This case is before us on remand from the Supreme Court of the United States.
Mills v. United States
,—U.S.-,
Our original opinion,
United States v. Banks,
1.
In Ornelas, the Supreme Court held that a two-step paradigm was to be employed in appellate review of two issues in Fourth *348 Amendment jurisрrudence, probable cause and reasonable suspicion:
[A]s a general matter determinations of reasonable suspicion and probable cause should be reviewed de novo on appeal. Having said this, we hasten to point out that a reviewing court should take care both to reviеw findings of historical fact only for clear error and to give due weight to inferences drawn from these facts by resident judges and local law enforcement officers.
—U.S. at-,
Writing for the court in the wake of
Ornelas,
Judge Coffey concluded, in
United States v. Yusuff,
More recently, in
United States v. D.F.,
2.
Today we are confronted with a situation not unlike the one that confronted us when, in D.F., the Supreme Court directed us to reconsider our standard of appellate review of the voluntariness of a defendant’s statement. We noted in D.F. that, on the issue of the voluntariness of a confession, the other circuits, although employing a defеrential standard of review to the underlying adjudicative facts of the case, traditionally had employed de novo review to the issue of voluntariness of a defendant’s statement. Id. at 419. We alone had employed a deferential *349 standard. The Supreme Court directed us to reassess our position in light of Ornelas,
On the issuе before us today, the voluntariness of the waiver of Miranda rights, the other circuits also are of one mind and employ the same paradigm as they do for assessing the voluntariness of a defendant’s statement. 3 We stand alone in using a deferential standard of review with respect to the ultimate issue of voluntariness. 4
This disparity between our approach and that of the other circuits would be, standing *350 alone, a sufficient reason for our reconsidering our position. Here, of course, we have an express direction from the Supreme Court to undertake such a reassessment. Before the Supreme Court, Mr. Mills claimed that we had erred by applying a clear error standard to the district court’s determination that he had not invoked effectively his right to remain silent and that he had waived knowingly and voluntarily his Miranda rights. The Solicitor General of the United States submitted that the Supreme Court ought to vacate our judgment and to direct us to review these issues under Ornelas’ methodology-
We believe that
Ornelas
mаkes it clear that we ought to join the rest of the Country in holding that the ultimate issue of the voluntariness of a waiver of
Miranda
rights ought to be reviewed de novo by an appellate court. Like the issue of the voluntariness of a defendant’s statement, the voluntariness of a
Miranda
waiver requires assessment of the historical facts of the case in light of a prevailing legal standard. Like the issue in
D.F.
and, indeed, like the issue in
Ornelas,
independent review is necessary to ensure uniformity of decision and the predictability and ease of administration that follow from uniformity of decision.
5
Nevertheless, as the Supreme Court did in
Ornelas
and as we did in both
Yusuff
and in
D.F.,
we emphasize that the findings of historical fact and the reasonable inferences that the trier of fact draws from those findings are matters on which we owe deference. Although, as Chief Justice Rehnquist noted in
Ornelas,
plenary review of the ultimate conclusion fosters consistency of application and clarification of legal precedent, — U.S. at-,
Against this background, we shall now turn to an assessment of Mr. Mills’ submissions.
3.
We first turn to Mr. Mills’ contention that the district court erred in its determination that he did not effectively invoke his
Miranda
rights. Even the most cursory examination of this issue emphasizes the importancе of the first step in the
Ornelas
paradigm: Historical facts are the appropriate domain of the trier of fact, and our review of such findings is deferential. The magistrate judge heard the evidence and determined that Mr. Mills’ statement in the squad car on the way downtown was not a clear assertion of his right to be silent but rathеr a general expression of anger.
See United States v. Banks,
As wе noted in our earlier opinion, an examination of the record supports the conclusion of the magistrate judge that Mr. Mills’ outburst was not an invocation of his right to remain silent but rather a general expression of annoyance. This conclusion is not compelled by an examination of the rec *351 ord; howеver, it is a permissible conclusion from that record, one that the magistrate judge and the district court were certainly-permitted to make. Id. at 1197. Indeed, the determination depends to a very great extent on the magistrate judge’s observation of the demeanor of the witnesses as they described the circumstаnces surrounding that early morning arrest and ride downtown. Having determined that the record will support the interpretation of the magistrate judge, we must conclude that the district court’s determination was not clearly erroneous. 6 As we concluded in our first opinion, the statement, as characterized by the magistrate judge, was not an unambiguous assertion by the defendant of his Miranda rights.
4.
Mr. Mills also asserts that he did not waive voluntarily his Miranda rights. As we have already explained, we believe that, in the wake of Ornelas, the ultimate issue of voluntariness must be reviewed de novo on appeal. Deference must be given to the trier of fact with respect to the underlying histоrical facts.
We also think that it is important to note that the practical realities that surround the adjudication of this issue in this case and, indeed, in so many others also counsel that we employ the same standard of review as we do for the voluntariness of a defendant’s statement. Here, as in many cases in which we are dealing with an allegedly implied as opposed to an explicit waiver, the issue of whether the defendant waived his Miranda rights is virtually indistinguishable from the issue of whether the defendant’s statement was voluntary. Mr. Mills’ contention is that the officers teased the waiver out of him in the same process as they teased the stаtement out of him. It is particularly appropriate therefore, as both the defense and the government urge, to apply the same standard of review.
In our earlier opinion, we rehearsed comprehensively the determinations of the magistrate judge with respect to the waiver issue.
See Banks,
Conclusion
Having reexamined the issues presented by Mr. Mills in light of the decision of the Supreme Court in Ornelas, we believe that the district court committed no reversible error. Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Notes
. This case establishes, in light of intervening Supreme Court authority, a new standard of review for the voluntariness of the waiver of Fifth Amendment Miranda rights. Accordingly, pursuant to Circuit Rule 40(e), it has been circulated to the entire court. No judge favored a rehearing en banc on this issue.
. Judge Coffey's view recently has been followed by Chief Judge Wilkinson of the Fourth Circuit in
United States v. Howard,
. See 2d Circuit:
United States v. Lynch,
.
See, e.g., United States v. Betts,
We have followed the same rule in reviewing state cases within our habeas jurisdiction.
See, e.g., Henderson v. DeTella,
. We also note that our holding today dоes not signal that all mixed questions of fact and law are necessarily matters for de novo review. As the Supreme Court pointed out in
Pierce v. Underwood,
. We also note that Mr. Mills did not make any incriminating statement until he was within the FBI offices and had been re-Mirandized. As we explain below, there is, in our view, no question about the validity of his waiver of his Miranda rights at that time.
