OPINION
¶ 1 Defendant Edgar Jose Montero appeals from his conviction, following a jury trial, for murder, aggravated assault, and possession or purchase of a dangerous weapon. He argues that the trial court erred in failing to suppress his confession, which he contends police obtained through coercion and improper interrogation tactics. We affirm.
¶ 2 In the early morning hours of March 19, 2005, Montero and a number of his аcquaintances—some of them gang members—• gathered at Perry and Eugene Spight’s apartment in Taylorsville for a party. Among the group were Jose Johnson, Lonia Kersey, Marci Batchelor, and Heron Gonzales. At some point, Montero and Gonzales began arguing over gang-related matters. Perry asked them to go outside, where the argument continued, and Johnson, too, began arguing with Gonzales. Eventually, Batche-lor and the Spight brothers went outside to try to diffuse the situation. Shots were fired, and Perry Spight was struck in the back, fatally wounded.
¶3 The party guests scattered. Eugene Spight later testified that he saw Montero get into Johnson’s red SUV. Batchelor testified that she and Gonzales left together and met up with some friends at a restaurant. She further testified that while she was at the restaurant, Montero called her on her cell phone and asked, “Did I get him?”
¶ 4 Meanwhile, police began to investigate. Their investigation led them to Johnson’s house, where they found Johnson, Montero, and Kersey. When they knocked on the front door, Montero “almost immediately” attempted to escape out the back basement door. He was apprehended, and police took all three to the police station for questioning. Pursuant to a search warrant issued shortly thereafter, police searched Johnson’s home. In the basement bedroom from which Monte-ro had attempted to flee, they found a black parka in which was found a .25 caliber semiautomatic pistol. Ballistics testing later showed that the fatal bullet and two shell casings found at the scene came from that pistol.
¶ 5 At the police station, Johnson refused to cooperate and was taken to jail on obstruction of justice charges. Montеro waived his Miranda rights and agreed to talk to Detective Adamson. Over the course of the next six and one-half hours, Detective Adamson conducted an on-again, off-again interrogation while Montero sat handcuffed to a chair in a small interrogation room. Near the end of the detention and after changing his story repeatedly, Montero admitted that he pulled the trigger on the gun that killed Perry Spight. 2
¶ 6 Before trial, Montero moved to have his confession suppressed. The trial court denied his motion, and a videotape of his confession was admitted as evidence during his jury trial. 3 Eugene Spight and Batchelor also testified at trial. Eugene testified that he saw Montero, whom he identified as “Gumby,” shoot Perry. Batchelor testified that she “looked up ... at [Montero],” who was wearing a “big, black jacket” and standing about twenty-five feet away holding a gun, with “his arms ... extended ... like hе was pointing it.” The jury convicted Monte-ro, and the trial court sentenced him to serve a term of up to life in the state prison. Montero appeals.
ISSUE AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶ 7 On appeal, Montero renews his argument that his confession should have been suppressed. Specifically, he argues that his confession was involuntary, a result of Detective Adamson’s coercive interrogation tactics, and that its admission as evidence was рrejudicial to his case. “The constitutional standard for determining the voluntariness of a confession requires that we independently review the entire record,”
State v. Mabe,
¶8 The Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution “protects individuals from being
compelled
to give evidence against themselves.”
Id.
¶ 11 (emрhasis in original) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted). Under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, “certain interrogation techniques, either in isolation or as applied to the unique characteristics of a particular suspect, are so offensive to a civilized system of justice that they must be condemned.”
Id.
(citations and internal quotation marks omitted). “ ‘In the face of a [defendant’s] challenge to the voluntariness of a statement or confession, it is incumbent upon the prosecution to demonstrate by a preponderance of the evidence that the statement was made voluntarily based upon the totality of circumstances.’ ”
Id.
¶ 45 (quoting
State v. Allen,
¶ 9 A confession is involuntary only where evidence shows “ ‘some physical or psychological force or manipulation that is designed to induce the accused to talk when hе otherwise would not have done so.’ ”
Id.
¶25 (citation and emphasis omitted).
See also Colorado v. Connelly, 479
U.S. 157, 167,
¶ 10 Factors relevant to our consideration of the evidence include “the duration of the interrogation, the persistence of the officers, police trickery, absence of family and counsel, and threats and promises made to the defendant by the officers.”
Rettenberger,
¶ 11 Montero’s counsel describes the coer-civeness of his interrogation in these terms:
The interrogation took place over a period of more than six hours; [Detective] Adam-son was persistent; he made threats, promises, and misrepresentations, and he used trickery; he used the false friend technique; he subjected Montero to extended periods of incommunicado; there is no indication that Montero had аnything to eat, and [Detective] Adamson brushed aside Montero’s requests to lie down, or to call his mother, and his concerns about throwing up.
These “coercive tactics,” according to Monte-ro, caused him to confess “just to end the interrogation.” Moreover, he asserts, because “[confession evidence can be powerful in a case that requires the jury to make inferences,” its admission under the circumstances here had a “pervasive influence” and was unduly prejudicial. We address each of these arguments in turn.
¶ 12 Montero was interrogated off and on for just over six hours. Our review of the record, including the videotape of the interrogation, shows that Detective Adamson actively questioned Montero for less than half that time. Montero claims that this was excessive, but he provides no ease law supporting that view. On the other hаnd, the State points us to cases where detentions and interrogations for similar periods of time were held to be acceptable.
See State v. Ashdown,
¶ 13 Montero also complains that Detective Adamson was persistent. For example, he complains that Detective Adamson “repeatedly maintained that statements and evidence pointed to Montero as the shooter.” He further complains that Detective Adam-son rejected his explanations as inconsistent with the information police obtained, and that Detective Adamson “urged [him] to ‘be a man’ ” and suggested that he “needed to take responsibility” for his actions. But a police officer’s exhortations to tell the truth or assertions that a suspect is lying do not automatically render a resulting confession involuntary.
See
2 Wayne R. LaFave et al.,
Criminal Procedure
§ 6.2(e), at 636 (3d ed.2007). On the contrary, we think it eminently reasonablе that police officers challenge criminal suspects’ questionable explanations in their pursuit of the truth and their efforts to solve crimes. We do not think Detective Adamson was overzealous in his pursuit of the truth; in fact, he gave Montero every opportunity to explain his involvement. On one occasion, he remarked to Montero, “I’m going to give you every opportunity to you know ... resolve this and if there’s somebody еlse ... we want somebody else ... we definitely don’t want the wrong guy ... you know ... because that means ... somebody got away with murder.” Given the absence of any evidence of “systematic persistence” sufficiently egregious to suggest coercion,
see, e.g., Harris v. South Carolina,
¶ 14 Montero next contends that Detective Adamson “made threats, promises, and misrepresentations, and he used trickery.” We find little support for this contention. “[A]n interrogation can be ‘impermissi-bly coercive because [it] carried a threat of greater punishment or a promise for lesser punishment depending on whether [a defendant] confessed.’”
State v. Rettenberger,
¶ 15 Ñor do Detective Adamson’s suggestions that Montero’s “cooperation is ... the only thing that is going to save ... [him] from getting into ... any trouble,” and that “maybe [he could] get in there ... and cut some kind of a deal,” constitute promises that provided improper inducements to Montero to confess. These, too, were accurate statements of fact. The possibility was open to Montero to cooperate with police in their investigation, just as it was possible to attempt to negotiate a plea agreement if the facts of the case' warranted it. There was nothing wrong with Detective Adamson’s telling Montero, “if you [are] cooperative and tell me everything you can ... then I’ll do whatever I can to help you out” and “if you ... honestly didn’t intend to kill that guy ... then put that on the table ... and we’ll take that into account ... and we’ll talk to the D.A. about it ... and we’ll try to resolve it.”
See Strain,
¶ 16 We also see no problem with Detective Adamson’s indication that “only about ... 8 people” were outside in the area when the shooting took place, his suggestion that some of the witnesses had identified
¶ 17 Montero next argues that Detective Adamson’s attempts to “recast the murder as a crime far less serious in nature” constituted trickery. Again, we disagree. Statements suggesting that a suspect may not have committed a homicide intentionally, or that a situation simply got out of hand, do not, standing alone, overсome a defendant’s will such that his confession will be deemed involuntary.
See Rettenberger,
¶ 18 Montero insists that Detective Adamson’s use of the false-friend technique, a technique whereby the interrogator represents that he is a friend acting in the suspect’s best interest, overcame his will. “Standing alone, [the false-friend] technique is not 'sufficiently coercive to produce an involuntary confession,’ but may be significant 'in relation to other tactics and factors.’ ”
State v. Bunting,
¶ 19 Montero next asserts that Detective Adamson improperly subjected him to extended рeriods of incommunicado and that such conduct was especially egregious because he was left handcuffed to a chair. As we said above, we hardly think Montero was subjected to “extended” periods of anything, and other jurisdictions have recognized that restraining suspects with handcuffs is standard procedure.
See, e.g., United States v. Cardenas,
¶20 Finally, Montero complains thаt he had nothing to eat and no restroom breaks, and that Detective Adamson brushed aside his requests to he down and to call his mother, as well as his concerns about throwing up. We have thoroughly reviewed the interrogation transcript and the videotape, and we can see nothing to indicate that Montero ever asked for anything to eat or to use the restroom. With respect to his other complaints, Montero asked only once to lie down and to call his mother, and he never again mentioned a need to throw up after raising the possibility just once. Had he been truly exhausted or ill, he would have renewed his
¶ 21 Because we must look at the totality of circumstances in determining whether Montero’s confession was voluntary, we finally consider, in conjunction with the factors discussed above, the individualized factors of his mental and emotional health, education, age, and experience with the judicial system. Montero insists that he was a scared eighteen-year-old and a Venezuelan who does not speak English as his native language. But we see nothing in the record to suggest that Montero was in any way particularly susceptible to cоercion or manipulation. Although he is fairly young, he has attended some college and speaks excellent English. He is also familiar with the legal system, given a criminal history—despite his comparative youthfulness—that includes convictions for possession of a firearm, obstruction of justice, theft, possession of a stolen vehicle, and disorderly conduct by fighting.
¶22 All of these facts notwithstanding, Montero asserts that Detective Adamson’s interrogation tactics were sufficiently similar to those employed by law enforcement officers in
State v. Rettenberger,
¶ 23 Also contributing to the Court’s decision were several facts unique to the defendant. He had a below average I.Q. and the maturity level of a fifteen-year-old. He suffered from attention deficit disorder and exhibited symptoms of depression, anxiety disorder, thought disorder, schizophrenia, and dependent personality disorder. An expert opined that he “would experience greater anxiety in solitary confinement than would the average persоn.” Id. ¶ 6. She also testified that he “would be highly susceptible to psychological manipulation by police interrogators, that he would be overly compliant and dependent upon the police officers, and that he would tend to agree with the officers’ statements during an interrogation in order to relieve his stress.” Id. This proved correct, for the defendant’s confession contained “little information that was not first provided оr suggested by the interrogating officers.” Id. ¶ 39. In fact, at times the defendant even “asked the officers for information about the crime” or “incorporated the officers’ suggestions into his confession.” Id. ¶42. These facts are in stark contrast to the facts of this case, which simply do not reach the level required for suppression of Montero’s confession.
CONCLUSION
¶ 24 The trial court did not err in declining to suppress Montero’s confession. Detective Adamson’s interrogation did not rise to the level of coercion. Neither the circumstances of the detention nor the length of the interno-
¶ 25 Affirmed.
Notes
.We state the facts in the light most favorable to the jury's verdict and the trial court's rulings.
See State v. Hobbs,
. Additional relevant facts are discussed later in this opinion, in the course of considering Monte-ro’s arguments on appeal.
. Detective Adamson also summarized Montero’s confession during his testimony at trial.
