¶ 1 Aftеr a jury trial, appellant Pamela Peterson was convicted of theft of means of transportation by control or by controlling stolen property. The trial court suspended imposition of her sentence, placing her on probation for two years and ordering restitution of $1,392. On appeal, Peterson argues the court erred in denying her motion to suppress without a hearing and in admitting certain evidence at trial over her hearsay and confrontation objections. She also challenges the restitution order. For the following reasons, we stay in part, vacate in part, and remand for further proceedings.
Factual Background and Procedural History
¶ 2 In January 2010, Linda V. was delivering newspapers in her GMC Canyon pickup track in Tucson. She stopped at a restaurant to make a delivery, turning off the track’s engine but leaving the keys in the ignition. When she came back outside, she saw a man opening the driver’s side door. She jumped in the truck on the passenger’s side and tried to grab the keys while the man attempted to start the enginе. The man then displayed a weapon, and she “threw [herjself out onto the curb.” At trial, she testified she did not know the man but was certain Peterson did not steal her truck.
¶ 3 Approximately two weeks later a Tucson police officer responded to a call reporting a man and woman arguing in a drugstore parking lot. Upon arrival, the officer encountered a man who identified himself as Jeffrey Peterson
¶ 4 As Peterson drove away with Jeffrey in the passenger seat, the officer conducted a routine cheek of the truck’s license plate number, which indicated the truck had been stolen. The officer caught up to the truck, pulled it over, and asked Peterson to get out аnd sit against a wall. He asked Peterson who owned the truck, and she answered it belonged to a friend of her husband’s named Linda. A detective searched the track and found items bearing Linda V.’s name mixed among items bearing Peterson’s name. After advising Peterson of her Miranda
¶5 Peterson was charged with theft of means of transportation by control and/or by controlling stolen property. Before trial, she moved to suppress certain statements she had made to Brown, arguing they had been taken involuntarily and in violation of Miranda. The trial court denied the motion. The jury found Peterson guilty, and she wаs sentenced as outlined above. We have jurisdiction over her appeal pursuant to AR.S. §§ 12-120.21(A)(1), 13-4031, and 13-4033(A)(1), (4).
Discussion
Motion to Suppress
¶ 6 Peterson argues the trial court abused its discretion “in summarily denying, without a hearing, [her] Motion to Suppress her statements made to Detective Brown.”
¶ 7 Peterson first assigns error to the trial court’s failure to hold a hearing before ruling on her Miranda motion. She contends, as she did below, that Detective Brown continued questioning her after she had invoked her right to remain silent аnd she subsequently made incriminating statements. In its answering brief, the state does not address the issue of whether Peterson was entitled to a hearing, but argues only that the court correctly ruled on the merits of her motion.
¶ 8 “Miranda requires law enforcement officers, when questioning a suspect in custody about criminal activity, to inform the suspect he or shе has the right to remain silent.” State v. Szpyrka,
¶ 9 When a defendant seeks to suppress statements on the ground they were taken in violation of Miranda, he or she must allege a prima facie case for suppression before being entitled to a hearing. See Ariz. R.Crim. P. 16.2(b). To meet this burden, a defendant need only make allegations which, if proved, would entitle him or her to suppression. Rodriguez v. Arellano,
¶ 10 In her motion to suppress, Peterson cited the following exchange with Brown, who she claimed had placed her in handcuffs and read her the Miranda warning before interviewing her.
Det. Brown: [ ]Okay, cause, cause he, he’s saying that you guys went оut. You know, you guys we[ ]re gonna get evicted. You guys were all stressed out about not being able to move your stuff. You get, decided to go use a friend’s phone to, to make some phone calls and then lo[ ] and behold here you come with the truck and the keys, and he didn’t question it at all whatsoever. So he assumed everything was good to gо. You, you know, you said that you get the ear for about a week or so when your friend was out of town. So that didn’t happen? Pamela?
Ms. Peterson: No, not exactly like that. Det. Brown: Okay, so how exactly did it happen? I ... would like to kind of understand how it happened. So who did you get the truck from?
Ms. Peterson: I, I don’t have anything else to say about hоw it all happened.
Det. Brown: You don’t have anything else to say or you don’t want to say what else you have to say? So I think you know more about what’s going on than what you’re telling me.
Questioning continued after this exchange and, as Peterson indicated in her motion, she subsequently admitted Jeffrey had not borrowed the truck from a friend named Linda, but rather she herself had borrowed it from a neighbor named Maya, whose last name she did not know.
¶ 11 In her motion to the trial court, relying principally on Szpyrka, Peterson argued her statement, “I don’t have anything else to say about how it all happened,” was an unequivocal invocation of her right to remain
¶ 12 As noted above, to establish a prima facie case warranting a hearing, Peterson needed only to allege facts that, if proved, would entitle her to suppression. Arellano,
¶ 13 The trial court distinguished Szpyrka because in that casе “the suspect made the statement immediately, and repeatedly, after the officer gave the Miranda warnings.” But, at least for purposes of determining whether Peterson has sufficiently alleged a Miranda violation, it is immaterial whether she claims to have invoked the right to silence at the outset of questioning or at some point in the middle; the right can be invoked at any time. Miranda,
¶ 14 The state argues Peterson’s statement was ambiguous because it “can be interpreted to indicate that [she] was willing to answer further questions or otherwise assist but simply thought she had no additional information to provide on the matter.” The trial court applied a similar rationale in denying the motion, indicating there were other reasonably possible meanings behind the alleged invocation. But the argument that the circumstances surrounding Peterson’s questioning may have ascribed another meaning to her statement does not undermine the fact that she met her initial burden. Rather, it may properly be raised at a suppression hearing to rebut her allegation. See Arella-no,
¶ 15 Finally, even if Peterson’s alleged invocation was ambiguous, the record is insufficient to conclude that Brown’s verifying query, “You don’t have anything else to say or you don’t want to say what else you have to say?” was a permissible clarifying question. See Finehout,
¶ 16 The trial court also denied Peterson’s motion to suppress her statements on volun-tariness grounds, stating in its ruling on her motion to reconsider that she had not alleged “any specific circumstances establishing a prima facie case that any statements should bе suppressed as involuntary” and that “[flurther proceedings on the issue would serve no purpose.” Peterson contends, and the state concedes, that the court erred in summarily denying her voluntariness motion without a hearing.
¶ 17 In an exception to the general rule noted above, a defendant need not make a prima faсie ease for suppression on the ground of voluntariness in order to trigger the state’s burden and be entitled to a hearing. See State v. Fimbres,
Remedy
¶ 18 Peterson argues her conviction should be vacated and the case remanded for a new trial, before which the court would hold a suppression hearing. She suggests this would “put[] the parties in the same position they would have been in but for the error” and would preserve Peterson’s right to appeal the court’s ruling on remand. The question of whether a defendant’s conviction should be vacated or the matter remanded for a limited hearing requires a ease-by-case determination. See State v. Simoneau,
¶ 19 The state, on the other hand, argues we should not vacate Peterson’s conviction but should instead remand for thе trial court to hold a limited hearing and grant a new trial only if it concludes the statements should have been suppressed. In support of this proposed remedy, the state relies on more recent supreme court authority than that cited by Peterson. See State v. Jessen,
Disposition
¶20 For the foregoing reasons, the trial court’s ruling denying the motion to suppress is vacated, the matter is remanded for the limited purpose of allowing thе trial court to hold a suppression hearing, and the remainder of the appeal is stayed pending the outcome of that hearing. If the trial court rules Peterson’s statements were taken voluntarily and in accordance with Miranda, it will notify this court by causing a certified copy of its minute entry to be transmitted to the clerk of this court. If no objection to that ruling is presented to this court within fifteen days of the ruling, the stay will be lifted, and we will consider the remaining issues on appeal.
¶ 21 If, however, the trial court finds the statements were made involuntarily or were taken in violation of Miranda, it is directed to enter an order granting Peterson a new trial at which the statements will be suppressed. In that event, the stayed portion of this appeal will be dismissed as moot.
Notes
. At trial, the state informed the court it had discovered the man's name was actually Gary Adams. Because his identity is irrelevant to our analysis, we refer to him as Jeffrey, the name he gave to the officer who initially stopped the truck and the name used at trial.
. Miranda v. Arizona,
. Peterson also argues the trial court erroneously admitted hearsay statements at trial and erred in computing the amount of her restitution. For reasons discussed below, however, we stay our consideration of these issues.
. The trial court relied in part on Berghuis v. Thompkins, - U.S. -,
. The state has not argued any error in this respect was harmless, see State v. Rodriguez,
. We do not address the merits of either Peterson's voluntariness or Miranda argument but conclude only that she met her burden of going forward and is entitled to a hearing on both issues. We leave to the trial court, as discussed below, the determination of the merits and the question of whether Brown's follow-up questions wеre "designed solely to clarify” Peterson’s intent. Szpyrka,
. Peterson additionally cites, in violation of Rule 111 (c), Rules of the Supreme Court, State v. Lamb, a memorandum decision in which Division One of this court considered an issue similar to that in this appeal. No. 1 CA-CR 09-0622 (memorandum decision filed June 9, 2011) (vacating conviction after erroneous denial of motion to supрress), superseded by State v. Lamb,
. The state makes this argument only with respect to the voluntariness issue; it argues the denial of a Miranda hearing was not error.
