166 Ohio App. 3d 492 | Ohio Ct. App. | 2006
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *494
{¶ 1} Defendant-appellee, Rascal Sneed, was charged with carrying a concealed weapon in violation of R.C.
{¶ 3} Doug Jones testified that he was working at the facility when he saw the vehicle crash into the fence. Jones thought that the occupants of the vehicle might have been injured, so he called the police. Jones saw a man get out of the vehicle, run down the sidewalk toward some bushes, and return to the vehicle. When police officers arrived, Jones told them what he had seen.
{¶ 4} Cincinnati Police Officer Michael Winslow testified that he and his partner were responding to the accident scene when they received an additional dispatch. The dispatch relayed a complainant's report that a man involved in the accident had thrown an unknown object into some bushes down the street, about 100 yards south of the wrecked vehicle.
{¶ 5} When the officers arrived at the accident scene, they saw the vehicle's track marks leading up an embankment to a fence. The vehicle had rolled back down the embankment and had come to rest.
{¶ 6} Officer Winslow testified that there was some confusion at first as to who was at fault in the accident. The officers charged Sneed's passenger with driving under the influence of alcohol after determining that she had taken control of the vehicle and had caused the crash.
{¶ 7} The officers learned that Sneed had two outstanding bench warrants, so they placed him under arrest. He was handcuffed and placed in a police cruiser.
{¶ 8} Officer Winslow testified that he noticed an odor of an alcoholic beverage and thought that Sneed might have tried to discard or hide alcohol in the bushes. So Officer Winslow asked Sneed, "[W]hat is that object? * * * [I]s it alcohol or is it a gun of any sort or any kind of weapon?" Sneed responded, "Well, yeah, actually, it's a gun. * * * I'll show you right where it is."
{¶ 9} Officer Winslow immediately read Sneed his Miranda1 rights. Sneed indicated that he understood his rights and agreed to speak to the officers. According to Officer Winslow, Sneed was cooperative as he directed the officer to the bushes where he had thrown the gun.
{¶ 10} Officer Winslow testified that he asked Sneed how he had gotten the gun from his vehicle to the bushes without anyone seeing it. He asked Sneed, "[D]id you have it in your waistband?" According to Officer Winslow, Sneed responded that he had stuck the gun in his waistband, in the small of his back, and that he had concealed the gun by putting his shirt over it. *496
{¶ 11} Officer Winslow testified that he had not made any promises or threats to Sneed, and that he did not coerce Sneed or deny him necessary medical care.
{¶ 12} Sneed, however, testified that he had not concealed the gun when he ran down the street. He said that he had simply held the gun at his side. Sneed also said that the officer had not advised him of his Miranda rights.
{¶ 17} The United States Supreme Court enunciated the public-safety exception in New York v.Quarles.6 In that case, police apprehended a suspect and had reason to believe that the suspect had just discarded a gun in a supermarket. Before advising the suspect of hisMiranda rights, an officer asked him where the missing gun was. The suspect said, "[T]he gun is over there," and officers recovered the loaded gun. After being arrested and advised of his Miranda rights, the suspect admitted that he owned the gun.
{¶ 18} The court recognized that the missing gun posed a great danger to the public and that there are situations in which the need for answers to questions regarding public safety outweighs the need for the prophylacticMiranda warnings.7 Consequently, the court adopted a public-safety exception to the Miranda rule: police may justifiably fail to inform a suspect of his Miranda rights in order to ask questions necessary to secure their own safety or the safety of the public.8 The questions asked under the public-safety exception must be readily distinguishable from questions designed to elicit testimonial evidence from the suspect.9
{¶ 19} The availability of the public-safety exception does not depend upon the motivation of the individual officers involved.10 So application of the exception does not depend "on post hoc findings at a suppression hearing concerning the subjective motivation of the arresting officer."11
{¶ 20} Here, police officers responding to the scene of a single-vehicle accident at night were informed that after the accident, a passenger had hurriedly thrown an object into some bushes about 100 yards away from the wrecked vehicle. *498 Officer Winslow suspected that Sneed was trying to hide or discard something, but admitted that he did not know whether the item was a weapon or alcohol.
{¶ 21} Certainly, a reasonable officer would have suspected that Sneed did not want investigating officers to discover the concealed object and would have suspected that such an object might have posed a threat to the public. Indeed, a reasonable officer might have been remiss in his duties to protect the public if he had not attempted to quickly ascertain the nature of the object.
{¶ 22} Had Miranda warnings deterred Sneed from responding to Officer Winslow's question about the nature of the thrown object, potentially "the cost would have been something more than merely the failure to obtain evidence useful in convicting [him]."12 In any event, Officer Winslow's questions to Sneed were not designed to elicit testimonial evidence but to determine the character of the thrown object. The officer's prewarning questioning simply ensured that the public would not be endangered by the concealment of a dangerous item in a public area.13
{¶ 23} Accordingly, we hold that Sneed's unwarned statements fell within the public-safety exception and that the trial court erred by excluding Sneed's subsequent warned statements as illegal fruits of a Miranda violation.14
{¶ 26} The court recognized that the failure to giveMiranda warnings does not mean that a suspect's unwarned statements have actually been coerced.16 The failure to warn simply creates a presumption of compulsion, so that unwarned *499 but otherwise voluntary statements must be excluded from evidence under Miranda.17
{¶ 27} The court stated, "It is an unwarranted extension of Miranda to hold that a simple failure to administer the warnings, unaccompanied by any actual coercion or other circumstances calculated to undermine the suspect's ability to exercise his free will, so taints the investigatory process that a subsequent voluntary and informed waiver is ineffective for some indeterminate period. Though Miranda requires that the unwarned admission must be suppressed, the admissibility of any subsequent statement should turn in these circumstances solely on whether it is knowingly and voluntarily made."18
{¶ 29} The court23 held that the admissibility of postwarning statements continues to be governed byElstad unless police used the deliberate question-first strategy.24 If that strategy was used "in a calculated way to undermine the Miranda warning," then postwarning statements related to the substance of prewarning statements must be excluded unless curative measures were taken *500 before the postwarning statements were made.25 Curative measures "should be designed to ensure that a reasonable person in the suspect's situation would understand the import and effect of the Miranda warning and of theMiranda waiver."26
{¶ 31} Elstad requires that a court make a threshold inquiry into the effect of the Miranda violation on the voluntariness of a suspect's unwarned statement.27 In determining whether a suspect's statement was made voluntarily, a court should consider the totality of the circumstances.28 These circumstances include "the age, mentality, and prior criminal experience of the accused; the length, intensity, and frequency of interrogation; the existence of physical deprivation or mistreatment; and the existence of threat or inducement."29 The same considerations apply to whether the suspect understood and voluntarily waived his Miranda rights.30 "[E]vidence of police coercion or overreaching is necessary for a finding of involuntariness."31 *501
{¶ 32} Once a court finds that a suspect's unwarned statement was voluntary, the focus of the inquiry shifts to whether the suspect's postwarning statement was knowingly and voluntarily made.32 The fact that a suspect chooses to speak after being given Miranda warnings is highly probative.33
{¶ 33} Here, there was no evidence of coercive tactics that would have rendered Sneed's unwarned statements or Miranda waiver involuntary. Police made no threats or promises to get Sneed to confess. And police did not subject Sneed to lengthy or intense questioning. Because Sneed voluntarily and knowingly waived his Miranda rights, we conclude that Sneed's postwarning statements were not involuntary.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
GORMAN, P.J., and SUNDERMANN, J., concur.