OPINION
¶ 1 After a jury trial, appellant Luis Moreno-Medrano was convicted of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon or dangerous instrument and attempted armed robbery, both dangerous-nature offenses. The court sentenced him to concurrent, presumptive prison terms of 7.5 years. On appeal, Moreno-Medrano claims the court erred in denying his motion to suppress a statement he had made to police, ordering him to pay attorney fees without making certain factual findings, entering a criminal restitution order with respect to the fees imposed, and considering his claim of innocence as a denial of responsibility at sentencing. Finding no error, we affirm.
Facts
¶ 2 “We view the facts in the light most favorable to sustaining the convictions.”
State v. Robles,
Motion to Suppress
¶ 3 Moreno-Medrano argues the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress his statement to the police, contending he did not validly waive his rights under
Miranda v. Arizona,
¶ 4 “ ‘Answering questions after police properly give the
Miranda
warnings constitutes a waiver by conduct.’ ”
State v. Tros
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tle,
¶5 By stating that he understood his rights and then engaging in “a course of conduct indicating waiver,”
Butler,
¶6 Moreno-Medrano further argues that because the evidence shows the police department routinely fails to obtain explicit waivers and even trains officers “to affirmatively ignore any inquiry” regarding waiver, “the spirit and intent of
Miranda”
are not being fulfilled. He suggests we draw a distinction between inadvertent failure to obtain an explicit waiver and this officer’s deliberate failure to obtain an explicit waiver. We agree that the better practice is to obtain an explicit waiver from the suspect. But our supreme court has held, without considering the subjective intent of the officer, that an explicit waiver is not required.
See Trostle,
Imposition of Fees
¶ 7 Moreno-Medrano also argues the trial court committed fundamental error when it .ordered him to reimburse Pima County $400 in attorney fees and pay a $25 indigent administrative assessment without first ascertaining his financial ability to pay these amounts. He did not, however, object to the imposition of fees at arraignment or at sentencing. When a defendant does not object below to an alleged error, we review solely for fundamental error.
State v. Henderson,
¶ 8 The fees at issue were imposed pursuant to A.R.S. § 11-584 and Rule 6.7(d), Ariz. R.Crim. P. Section 11-584(B)(1) authorizes the court to assess defendants “an indigent administrative assessment of not more than twenty-five dollars.” Section 11-584(B)(3) permits the court to require a defendant to “repay to the county a reasonable amount to reimburse the county for the cost of the defendant’s legal defense.” Section 11-584(C) provides that when “determining the amount and method of payment!,] the court shall take into account the financial resources of the defendant and the nature of the burden that the payment will impose.” Finally, Rule 6.7(d) provides that, if the court determines the defendant has the “financial resources which enable him or her to offset in part the costs of the legal services to be *353 provided, the court shall” require the defendant to pay “such amount as [the court] finds he or she is able to pay without incurring substantial hardship.”
¶ 9 Before imposing fees pursuant to § 11-584 and Rule 6.7(d), the court is required to make specific factual findings that the defendant has the ability to pay the fees imposed and that the fees will not cause a substantial hardship.
State v. Taylor,
¶ 10 The court imposed these fees at Moreno-Medrano’s arraignment and reconfirmed the obligation at sentencing. It is unclear from the record whether the court had all of Moreno-Medrano’s financial information available to it at the arraignment, but it did not make express findings regarding Moreno-Medrano’s financial status at either hearing.
¶ 11 Division One of this court has held that the failure to make the required findings before imposing attorney fees constituted fundamental error.
See State v. Lopez,
¶ 12 We cannot agree that the fundamental nature of the right to counsel compels the conclusion that the court’s failure to make the requisite findings regarding reimbursement constitutes fundamental error. The
Lopez
court cited
Espinoza
for its holding that the contribution provisions in § 11-584 and Rule 6.7(d) do not violate a defendant’s fundamental right to representation.
Lopez,
¶ 13 Moreover,
Lopez
preceded
Henderson
and its clarification of the fundamental error standard. And failing to make the required findings cannot fairly be characterized as one of those “rare” circumstances that deprives the defendant of a right essential to his defense or otherwise renders it impossible for him to have had a fair trial.
See Henderson,
¶ 14 We also conclude that Moreno-Medrano has failed to show that the trial court did not consider his financial ability in imposing these fees and thereby committed fundamental error. Both a report prepared by pretrial services before his arraignment and the presentence report contained information about Moreno-Medrano’s financial circumstances. Nothing in the record indicates that the court failed to consider this information.
See State v. Medrano,
¶ 15 Moreno-Medrano also appears to argue it would have been fundamental error to impose the fees even if the court had made the requisite findings. He claims that information in the presentence report shows he did not have the financial ability to contribute
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to the cost of his defense and cites
State v. Torres-Soto,
Criminal Restitution Order
¶ 16 Moreno-Medrano further argues the trial court erred in reducing the $400 attorney fee and $25 indigent administrative assessment ordered under A.R.S. § 11-584(B) to a judgment and entering a criminal restitution order at sentencing. He contends that AR.S. § 13-805 only permits those fees to be reduced to a criminal restitution order at the completion of a defendant’s sentence or term of probation and that the error alleged here will result in immediate accrual of interest on his obligation under § 13-805(C). Because Moreno-Medrano failed to object below, we again review solely for fundamental, prejudicial error.
See Henderson,
¶ 17 Moreno-Medrano does not argue the alleged error was fundamental.
See State v. Ramsey,
¶ 18 Additionally, we have held in a different context that fees ordered under § 11— 584(B) “are not punitive in nature or related to other court-imposed penalties.”
State v. Connolly,
Insistence on Innocence at Sentencing
¶ 19 Moreno-Medrano last contends that, in sentencing him, the trial court improperly adopted the prosecutor’s position that Moreno-Medrano’s insistence on his innocence was a factor supporting a presumptive sentence. Because he failed to raise this issue
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below, we review solely for fundamental error.
See Henderson,
¶ 20 A defendant’s refusal “to publicly admit his guilt ... is irrelevant to a sentencing determination.”
State v. Carriger,
¶ 21 At sentencing, the trial court stated: Mr. Moreno-Medrano, I have considered your letter, as I said, even though to the presentence report author you still maintain your innocence. And you’re entitled to do so, but I have considered the fact that you have indicated, if you will, a sense of remorse with respect to the situation. And that was clearly evident in your letter.
Although the court mentioned that MorenoMedrano maintained his innocence and had
the right to do so, it did not state that it considered Moreno-Medrano’s insistence on his innocence as a factor in sentencing him. Indeed, the statement suggests the court considered Moreno-Medrano’s remorse, not his insistence on his innocence. Nothing in the record contradicts the presumption that the court considered only evidence properly related to the sentencing decision.
See Phillips,
Conclusion
¶ 22 Based on the foregoing, Moreno-Medrano’s convictions and sentences are affirmed.
