¶ 1. Dеfendant entered a conditional plea of guilty to cocaine and marijuana possession after the district court denied his motion to suppress. He appeals the denial of his suppression motion here. Defendant sought to suppress statements and physical evidence gathered by a state trooper after the trooper stopped defendant for speeding, directed him into the police cruiser and questioned him about the smell of marijuana in his car, then conducted what the State maintains was a consensual search of defendant’s car and his passenger’s backpack. We reverse the district court’s decision with respect to the statements defendant made and the physical evidence he produced in the cruiser, but affirm with respect to the search of the vehicle and the passenger’s luggage.
¶ 2. Based on the district court’s findings, together with the in-cruiser audio-video record of the stop as presented to the court, the relevant background is as follows. In February 2006, defendant and his passenger were traveling south on Interstate 89 near Sharon, Vermont, when a state trooper stopped defendant for traveling аt a speed of ninety-five miles per hour. When the trooper approached the vehicle’s open window to question defendant, the trooper noticed a strong odor of raw marijuana in the vehicle. The trooper testified that he asked defendant to exit the vehicle and sit in the police cruiser due both to the excessiveness of defendant’s speed and the smell of marijuana. The trooper did not mention the marijuana smell to defendant at this time.
¶ 3. Inside the cruiser, while he processed defendant’s speeding violation, the trooper informed defendant thаt he could arrest defendant for such an excessive speed, but, instead, would just issue a citation. Defendant expressed relief and gratitude that the trooper was giving him “a break,” but this break was short-lived. Once the ticket was written, the trooper told defendant he would not be released until the trooper determined if there was anything illegal in the car. Defendant asked if the trooper would need to search the car, and the trooper replied that he smelled marijuana in the car and asked if defendant would mind if he “took a look.” When defendant asked if he had to let him search, the trooper responded, <fYeah, if there’s a little bit, I can deal with it.” The trooper then asked defendant if he had marijuana on his person, and in response, defendant produced some from his pocket and handed it to the trooper.
¶ 4. At this point, the trooper called on his radio for a second car to assist at the scene. The trooper then asked defendant several more questions regarding marijuana, including whether he had smoked any marijuana before he started driving. Defendant responded that he had, adding, “Now I’m definitely going down with you, huh?” The trooper told him he would still “seе what [he could] deal with” and that he needed the back-up police to attend “because of the search of the car.”
¶ 5. The trooper asked defendant again for consent to search the vehicle, and produced a consent form for defendant to sign. The trooper read the consent form to defendant, including the standardized text advising that the signer “freely” gives permission to the police officer “to conduct a complete search” of the vehicle and “its contents . . . under [his] control.” The form also states that the signer understands that he “[does] not havе to allow this” and that “[n]o threats or promises have forced this consent.”
¶ 6. Told again that he could not be forced to let the trooper into the car, defendant was reluctant to agree, and asked for confirmation that the trooper could not search if defendant did not sign the form.
¶ 7. In the ensuing search, the trooper discovered a plastic bag containing marijuana inside a slightly opened backpack located in the passеnger compartment of the vehicle. Defendant previously had informed the trooper that the backpack belonged to his passenger. When the trooper pulled the backpack out of the vehicle, the passenger confirmed that the backpack was his. The trooper asked if there was anything else in the backpack, and the passenger answered that the same backpack also contained a bag of cocaine. At the trooper’s direction, the passenger pulled the cocaine from the backpack. The troopеr then arrested defendant and the passenger and transported them to the local state police barracks.
¶ 8. Both men were charged with possession of the approximately 83 grams of marijuana and 102 grams of cocaine found in the passenger’s backpack. Defendant and the passenger were represented by separate attorneys and filed separate motions to suppress the physical evidence and statements obtained during the traffic stop and the search. Each defendant also joined the motion filed by the other. After a joint hearing, the district court granted the passenger’s motion because the trooper knew that passenger had not consented to the search of his backpack, but denied defendant’s motion to suppress since he voluntarily consented to the search of his vehicle and its contents.
¶ 9. On appeal, defendant raises four issues. First, whether his admission of marijuana use and production of marijuana from his pocket are the products of a custodial interrogation conducted without the warnings guaranteed by
Miranda v. Arizona,
I. Unpreserved Argument: Defendant’s Consent to Backpack Search
¶ 10. We begin by addressing defendant’s fourth argument, which was not particularly raised in defendant’s presentation below in support of his own motion to suppress, and was only peripherally touched upon in connection with the passenger’s suppression motion. Defendant now argues that the evidence taken from the backpack should have been suppressed against him because he could not givе the trooper valid consent to search the passenger’s backpack. Defendant contends that
¶ 11. The district court relied on the above-described reasoning to grant the passenger’s motion to suppress the еvidence gathered from the backpack, but the court did not extend that rationale to defendant. Instead, the district court held that defendant consented to the search because he voluntarily signed the consent form. As recited earlier, the consent form included defendant’s vehicle and “its contents . . . under [his] control.” Defendant never argued, and the court never addressed, the issue of whether the backpack was, or was not, under defendant’s control, or whether defendant’s consent did, or did not, extend to his passenger’s backpack when it was contained within defendant’s automobile. Defendant contends this was error because the reasoning supporting the court’s decision to grant the passenger’s suppression motion applies equally to him.
¶ 12. The State counters that defendant did not argue this point below and that it is not preserved on appeal. We note that defendant’s position raises potentially intricate questions concerning the degree of control or dominion over the backpack, or the lack thereof, necessary for a consent by defendant to its search to be valid against him, if not against his passenger. Assuming the autоmatic standing claimed by defendant to argue the point, the point was not made before the trial court.
¶ 13. Arguments that are “neither litigated nor decided below will not be addressed for the first time on appeal.”
State v. Sprague,
¶ 14. Defendant claims he did preserve the issue by joining in his passenger’s suppression motion, which defendant characterizes as explicitly making the same argument below. Defendant is mistaken. Passenger’s motion and memorandum before the district court contended, in a single sentence, that defendant could not consent to a warrantless search of passenger’s backpack so as to permit the contraband
¶ 15. Defendant’s final reason that this Court should address his argument is that the automatic-standing doctrine we adopted in
State v. Wright,
II. Custodial Interrogation
¶ 16. Defendant argues that his admission of marijuana use and his production of marijuana from his pocket should be suppressed as products of a custodial interrogation conducted without
Miranda
warnings.
Miranda
warnings are required whenever a person is subjected to custodial interrogation, which means “questioning initiated by law enforcement officers after a person has been taken into custody or otherwise deprived of his freedom of action in any significant way.”
Miranda,
¶ 17. Here, the district court concluded that defendant was not the subject of a custodial interrogation while he was questioned in the trooper’s car. Suppression motions present mixed questions of
fact and law, and we review the district court’s factual findings for clear error and its legal conclusion de novo.
State v. Stevens,
¶ 18. Contrary to the district court’s ruling, the uncontroverted factual findings in this case lead to the conclusion
¶ 19. The trooper’s exchange with defendant, as captured on the in-cruiser recording, illustrates that after the ticket, the trooper ratcheted up the detention by making it clear to defendant that he could not leave pending the trooper’s investigation of the suspected, and much more serious, criminal activity beyond the original cause of the stop.
State v. Pontbriand,
III. Taint of Prior Illegality
¶20. Defendant argues that the search of his car and the backpack are tainted by the prior illegality of the unwarned custodial interrogation, and therefore, the fruits of the searches must be suppressed. This argument depends on defendant’s misplaced reliance on
State v. Peterson,
¶21. Peterson shares many facts in common with the instant case, but is ultimately inapposite. Suspect Peterson’s misadventure began with Peterson pulling his car alongside a police vehicle to initiate a conversation with a law-enforcement officer. Law-enforcement officers detected the smell of marijuana in Peterson’s car, and thereafter proceeded with a roadside pat-down, which produced evidence of marijuana from Peterson’s person, and inquiries that elicited Peterson’s admissions of growing marijuana at home. This segued to a search of his car and house after he executed a consent-to-sеarch form. Id. ¶¶ 2-8. At his house, the suspect was subjected to further unwarned interrogation, this time while under arrest, leading to his disclosure of twenty-seven marijuana plants growing behind his property. Id. ¶ 5. Declining to follow Patane, as explained above, we ruled to reverse the trial court’s denial of a motion to suppress the twenty-seven plants last disclosed. 2
¶22.
Peterson
is of no application here because we have already held that
Miranda
warnings are not necessary before law enforcement officials request consent to search.
State v. Crannell,
TV. Voluntariness of Consent
¶ 23. Defendant next argues that his consent to the vehicle search was involuntary. For consent to be valid, it need only be volitional, not a “knowing and intelligent waiver of a constitutional right.”
State v. Zaccaro,
¶25. Defendant argues that his consent to search his car was not voluntary because the totality of the circumstances created a situation where his signature on the consent form was merely a submission to the trooper’s colorable authority. Defendant contends that because the trooper made it clear the car would be searched — with defendant’s consent if given, or by warrant if consent was withheld — defendant reasonably perceived that he had no choice but to permit the search. Why that conclusion should necessarily follow from those facts is unexplained. Defendant posits, essentially, that the combination of custody, defendant’s inexperience, the repeated requests for consent, and a false lure of release, together with the trooper’s declaration that, absent consent, the car would be held pending a warrant, compel the conclusion that defendant succumbed to police pressure as a matter of law.
¶ 26. The totality of the evidence, however, indicates otherwise and supports the trial court’s findings and conclusion that defendant’s consent was, in fact, voluntary. His extreme reluctance to consent reflects that he was not simply cowed by the circumstances of his involuntary detention, interrogation, incrimination, any pretense to generosity by the trooper, the trooper’s call for back-up, and the repeated requests for consent. The trooper expressly told defendant that he did not have to agree to the search, that his permission had to be freely given, and that he could not be forced to consent. When defendant asked if the car could be searched if he did not sign the consent form, the trooper reiterated that it was defendant’s choice to either give consent or to wait while the trooper applied for a warrant. Adding that the warrant process would result in his car being towed and some delay wаs neither inaccurate nor disingenuous.
¶ 27. If defendant labored under an earlier impression that he had no choice but to allow the search, this must have been dispelled by the trooper’s later explanation of the consent form and defendant’s options. Although insistent on seeking permission to search, the trooper was just as persistent in reiterating that it was defendant’s choice, and that his consent could not be forced. Defendant’s inquiry about whether the search could proceed
¶28. Taking all of the trooper’s statements and explanations into аccount, and despite the trooper’s insistence, it was obvious that without consent, the officer could not search without a warrant, and that without a warrant, the officer could not search without consent. The alternative of towing defendant’s car pending a warrant was real, not feigned, and defendant was clearly told it was his choice to make. The district court determined that this explanation of the warrant process, while probably daunting, was not “false or otherwise sufficient to break [defendant’s] will. . . . [Nor was it] inherently coercive or unfair.” The court’s conclusion is supported by the record.
¶ 29. The trooper’s clear and unambiguous statements were no assertion of colorable authority to coerce defendant’s permission. This was quite unlike the situation cited by defendant in
Bumper v. North Carolina,
¶ 30. Even assuming the trooper represented the warrant as likely or sure to issue, such an expressed opinion still would not render defendant’s consent involuntary according to thе federal precedent relied on by defendant. In
United States v. Faruolo,
¶ 32. In sum, the district court’s conclusion that defendant’s consent to search was not coerced, despite being unlawfully interrogated while in custody, is supported by the weight of the evidence and the totality of the circumstances.
Affirmed in part and reversed in part.
Notes
The State did not appeal the trial court’s suppression of the backpack evidence against the passenger, so we do not address the court’s ruling in this regard.
We explicitly refused to consider, as unpreserved for appeal, any claims of
Miranda
or constitutional violations preceding that final discovery.
Peterson,
