other techniques of persuasion "initiated by law enforcement officers after a person has been taken into custody or otherwise deprived of his freedom of action in any significant way." Thus, custodial interrogation occurs where there is both (1) custody or other significant deprivation of a suspect's freedom and (2) interrogation.
Td. at 1 34 (quoting Innis,
112 Generally speaking, a person is in custody for purposes of Miranda when the person's "freedom of action is curtailed to a 'degree associated with formal arrest'" Berkemer v. McCarty,
118 In making custody determinations, "the only relevant inquiry is how a reasonable man in the suspect's position would have understood his situation" Ber-kemer,
{14 The Utah Supreme Court has established four factors for "determining whether an accused who has not been formally arrested is in custody. They are: (1) the site of interrogation; (2) whether the investigation focused on the accused; (8) whether the objective indicia of arrest were present; and (4) the length and form of interrogation."
3
Salt Lake City v. Carner,
115 Applying the four factors here, we first note that "no [objective] indicia of arrest such as readied handcuffs, locked doors[,] or drawn guns were present." Car ner,
16 Second, we point out that the site of interrogation was a public road. Generally, this fact will weigh in favor of a non-custody determination because "[the] exposure to public view both reduces the ability of an
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unscrupulous policeman to use illegitimate means to elicit self-incriminating statements and diminishes the motorist's fear that, if he does not cooperate, he will be subjected to abuse." Berkemer,
T 17 Third, turning to the length and duration of the interrogation, we acknowledge that one feature of traffic stops that mitigate against the need for Miranda warnings is that "a traffic stop is presumptively temporary and brief" Berkemer v. McCarty,
$18 Finally, we consider the fourth factor-the form of the interrogation and "whether the investigation focused on the accused." Salt Lake City v. Carner,
CONCLUSION
119 We conclude that Levin was not in custody when he made incriminating statements. The trial court therefore did not err in denying Levin's motion to suppress such statements. Accordingly, we affirm.
Notes
. In State v. Levin,
. The supreme court noted that because it was "concerned only with defining the appropriate standard of review, [it was] limit[ing its] discussion of the facts in this case." Levin II,
Notably, although we quote directly from the Utah Supreme Court's recitation in Levin II, we deviate from this court's usual line and indentation format in an effort to aid readability.
. As previously noted, we do not determine the issue of interrogation. But for purposes of our custody analysis we assume that interrogation occurred.
