Defendant appeals a judgment of conviction for driving under the influence of intoxicants (DUII), ORS 813.010, assigning error to the trial court’s denial of her motion to suppress evidence that she refused to submit to a breath test. She argues that evidence of her refusal was inadmissible for two reasons: first, because the refusal occurred without the advice of counsel and was therefore fatally tainted; and second, because she had a constitutional right to refuse the test and the state cannot use the invocation of a constitutional right as evidence of guilt. We rejected the second argument in
State v. Gefre,
The relevant facts are not in dispute. Officer Schneider arrested defendant for DUII. At the police station, he provided her with a telephone, telephone books, and her own cell phone. He then asked her if she would take a breath test. According to his testimony,
“[a]t first she said she didn’t know what to do, that she wanted to ask someone. And I asked her if she wanted to ask someone what to do, and she said yes. And I told her again that she was free to use those phones and phone books to call anybody she wanted to if she wanted to ask for advice; at which point she told me she did not want to call anyone.”
What happened next is captured in the following colloquy between defense counsel and the officer:
“[COUNSEL]: Did you go then and say, I’ll — if you want to make a call, I’ll leave the room so you can talk in private?
“[OFFICER SCHNEIDER]: No, I did not.
“[COUNSEL]: Okay. Did you offer her privacy?
“[OFFICER SCHNEIDER]: No.”
*393 Schneider further testified that, after the 15-minute observation period that is required before conducting a breath test, “I asked her again what she wanted to do, if she wanted to take the breath test, and at that time she told me, and I quote, ‘I don’t want to take the test,’ ” a statement that Schneider recorded as a refusal. At a pretrial hearing, defendant submitted a motion to suppress evidence of her refusal to submit to a breath test. The court denied that motion, and defendant was subsequently convicted by a jury.
On appeal, defendant renews her argument that she was denied her right to counsel under Article I, section 11, of the Oregon Constitution
1
because she was not afforded an opportunity to consult an attorney in private before deciding whether to take the breath test and that evidence of her refusal should therefore have been suppressed.
2
We agree with defendant that she was not afforded her right to counsel. In
State v.
Spencer,
“[A]n officer may be justified in remaining in the room until contact with an attorney is made in order to ensure that the suspect actually calls an attorney rather than using the telephone for some inappropriate purpose. However, when a DUII arrestee has asked to call an attorney, if an officer intends to remain seated in the room until the call is made, we think that the onus is properly on the officer to inform the arrestee — before the call is made — that, once he or she contacts an attorney, privacy will be afforded.”
Id. at 130.
The right delineated by these cases is the right to have an opportunity to consult with
counsel.
Defendant asserts that a driver arrested for DUII has the right to consult privately not just with counsel, but with anyone. She relies on language from
State v. Newton,
*395
Durbin
and
Matviyenko,
on the other hand — the cases holding that the right to consult with counsel implies the right to do so
in private
— rely on Article I, section 11, of the Oregon Constitution, and the implied privacy right is inextricably linked to the fact that the consultation is with an attorney; a driver arrested for DUII has the right to consult privately with counsel because “confidentiality is ‘inherent’ in the right to counsel.”
Durbin,
The question in this case, therefore, is whether defendant invoked her right to counsel when she told the police officer that she “wanted to ask someone” for advice before deciding whether to take the breath test. If a suspect makes an equivocal invocation of the right to counsel under Article I, section 12,
3
police are required to ask follow-up questions to determine what the suspect meant before proceeding with interrogation.
State v. Charboneau,
*395 “No person shall * * * be compelled in any criminal prosecution to testify against himself.”
*396 We conclude that, under the circumstances here, a reasonable police officer would regard defendant’s statement that she wanted advice from “someone” as an equivocal invocation of her right to counsel. The conversation between defendant and Schneider occurred while defendant was confined in a police station, having been arrested for DUII, and confronting a decision involving legal issues and having serious punitive consequences. A reasonable police officer would certainly have understood defendant’s request to “ask someone” for “advice” to be (at least possibly) a request to speak to an attorney. That being the case, the officer had the obligation, first, to ask follow-up questions in order to determine whether defendant had invoked her right to counsel; and second, if so, to inform her that, if she wanted to speak with an attorney, she could do so in private. Because that did not occur, defendant was not afforded her right to counsel under Article I, section 11.
That conclusion, however, does not end our inquiry. Defendant does not argue that her conviction must be reversed because she was denied her right to consult privately with an attorney — that is, that denial of the right to counsel
per se
requires reversal — and we do not address that question. Rather, defendant’s assignment of error is that the trial court should not have allowed the state to introduce evidence of her refusal to take the breath test. Put another way, defendant argues only that, because her refusal to take the breath test resulted from an unlawful failure to afford her the right to consult privately with an attorney, the refusal should have been suppressed. To prevail on that argument, defendant must demonstrate not only that the evidence was tainted by a violation of the right to counsel, but that admitting it was harmful. Or Const, Art VII (Amended), § 3 (judgment must be affirmed notwithstanding error if error did not
*397
affect judgment); OEC 103(1) (evidentiary error not presumed to be prejudicial). Thus, we must affirm the conviction if “there [is] little likelihood that the particular error affected the verdict.”
State v. Davis,
Here, the state presented a compelling case against defendant. The testimony established that defendant had spent the evening at two taverns and had consumed “five or six” drinks; that, after the second tavern closed at around 2:00 a.m., she got in her car and drove “erratically” on 1-5, “swerving back and forth,” frequently crossing from one lane to another and, at one point, driving into the median; that, when she was finally detained at her home, she had slurred speech, bloodshot and glassy eyes, and the odor of alcohol on her breath; that she attempted to exculpate herself by telling the arresting officer that she had not been driving, but was dropped off by a friend (an assertion that cannot be squared with the evidence); that she failed several field sobriety tests (although not all of them); and that she showed all six indicators of intoxication on the horizontal gaze nystagmus test. Her refusal to take the breath test was relevant only to show “consciousness of guilt.”
See Gefre,
Affirmed.
Notes
Article I, section 11, provides, in part:
“In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall have the right * * * to be heard by himself and counsel * *
Defendant also asserts that the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution protects her right to counsel in the present case. However, she offers no argument as to why the Fourteenth Amendment protects her right to a private consultation with counsel. Accordingly, we decline to address defendant’s federal constitutional claim.
See State v. Thompson,
Article I, section 12, provides, in part:
