¶ 1 Juaquin Zamora (“Zamora”) appeals his conviction and sentence for first degree criminal trespass. The only issue on appeal is whether the superior court erred in denying Zamora’s motion to suppress evidence. In ruling on a motion to suppress evidence when police conduct a two-stage custodial interrogation, a court must determine whether inadmissible statements made to the police prior to
Miranda
1
warnings taint statements made after those warnings or the use of a two-stage custodial interrogation was intended to avoid the purpose of those warnings.
Missouri v. Seibert,
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶ 2 City of Glendale Police Officers A and H responded to a call that someone was trespassing in a vacant apartment in an apartment complex. When the officers arrived at the vacant apartment, they suspected that someone had broken in because the door frame was damaged. They knocked and announced themselves as police officers and a young girl opened the door to let them in. The officers saw three girls and Zamora inside the apartment. Zamora was alone sitting on the floor in one of the rooms. The two officers split up: Officer H talked to the girls and Officer A talked to Zamora.
¶ 3 For approximately five to fifteen minutes, Officer A asked Zamora general questions to determine whether he had a lawful reason for being in the apartment. Zamora told Officer A that he went to the apartment because he wanted to warn the girls that the police were coming. Zamora also said that he thought that the apartment was a clubhouse, but stayed even after learning it was not. Officer A then asked why he stayed in the apartment if he knew it was not a clubhouse. Zamora replied that he stayed because he was eating, that he had only been there for two or three minutes, and that he wanted to leave. At some point, Zamora stood up and asked to leave, but Officer A told him to sit down. Officer A had to tell Zamora twice to sit down before he complied. Officer A concluded that Zamora was unlawfully in the apartment and placed him under arrest. It is undisputed that up to that point the police had not read Zamora his Miranda lights.
¶4 Immediately after making the arrest, Officer A handed Zamora over to Officer H and both officers escorted Zamora to a patrol car. With Zamora secured in the back seat, Officer A left to speak with the property manager and Officer H read Zamora his Miranda rights. When Officer A returned to the ear, Officer H told Officer A that he read Zamora his rights, and Zamora affirmed to Officer A that he understood them. Then Officer A asked Zamora to tell him again “what happened today.” Zamora said that he had already told Officer H what happened. 3 In response, Officer A told Zamora that since he had been advised of his Miranda rights, he needed to re-tell the story. However, it is unclear what Zamora then said to the officers.
¶ 5 Zamora was indicted for criminal trespass in the first degree pursuant to Arizona Revised Statutes (“A.R.S.”) section 13-1504(A)(1) (Supp.2008). 4 Zamora moved to suppress the statements he made to the police officers at the scene, arguing the statements were coerced, but neither party cited or argued Elstad or Seibeit. The superior court denied that motion in its entirety. Because it is important for our analysis, we quote from the superior court’s explanation and ruling verbatim:
Counsel, based upon the totality of the circumstances of the evidence the Court heard, the Court finds that the defendant was not free to leave from the apartment,based on whoever [sic] that was part of investigative detention. Based upon the totality of the circumstances, the Court does find that Miranda applied in the totality at that time. The defendant may not have been free to leave until the officer finished asking him some questions. He was not formally under arrest, and the other indicia or liability [sic] that we look for was not present.
Therefore, I am going to allow the State to use those pre-Miranda Warnings as post Miranda warnings based upon what the officer testified to. The Court does not find that the way the officer phrased the questions is necessarily in and of itself coercive. That if it was, the defendant acknowledged to understanding those rights, and in essence agreed to go forward with the questioning. Therefore, I will allow the State to use those post Miranda statements at [sic] well.
¶ 6 Zamora was convicted of first degree criminal trespass. He received a suspended sentence and three years probation beginning from his discharge from prison for time served under another crime. Zamora timely appealed pursuant to Arizona Rule of Criminal Procedure 31.3. This court has jurisdiction pursuant to Article 6, Section 9 of the Arizona Constitution and A.R.S. §§ 12-120.21(A)(1) (2003), 12-210RB), 13-4031 (2001), and 13-4033(A)(1),(3) (2001).
ANALYSIS
I. Standard of Review
¶ 7 When reviewing an appeal from a denial of a motion to suppress, we will not reverse except for an abuse of discretion.
State v. Cruz,
II. Admissibility of the Statements
¶ 8 Zamora claims that the superior court erred in denying his motion to suppress the statements he made before and after the police read him his Miranda rights. We find the superior court record unclear regarding when Zamora was in custody for Miranda purposes and if any of the statements admitted at trial were made while he was in custody, but before he had been given his Miranda warnings. We also cannot determine whether the court applied the proper standard for the admissibility of evidence when two-stage interrogation techniques are employed. Accordingly, we remand for clarification and, if necessary, a new trial.
¶ 9 Police are free to ask questions of a person who is not in custody without having to give the person any warnings under
Miranda. Florida v. Bostick,
¶ 10 Once the person is in custody, however,
Miranda
requires that if the State wants to admit statements the person may make in response to questioning, the police must first inform him of certain constitutional rights.
Miranda,
A. Pre-Miranda Statements
¶ 11 As to the admission of Zamora’s
pre-Miranda
statements, we must remand to the superior court because we cannot determine from the record whether the court applied the correct test for admission of statements made in response to custodial interrogation prior to Zamora being
Mirandized.
Based on the testimony at the suppression hearing and the court’s findings quoted above, we cannot determine whether the court denied the motion to suppress because it concluded the
pre-Miranda
statements were not made while Zamora was in custody or because the court thought they were made while Zamora was in custody, but did not think the statements were coerced. The correct approach is to first determine if the person was in custody; if he was in custody, he was not
Mirandized
and the statements were not spontaneous, they are inadmissible during the State’s case-in-chief regardless whether they were coerced by other means.
See Miranda,
¶ 12 It is unclear if Zamora made the pre-
Miranda
statements when he was in custody. Officer A acknowledged Zamora was not free to leave when he told him to sit down. In
¶ 13 We remand to the superior court for clarification of when custody occurred and whether any statements were made while Zamora was in custody prior to his being Mirandized. Responses to questions after Zamora was in custody, made before he had been Mirandized, would be inadmissible.
B. Post-Miranda Statements
¶ 14 In addition, Zamora claims that because his post-Miranda statements were products of the non -Mirandized statements, they were tainted and the superior court should have suppressed them. Citing Sei-bert, Zamora argues that his answering general questions about why he was at the apartment before he was Mirandized made the Miranda warnings ineffective. We cannot determine whether to affirm or reverse the superior court, however, for two reasons. First, we find that the record lacks sufficient factual information surrounding the post-Mi randa statements. Second, the superior court may have incorrectly applied Seibert and Elstad. Thus, we remand the case to the superior court for a determination whether Zamora’s post-Miranda statements were voluntary and, if not, whether a new trial is needed.
¶ 15 To the extent Zamora made statements in response to custodial interrogation before being
Mirandized
and then repeated those statements in response to questions after being
Mirandized,
under current law one of two tests is used to determine whether the
post-Miranda
statements are admissible.
7
Under
Elstad,
an uneoerced pr
e-Miranda
warning statement made in custodial interrogation does not disable a person from later waiving his rights and confessing after he has been given the requisite
Miranda
warnings.
Elstad,
¶ 16 In
Seibert,
however, the Supreme Court in a plurality decision held that courts should review two-step interrogation cases by first determining whether the police deliberately withheld the
Miranda
warnings.
¶ 17 If a court finds police acted deliberately to undermine
Miranda,
it must determine whether the
Miranda
warnings were effective — based on both objective and curative factors — to “apprised the suspect that he had a ‘genuine choice whether to follow up on [his] earlier admission.’ ”
Williams,
(1) the completeness and detail of the pre-warning interrogation, (2) the overlapping-content of the two rounds of interrogation, (3) the timing and circumstances of both interrogations, (4) the continuity of police personnel, (5) the extent to which the interrogator’s questions treated the second round of interrogation as continuous with the first and (6) whether any curative measures were taken.
Id. at 1160. If the Miranda warnings are effective, then uncoerced post-Miranda statements are admissible. If, however, the Miranda warnings are not effective, then post-Miranda statements should be suppressed unless curative measures were employed. If curative measures “are absent or fail to apprise a reasonable person in the suspect’s shoes of his rights, the trial court should suppress the confession.” Id. at 1158. As the Seibert Court explained:
postwarning statements that are related to the substance of prewarning statements must be excluded unless curative measures are taken before the postwarning statement is made. 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 the Miranda waiver.
Seibert,
¶ 18 In contrast, when no deliberateness to undermine
Miranda
is found, the court is to apply the
Elstad
standard: (1) Uncoerced
post-Miranda
warning statements are admissible if the Fifth Amendment waiver was valid, but (2) uncoerced post-
Miranda
statements are inadmissible if the pr
e-Miranda
warning statements were otherwise coerced and the taint from such coercion has not dissipated through the passing of time or a change in circumstances.
Elstad,
¶ 19 Here, the superior court concluded that both Zamora’s pr
e-Miranda
and post-
¶20 As noted above, on this record we cannot reverse or affirm the trial court’s ruling, however, for at least two reasons. First, the record does not reflect what Zamora told the police after he was Mirandized. Thus, when the police recounted his statements during the trial, we cannot tell if those statements were based on Zamora’s pre-Mi-randa or post-Miranda answers. Second, since the court did not make any finding about deliberateness, but only found that there was no coercion as to the post-Miranda statements, we cannot tell whether the court considered the Seibert test at all. Even if Seibert did not apply, the court made no finding whether the pr e-Miranda statements, assuming they had been made in response to custodial interrogation, were un-eoereed or any coercion had dissipated. 9
CONCLUSION
¶21 Because the record lacks pertinent facts bearing on whether any or all the statements should have been suppressed, we remand the case to the superior court.
State v. Smith,
Notes
.
Miranda v. Arizona,
. A "two-stage” custodial interrogation occurs as follows. In the first stage, police interrogate a person in custody without having given the person his
Miranda
warnings and the person has made statements in response to that questioning. Then, in the second stage, the police give the person his
Miranda
warnings, the person waives his right to remain silent and the person repeats his prior statements in response to the police repeating the questions or lines of questions asked prior to the
Miranda
warnings being given.
Seibert,
. Officer H denied that he asked Zamora any questions when Officer A stepped away to lalk with the property manager.
. We cite to the current versions of the applicable statutes because no material changes relevant to this case have occurred.
. We use the terms "suppression hearing” and "voluntariness hearing” interchangeably.
. If statements were made after a suspect was
Mirandized,
the court then must determine if the statements were coerced by other conduct.
State v. James,
. Prior to
Elstad
and
Seibert,
the Arizona Supreme Court adopted a "fruits of the poisonous tree” test for two-step interrogations.
State v. Hein,
. In a plurality decision, when "no single rationale explaining the result enjoys the assent of five Justices, the holding of the Court may be viewed as the position taken by those Members who concurred in the judgments on the narrowest grounds."
Williams,
While courts are divided on this issue in applying
Seibert, see New Jersey v. O'Neill,
. Nor can we hold that the admission of the statements was harmless error, an argument not made by the state on appeal. Zamora was convicted of trespass in the first degree, which requires knowledge that the premises was a residential structure. A.R.S. § 13 — 1504(A)(1). The premises in which Zamora was found was vacant and without furniture. Zamora told police at one point that he thought the premises was a clubhouse and only discussed why he stayed on the premises after he allegedly learned it was not a clubhouse.
