Case Information
*1 BEFORE: SUTTON, McKEAGUE, and WHITE, Circuit Judges.
SUTTON, Circuit Judge. In Anthony Scott’s last visit to this court, a panel held that he invoked his right to counsel shortly after police arrested him in connection with a string of robberies of auto-parts stores. Today’s appeal concerns what happеned next. After requesting counsel, did Scott initiate communication with police before submitting to additional questioning? And were Scott’s subsequent confessions voluntary? The district court answered yes to both questions, and so do we. We affirm.
I.
Police оfficers arrested Scott on May 28, 2008, after responding to a robbery at an O’Reilly Auto Parts store in Memphis, Tennessee. They found him near the store, noting that he *2 matched the description of the alleged robber and that he ran when confrоnted by police. They also found a black jacket, a black ski mask, and a loaded chrome revolver not far from Scott. Various aspects of the robbery matched the profile of several previous Memphis-areа crimes. The culprit targeted an auto-parts store on a rainy day, wore a dark jacket, carried a silver revolver and moved around the store in a low crouch (“duck walk[ing],” to be exact—police called him the “squatter robber,” R. 164 at 45–46) to avoid being seen from outside.
After arresting Scott and after transporting him to the Memphis Robbery Bureau, police
advised Scott of his rights, and Scott invoked his right to counsel.
See United States v.
Scott
,
Detective Hutchison, the lead investigator on the case, decided to move Scott to the City of Bartlett’s jail because he did not want to keep Scott in the same facility as his cousin, John Scott, the suspected getaway driver. While Hutchison walked Scott to a transport vehicle for the trip to Bartlett, Scott turned to Hutchison and said, “[H]ey, look, I know I need to talk to y’all, I just can’t do it right now, let me get my head together, . . . I will talk to y’all later. . . . I’m tired, let me get some rest, I will talk to you later.” R. 89 at 47. Hutchison told Scott to get some rest and get his head straight. If Scott still wanted to talk in the morning, Hutchison added, they could talk the next day.
The next day proved productive for the investigation. On the evening of May 29, the police brought Scott back to the Robbery Bureau, securing him in one of the building’s intеrview rooms. Hutchison offered Scott something to drink and a restroom break. Scott accepted a cup *3 of water, requested pizza and asked to see his mother and daughter. Hutchison told Scott that he would order food but that he couldn’t give Scott any “special privileges” or “favors or anything like that.” R. 89 at 73. With these preliminaries out of the way, Scott took a deep breath and said, “I’m ready! Let’s do this!” R. 88-7 at 6; see also R. 89 at 49. Hutchison stopped Scott before he could say anything else, informed him of his rights under Miranda and asked him to sign an advice-of-rights form.
Scott confessed. “[I]f you got any robberies starting in 2005 with somebody wearing a FedEx coat,” he told Hutchison, “it’s me, I robbed from Whitehaven to Midtown, Midtown to east Memphis, east Memphis to Orange Mound, Orange Mound to Third Street, аnd Third Street back to Raleigh.” Id. at 50. “[T]hat’s all me,” Scott acknowledged. Id. Scott detailed his crimes, confessing to six robberies of Memphis businesses. After a pizza-and-pop break at 11:00 pm, Scott made more statements before returning to the Bartlett jail around midnight. The next day saw morе Miranda warnings and more confessions. Scott admitted to robbing six additional businesses, including four auto-parts stores and two fast-food restaurants. Scott signed the last set of written confessions at 4:40 pm on May 30, and Hutchison allowed Scott to see members of his family.
Before trial, Scott filed a motion to suppress the statements, claiming he did not make them voluntarily and the warnings fell short. The district court denied the motion, and a jury convicted Scott of 16 counts of robbery and of the use of a firеarm in a crime of violence. See 18 U.S.C. §§ 924(c), 1951. Scott appealed the denial of his motion, and a panel of this court reversed, holding that Scott invoked his right to counsel and that it was not clear who re-initiated the interrogation. The panel remanded the case to the district court “for further factual findings to determine who—Scott or a member of the police—initiated further discussion.” Scott , 693 *4 F.3d at 721. On remand, the district court found that Scott initiated the contact and that his subsequent cоnfessions were voluntary.
II.
When “an accused . . . [expresses] his desire to deal with the police only through counsel,
[he] is not subject to further interrogation by the authorities . . . unless [he] himself initiates
further communication, exchanges, or conversations with the police.”
Edwards v. Arizona
, 451
U.S. 477, 484–85 (1981). The accused “initiates further communication” when he shows “a
willingness and a desire for a generalized discussion about the investigation.”
Oregon v.
Bradshaw
,
The record confirms Scott’s “willingness” to speak with the police. After requesting
counsel and without any prompting from police, Scott told Detective Hutchison, “I know I
need
to talk to y’all, . . . let me get my head together, . . . I
will
talk to y’all later.” R. 89 at 47
(emphasis added). The import of these words was not lost on Hutchison, and it is not lost оn us.
It’s not just that Scott was willing to talk; he “need[ed]” to talk, and he desired to talk.
Statements of this sort go well beyond what’s needed to initiate contact. If “What is going to
happen to me now?” suffices to show initiation,
Bradshaw
,
What happened the next day shows that Scott’s time in rest and in thought at the Bartlett jail did not temper his “desire” to speak with police. Before Hutchison or any other officer asked Scott a case-relаted question on May 29, Scott launched into a full confession. “I’m ready! *5 Let’s do this!” Scott said, explaining to Hutchison that he had “been through this before,” that he “kn[e]w the difference between consecutive and concurrent” sentences, and that he hoped his cooperation would help him “get all this stuff pushed together.” R. 89 at 49. Scott stopped only when Hutchison read him his Miranda rights and asked Scott to sign a waiver form. It was Scott’s decision, rationally and freely made, to initiate communication with police about the Memphis robberies, and Scott did so twice: once when he told Hutchison that he would “talk to [police] later”; and once the next day when he confirmed his desire to speak with police, announcing he was “ready” to “do this.”
Scott insists that Hutchison initiated contact with him when Hutchison brought him from the Bartlett jail back to the Robbery Bureau on May 29 and 30 for questioning. App. Br. at 24– 25. Transporting Scott for questioning after he invoked his right to counsel might have been problematic had Scott not initiated communication on the evening of May 28, inviting further conversation. But the record leaves no doubt that Scott did just that. After invoking his right to counsel, Scott re-initiated conversation with the police, nоt the other way around.
United States v. McWhorter
,
III.
Scott further argues that even if he re-initiated communications with the police, his
subsequent confessions were invоluntary—that his “will” was “overwhelmed by official
pressure.”
United States v. Wrice
,
Scott’s theory of coercion stumbles over the first step. The district court found that
“[o]fficers informed [Scott] of his
Miranda
rights at least fourteen times over three days . . . [and
he] signed at least twelve
Miranda
waivers.” R. 104 at 12–13. In signing the waivers, Scott
acknowledged that he understood his rights, that he still wanted to speak with police, that he
wasn’t under the influence of any intoxicant, that he didn’t suffer from any mentаl disorder, and
that he wasn’t in any physical discomfort. That Scott heard the
Miranda
warnings and
repeatedly waived his rights to be sure does not preclude a finding of coercion. “But . . . cases in
which a defendant can make a colorable argument that a self-incriminating statement was
compelled despite the fact that [police] adhered to the dictates of are rare.”
Dickerson
v. United States
,
Is Scott that “rare” defendant? He thinks so beсause the police “shackled” him to a bench in a small interview room, prevented him from contacting his family, kept him hungry and deprived him of sleep. App. Br. at 31–33. But the record-supported findings of the district court contradict this scenario at each turn. Begin with Scott’s interview room. Scott hangs his hat on *7 the testimony of Officer James Taylor, who, after admitting he is “not real good with measurements,” said that he questioned Scott in a room that was “a little larger than a hall closet.” R. 163 at 162. On this basis, Scott paints a picture of an accused shackled and surrounded by officers in a cramped space when he confessed. But this description takes artistic license with the record. Police questioned Scott on May 29 and 30 not in some hallway closet, but in the Robbery Bureau’s “Interview Room B,” a standard, six feet by ten feet room equipped with a conference table, an ankle restraint system that allowed Scott free use of his hands, and a two-way mirror. Thе room had a doorbell that Scott could use to summon police officers “if he need[ed] someone or something.” R. 89 at 78. This run-of-the-mine interview room does not support a claim of coercion.
What about Scott’s lack оf contact with family members? Detective Hutchison, it is true,
asked the Bartlett jail to prohibit Scott from using the telephone during his stay, and he denied
Scott’s request to speak to his mother and daughter early on the evening of May 29. But Scott
was not kept incommunicado. Officer Taylor contacted the mother of Scott’s daughter on May
28 to check on the daughter’s well-being. And Scott was allowed to call his mother at 11:45 pm
on May 29. Even if lack of contact with the outside world supрorts a claim of police coercion in
some settings,
see Miranda
,
The record also contradicts Scott’s claims of food and sleep deprivation. Police repeatedly checked on Scott’s well-being during his time in custody, offеring him drinks, restroom breaks and food. The Bartlett jail provided Scott breakfast (pancakes) on May 29, but Scott opted not to eat it. Although police questioned Scott until almost midnight on May 28 and 29, they did not prevent him from sleeping. On May 28, Detective Hutchison told Scott to “go ahead, get . . . some rest” before talking to the police, R. 89 at 47–48, and officers didn’t retrieve *8 Scott from the Bartlett jail until 5:00 pm on May 29 and 11:47 am on May 30. All of this gave Scott plenty of time to rest between interview sessions.
Scott persists that police coerced him by offering a quid pro quo. If he gave a statement
to the police, Scott claims to have been told, he would get food and contact with his family.
App. Br. at 33. But the only person who supported this theory was Scott, and the district court
did not credit his testimony on this score.
See United States v. Esteppe
,
IV.
For these reasons, we affirm.
