This is an appeal by Loris Lee McVay from a conviction after trial by jury of the crime of deadly assault by a prisoner. Appellant was sentenced to life imprisonment, to be served consecutively with other sentences he is currently serving. Taking jurisdiction pursuant to A.R.S. § 13-4031, we affirm.
The facts of this case concern an incident which took place at Arizona State Prison on May 11, 1979. While in an exercise yard of the prison, inmate Robert Brookover was beaten and stabbed numerous times. The only other individuals present were the appellant and his half-brother, Larry Evans, both inmates at the prison. Evans and the appellant were brought before the Disciplinary Court of the prison on a charge of violating prison rules by assaulting an inmate. They were found guilty, and the Disciplinary Court set the punishment as 30 days in isolation.
Confinement in the isolation cells of Arizona State Prison entails the loss of a number of privileges. Inmates in isolation are allowed to shower and exercise only three times per week, do not receive dessert with their meals, and are not allowed to have televisions or radios, tobacco, shoes, and other items of personal property in their cells. More significantly, the temperature in the isolation cells is hotter than in the rest of the prison, due to a less effective evaporative cooling system. The precise temperature of the isolation cells is one of the disputed facts, with the appellant claiming that it never went below 110 degrees in the summer and the prison officials countering with temperature estimates in the range of 85-90 degrees.
Subsequent to his confinement in the isolation section of the prison, the investigating officers conducted separate interviews with Evans and the appellant. At the second interview with Evans, he gave a statement concerning the stabbing. Evans was released from isolation shortly after he gave his statement. Appellant subsequently gave a statement which was introduced against him at his trial.
Prior to trial appellant moved to suppress the statement given in prison claiming that it was involuntary. After an evidentiary hearing, the motion was denied. Appellant urges that this ruling was error.
*20
The sole issue in this appeal is whether appellant’s confession was involuntary and, therefore, rendered inadmissible under the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.
Schneckloth v. Bustamonte,
I
In regard to appellant’s first argument, that the admissibility of his confession was negated by the alleged promise of removal from isolation, we find this unpersuasive for at least two reasons. First, the record supports the proposition that the investigating officers never made any promise at all. We recognize and accept the principle that a confession, in order to be voluntary within the meaning of the due process clause, must not have been obtained by any direct or implied promises, however slight.
Brady v. United States,
The alleged promise in the present case is analogous to the one in
State v. Hall,
“Q. Did you tell him [appellant] that you could get him out of the hole [isolation]?
A. I did not. I mentioned it to Mr. McVay that in the spirit of cooperation I would mention it to Mr. Aveneti [the warden] and that would be Mr. Aveneti’s decision as to whether he remained in the hole or whether he was taken out.”
As is apparent from the above exchange, the record supports the notion that the investigating officers merely told the appellant that the fact of his cooperation would be made known to the warden and it was
possible
this would have an effect on his request to be released from isolation. Admittedly, there is a conflict in the record on this point, with the appellant describing a forceful and unambiguous promise as having been made to him that he would be released from isolation if he made a statement. The trial court resolved this conflict in favor of admitting the confession. As we stated in
State v. Jordan, supra,
“The trial court’s determination of the admissibility of a confession will not be upset on appeal absent ‘clear and manifest’ error.”
The second factor in favor of finding there to be no promise here is that appellant initiated the question of his release from isolation. When Evans was being released from isolation, he shouted to appellant to cooperate in order to obtain release. Subsequently, appellant met with Officer Cavender and immediately brought' up the subject of his release from isolation. Thus, if there was a “deal” made whereby appellant would be released from isolation in
*21
exchange for confessing, appellant’s initiation of that “deal” protects the validity of the confession. In the words of this court in a similar case: “[Where] the proposal for the ‘deal’ came from the defendant, the promise did not interfere with the appellants’ exercise of a free volition in giving the confession.... ‘[Where] the promise was
solicited
by the accused, freely and voluntarily, . .. they cannot be heard to say that in accepting the promise they were the
victims
of compelling influences.’ ”
State v. Jordan,
II
Appellant next argues that the conditions in isolation were so intolerable as to overbear his free will, thereby rendering his confession involuntary. We recognize the principle that conditions of confinement can be so severe that the prisoner may be willing to give a confession merely to escape the intolerable imprisonment. In such a situation, the prisoner’s will is overborne and any resulting confession is deemed involuntary. However, in judging the coercive effect of the conditions of confinement, we are dealing with a matter of degree.
The controlling Arizona case on this question is
State
v.
Arnett,
which held that the conditions must constitute more than merely “uncomfortable surroundings.”
In addition to the issues presented by appellant, we have reviewed the entire record pursuant to A.R.S. § 13-4035(B) and find no fundamental error. The judgment and the sentence of the trial court are affirmed.
