OPINION
11 Jason Werner appeals his jury conviction for aggravated sexual assault, a first degree felony, in violation of Utah Code Annotated section 76-5-405 (1997). Werner asserts the district court erred in concluding his confession was not the involuntary product of police eoercion, in violation of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. We affirm.
BACKGROUND
T2 On May 18, 1999, at about 9:50 a.m., Lisa Wentz was walking across the Cache Valley Mall parking lot in Logan, Utah, on her way to work. In the parking lot, a young man walked up to her and introducеd himself as "Jason" and asked for her telephone number. When Lisa refused to give her number and attempted to walk away, the man grabbed her arm and pulled her towards a nearby movie theater. Lisa reported that the man threatened her, grabbed her breasts, and exposed his genitals. When the assailant was momentarily distracted by a passing car, Lisa was able to break free and run to safety. She reported the incident to her co-workers and the police were notified.
T8 At about this same time, eyewitnesses in thе adjacent theater dialed 911. They described the assailant as a white male driving an older model yellow or creme colored four-door automobile.
T4 Logan police detectives began working the case immediately. Having had prior experience with Werner, Detective Rod Peterson put Werner under surveillance. Detective Peterson obtained photographs of Werner and a yellow automobile that he learned was owned by Werner's girifriend. Detective Peterson later conducted a photo lineup where three eyewitnesses, in addition to the victim, picked Werner as the assailant. Two of these witnesses also picked Werner's girlfriend's car from a photo lineup.
T5 Consequently, on May 27, 1999, at the police station, Detective Peterson questioned Werner about his involvement in the assault. The videotaped interrogation lasted approxi *207 mately an hour and a half. Near the end of the interview, Werner confessed. Later at a suppression hearing, the district court heard argumеnts and viewed the videotaped interview in its entirety before finding that under the totality of the cireumstances, "[ Werner's] statement was voluntary ... [and without] impermissible coercion." At a subsequent jury trial, Werner was convicted of aggravated sexual assault and sentenced to an indeterminate term of ten years to life in prison. Werner appeals his conviction on grounds that the district court erred in admitting his taped confession into evidence.
ISSUE AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
16 Werner contends the district court erred in denying his motion to suppress and ruling that his cоnfession was not involuntarily obtained through coercive police conduct. "In 'reviewing a trial court's determination on the voluntariness of a confession, we apply a bifurcated standard of review' " State v. Rettenberger,
ANALYSIS
I. Miranda Warning
17 As a preliminary matter, Wer-ner suggests that prior to questioning, Detective Peterson made statements to Werner "which vaguely recited the essence of the Miranda
[ 1]
warning." - "While Miranda is recognized as obligating police to follow certain procedures in their dealings with an accused, the decision did not prescribe that law enforcement officers adhere to a verbatim recitation of the words of the opinion." State v. Strain,
T8 At the time of Werner's arrest, the following exchange ensued between Werner and Detective Peterson:
Peterson: I need to make sure you understand what your rights are and all that. You don't have to talk to me if you don't want to. You can decide at any time to stop answering any questions I ask you. You can have an attorney present. And if you can't afford to hire one the court will appoint one for you.... And you can go any of those routes at any time. You do understand all of that?
Werner: Yeah.
Peterson: And anything we talk about today may be used against you in court when we get to that point, okay?
Werner: Yeab.
In his own words, Detective Pеterson clearly covered every necessary component of an adequate Miranda warning.
II. Failure to Marshal the Evidence
T9 The State raises a second preliminary issue, contending we should not consider Werner's challenge of the district court's ruling that his confession was voluntary "because [Werner] failed to marshal the evidence in support of the trial court's ruling. 2
*208 10 The voluntariness of a confession is a legal determination and marshaling is not required. In State v. Rettenberger, our supreme court stated with no equivocation that
[ in "reviewing а trial court's determination on the voluntariness of a confession, we apply a bifurcated standard of review." State v. Mabe,864 P.2d 890 , 892 (Utah 1993). The ultimate determination of vol-untariness is a legal question; accordingly, we review the district court's ruling for correctness. See id. (citing Arizona v. Fuiminante,499 U.S. 279 ,111 S.Ct. 1246 , 113 LEd.2d 302 (1991)). We set aside a district court's factual findings only if they are clearly erroncous. Id.
T11 In sum, a district court's "ultimate determination of voluntariness," State v. Bunting,
III. Voluntariness of Confession
T12 Werner contends the district court erred in admitting "incriminating statements he made during the interview [with police, which] were the involuntary product of coercion, violating his right to due process under the Fourteenth Amendment and right to protection from compelled self-incrimination under the Fifth Amendment [to] the Unitеd States Constitution." State v. Bunting,
118 "The Fifth Amendment ' "protects individuals from being compelled to give evidence against themselves." '" Id. at " ¶ 14 (quoting State v. Rettenberger,
14 When the voluntariness of a confession is challenged, the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments "require ' "the prosecution to demonstrate by a preponderance of the evidence that the statement was made voluntarily." ' " Id. (quoting Rettenberger,
T15 For a court to find that a confession is involuntary, " ' to support [that] finding ... must reveal some physical or psychological foree or manipulation that is designed to induce the accused to talk when he otherwise would not have done so." *'" Id. (quoting Rettenberger,
$16 We factor into our totality of the circumstances analysis considerations such as " 'the durаtion of the interrogation, the persistence of the officers, police trickery, absence of family and counsel, and threats and promises made to the defendant by the officers' " Id. at ¶ 15 (quoting Rettenberger,
T17 Finally, "[tlhe constitutional standard for determining the voluntariness of a confession requires that we independently review the entire reсord." Mabe,
A. Werner's Background
118 Werner was approximately twenty-five years old at the time of the interview. He is a high school drop-out with an extensive criminal record. - He was incarcerated as a juvenile and then later as an adult. He served over two years in the Utah State Prison. Subsequent parole violations resulted in more prison time. In sum, Werner has had significant experience with the criminal justice system. Wernеr does not assert, and we cannot find in the record, any evidence of mental illness or emotional instability that would render him vulnerable to police interrogation tactics. Also, prior to the interview, Detective Peterson had dealt with Werner on numerous occasions in connection with other alleged criminal activities. Essentially, the interview took place between two people who knew each other.
T19 In sum, we are not dealing with a vulnerable defendant, but rather one experienced with thе criminal justice system in general, and with Detective Peterson in particular.
B. False Friend Technique
120 This court has previously stated that "[sItanding alone, [the false friend] technique is not sufficiently coercive to produce an involuntary confession, but may be significant in relation to other tactics and factors." State v. Bunting,
{21 The interrogation transcript in this case reveals that Detective Peterson employed the false friend technique. The following is representative of Detective Peterson's use of the technique:
Peterson: And that's why I come to you. That's why I grabbed this case, because, okay, I know Jason, I know Jason. I'll work that one. Let me get ahold [sic] of Jason and I'll work with him. So that's how everything kind of ended up on my *210 lap you knоw. If you have questions, or whatever, let's just be open with each other and talk.
And later,
Peterson: Just because this is my job doesn't mean I'm inhuman.... That's why when this case surfaced I said give it to me, I'll go talk to Jason.... That's not Rod the policeman, that's Rod the human. So don't think I'm being insensitive and I'm sarcastic or anything like that. I'm not being that, okay. I'm being frank with you, being honest with you. I'm telling you the way it is.... I understand and know the position that you're in. You're seared, you're worried, You're an ex-con.... Tell me something, Jason. Tell me something that makes it not a first degree. Tell me yоur side.
¶ 22 In State v. Rettenberger,
123 At the suppression hearing, expert testimony established that the defendant suffered from Attention Deficit Disorder, a below average 1.Q., and had the maturity level of a fifteen-year-old. See id. at 16. He also showed signs of "depression, anxiety disorder, thought disorder, schizophrenia, and De-pendant Personality Disorder." Id. In addition, the district court found that at the time of arrest and interrogation, the defendant was "under extreme stress and anxiety ... and was afraid of the death penalty." Id. at T7.
124 Noting that the dеfendant's "interrogation took place in yet a larger context of deception," id. at 1 24, the Rettenberger court held that
[ tlo the extent that [the defendant] suffers from mental disabilities and deficiencies, and to the extent that he believed the officers were protecting his best interests [because of the false friend technique], he was less likely to question the false claims about the evidence against him; was less likely to clearly invoke his right to counsel or to remain silent; was more likely to "parrot" back the details the officers suggested, whether or not they were true; was more likely to place stock in any promises or threats that the officers made, however ambiguous they might be; and was more likely to confess, whether guilty or innocent.
Id. at 1 28.
125 However, in Bunting, where the defendant lacked any "psychological condition [that would] impair his ability to respond to the detective's interrogation tactics," we concluded the "[dlefendant was not susceptible to the false friend technique."
126 As noted above, at the time of his arrest and interrogation, Werner was twenty-five years old, had an extensive eriminal record, and had served over two years in the Utah State Prison. In an attempt to analogize his mental condition with that of the defendant in Rettenberger, Werner points out that "it was noted in the pre-sentence report ... that [Werner] had learning disabilities, and despite a high IQ., he functioned at below average levels." We fail to see the similarities between Werner and the defendant in Reftemberger. Learning disabilities and below-average levеls of functioning do not equate with the kinds of mental disabilities that rendered the defendant in Retten-berger susceptible to the false friend technique.
127 While we agree that the false friend technique can be coercive in some cireum-stances, we conclude it was not in this case.
C. Misrepresentations Regarding Incriminating Evidence
128 Next, Werner contends that his confession was involuntary because Detective Peterson misrepresented the strength and *211 the quantity of evidence the police had gathered against him.
T29 Both federal and Utah cases "have recognized that [a] defendant's will is not overborne simply because he is led to believe that the government's knowledge of his guilt is greater than it actually is." State v. Rettenberger,
T 30 Werner claims coercion resulted when Detective Peterson informed Werner there was "overwhelming evidence against him" and when, on two different occasions during the interview, Detective Peterson told Wer-ner that police were in possession of mall surveillance tapes that contained footage of Werner at the scene. 4 In fact, no such footage existed.
[ 31 We certainly do not condone the video tape hoax. In fact, it is this element which makes this case a close call. However, we note that both references to the nonexistent video tape occurred early in the interview and that Werner's confession did not occur until the latter stages of the questioning, suggesting that the misrepresentations did not overcome Werner's free will and yield a confession.
T32 Furthermore, there was significant other evidence of Werner's guilt, including three eyewitnesses supporting Detective Peterson's claim of "overwhelming" evidence. On the whole, we are not convinced that Detective Peterson's misrepresentation concerning the nonexistent mail video surveillance footage was "sufficiently egregious to overcome [Werner's] will so as to render [his] confession involuntary" in this case. Bunt ing,
D. Denying Access to Telephone and Outside People
133 Werner asks us to consider the potentially coercive effect of Detective Peterson's denials of Werner's requests to speak to his girlfriend, either in person or on the telephone.
[ 34 In State v. Rettenberger,
'I 35 We do not believe that Detective Peterson's repeated denials of Werner's requests to speak to his girlfriend render involuntary an otherwise voluntary confession.
E. Threats of Harsher Penalties and Promises of Leniency
136 Werner maintains that his confession was involuntarily obtained through *212 police coercion because Detective Peterson threatened Werner with harsher penalties unless he confessed and promised Werner leniency in exchange for his cooperation during the interview.
T37 Our supreme court has held that "[the mere representation to a defendant by officers that they will make known to the prosecutor and to the court that he cooperated with them, ... or appeals to the defendant that full cooperatiоn would be his best course of action, [are] not coercive." State v. Strain,
138 Nonetheless, "the important question . is not whether the ... interview was impermissibly coercive, but whether the coercive [threats] employed by [Detective Peterson] overcame [Werner's] free will, causing him to confess." State v. Mabe,
139 In Strain, in addition to threatening defendant with a first degree murder charge and possible execution if convicted, the police also made the defendant a promise of leniency in the form of a personal guarantee. See
[ 40 During the interview between Detective Peterson and Werner, the following exchange ensued:
Werner: I think you guys already have the charge. You should just tell me. I think you already know what you're-
Peterson: I do know. I already told you. The county attorney is going to say, Rod, book him on a first degree felony. If Jason wants to play hardball, we'll play hardball.
Werner: You're saying that's what he's going to say.
Peterson: I don't know yet. If we stop right now, if we stop right now, we both walk out that door, it will be a first degree felony, Jason, I guarantee it. I guarantee it because that's all I've got. I only have her side of the story. She's told me Jason committed a first degree felony. That's what she's told me.... If I can't get you to talk to me and tell me your side of the story I'm going to book you on a first degree felony.
(Emphasis added.)
T41 Detective Peterson also insinuated that Werner could obtain leniency in exchange for a confession:
Peterson: Tell me something, Jason. Tell me something that makes it not a first degree. Tell me your side.
Werner: A first or second, it don't matter.
Peterson: Tell me something that makes it not a first оr second degree felony. Tell me something-
1 42 We note, however, that like the defendant in State v. Miller,
1 43 We find troublesome Detective Peterson's threats of more serious charges and inferences of leniency if Werner's side of the story was told. However, under our totality of the cireumstances analysis, they do not render Wernеr's confession involuntary.
F. Other Factors
[ 44 We note that in the early stages of the interview, Werner denied involvement in the crime over twenty times. However, once he did confess, he did not merely " 'parrot' back" details suggested by Detective Peterson. State v. Rettenberger,
[ 45 Finally, "[tlo the extent the trial court has made subsidiary factual findings, ... those findings will not be set aside unless
*213
they are clearly erroneous." State v. Mabe,
Judge: This court finds the overall totality of the cireumstances are not impermissi-bly coercive. Specifically, it was not a coercive environment. In fact, to the contrary, this court would find that based upon the videotape[d interview], a review [of] the transeript, that there was mo coercive demeanor used by Detective Peterson. The length of the interview was not overly burdensome. Certainly not compared to those cited in the cases. The interview could have stopped at any time at the request of the defendant. In fact, I thought that the interview was conducted in a [very] humane fashion where that kind of request by the defendant could have been made at any time and presumably been honored.
The resulting statement was not based upon promises, guarantees or threats. Nor did it follow any suggestions made by Detective Peterson. Even after the first admission by the defendant that he was there, that he in fact did not intend to harm the victim in any fashion, Mr. Peterson suggested perhaps some see-narios, even those were not followed in the resulting colloquy. The statements made by the defendant were voluntarily initiated by himself relative to that.
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Overall the interview was not confrontational In fact, I thought the overall demeanor was one of mild urging. I didn't find any sarcasm. I thought the interview was conducted in a warm and humane fashion, readily distinguishable from both Strain and Mabe in a number of aspects.
These subsidiary findings made after the district court judge viewed the entire videotape of the interrogation help to persuade us that Wеrner's confession was voluntary.
CONCLUSION
T 46 At the time of his arrest, Werner was twenty-five years old, had an extensive criminal record, and had been incarcerated both as a juvenile and as an adult. Werner was experienced in dealing with the criminal justice system and was already acquainted with the interviewer, Detective Peterson. Prior to questioning, Werner received an adequate Miranda warning. While Detective Peterson did employ various methods of deception and other inappropriate interrogation tаctics, Werner's will was not overcome and his confession provided information that only Wer-ner could have known. Viewing all of the foregoing under the totality of the circumstances, we conclude Werner's confession was voluntary.
[ 47 Affirmed.
« 48 WE CONCUR: PAMELA T. GREENWOOD and GREGORY K. ORME, Judges.
Notes
1. See Miranda v. Arizona,
. In support of this assertion, the State cites Neely v. Bennett,
. On a related note, it is well-settled law that "[in the face of a challenge to the voluntariness of a statement or confession, it is incumbent upon the prosecution to demonstrate by a preponderance of the evidеnce that the statement was made voluntarily based upon the totality of the circumstances." State v. Allen,
. Detective Peterson explained at trial that during the interview he had placed a blank video tape marked "Mall Security of Jason in the Parking Lot" in the interview room "to see what [Werner's] reaction would be" and to get "an idea as to whether or not we for sure had the right individual."
