This intеrlocutory appeal is brought by Plaintiff-Appellant the United States of America (the “Government”) to reverse the district court’s order suppressing certain incriminating statements made by Defendanb-Appellee Michael Angelo Cavazos (“Cavazos”). Wе AFFIRM.
Factual and Procedural Background
On September 1, 2010, between 5:30 a.m. and 6:00 a.m., Cavazos woke to banging on his door and the shining of flashlights through his window. U.S. Immigration and Custom Enforcement (“ICE”) Agents, assisted by U.S. Marshals, Texas Department of Public Safety personnel, and Crane Sheriffs Department personnel, *192 were executing a search warrant on Cavazos’s home. The warrant was issued on the belief that Cavazos had been texting sexually explicit material to a minor female. After Cavazos’s wife answered the door, approximately fourteen law enforcement personnel entered Cavazos’s residence.
Immediately upon entering, government agents ran into Cavazos’s bedroom, identified him, and handcuffed him as he was stepping out of bed. Agents then let Cavazos put on pants before taking him to his kitchen. Cavаzos’s wife and children were taken to the living room. Cavazos remained handcuffed in the kitchen, away from his family, while the entry team cleared and secured the home. ICE Agents Le Andrew Mitchell and Eric Tarango then uncuffed Cavazos and sat with him in the kitchen for aрproximately five minutes while other officers secured the home.
Once the house was secured, agent Tarango asked Cavazos if there was a private room in which they could speak. Cavazos suggested his son’s bedroom. In the bedroom, Cavazоs sat on the bed while the two agents sat in two chairs facing him. The agents asked Cavazos if he wanted the door open, but Cavazos said to keep the door closed. Agents Mitchell and Tarango informed Cavazos that this was a “noncustodial interview,” that hе was free to get something to eat or drink during it, and that he was free to use the bathroom. The agents then began questioning Cavazos without reading him his Miranda rights.
About five minutes into the initial interrogation, Cavazos asked to use the restroom. Agents then searched the restroom for sharp objects and inculpatory evidence. Once cleared, they allowed Cavazos to use the bathroom, but one agent remained outside the door, which was left slightly open so the agent could observe Cavazos. Once finished, Cavazos, followed by an agent, went to the kitchen to wash his hands, as the restroom’s sink was broken. Cavazos then returned to his son’s bedroom, and the interrogation resumed.
After Cavazos returned to the bedroom, officers interrupted the interrogation several times to obtain clothing to dress Cavazos’s children. The officer would ask Cavazos for an article of clothing, which Cavazos would retrieve from the drawers and hand to the officer. Agents Mitchell and Tarango would then continue the questioning.
At some point during the interrogаtion, Cavazos asked to speak with his brother, who was his supervisor at work. The agents brought Cavazos a phone and allowed him to make the call, instructing Cavazos to hold the phone so that the agents could hear the conversation. Cavazos tоld his brother that he would be late for work.
Finally, the agents asked Cavazos if he had been “sexting” the victim. Cavazos allegedly admitted that he had, and also described communications with other minor females. After the interrogation was over, Cavazos agreеd to write a statement for the agents in his kitchen. While Cavazos began writing the statement, an agent stood in the doorway and watched him.
Cavazos wrote his statement for approximately five minutes before agents Mitchell and Tarango interrupted him. At that pоint the agents formally arrested Cavazos and read him his Miranda rights. From beginning to end, the interrogation of Cavazos lasted for more than one hour, and the agents’ conduct was always amiable and non-threatening. Subsequently, Cavazos was indicted for coercion and enticement of a child, and for transferring obscene material to a minor.
*193 On November 2, 2010, Cavazos moved to suppress the statements he made before he was read his Miranda rights. On January 14, 2011, a suppression hearing was held. On January 19, 2011, Judge Robert A. Junell granted Cavazos’s motion, and, on January 26, 2011, issued a memorandum stating the reasons for his order. Thereafter, pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3731, the Government filed this interlocutory appeal of the district court’s order.
Standard of Review
In an appeal from a district court’s ruling on a motion to suppress, this Court reviews factuаl findings in support of the ruling under the clearly erroneous standard and legal conclusions
de novo. United States v. Seals,
Analysis
The Government appeals the district court’s finding that Cavazos was subjected to a custodial interrogation when he was interrogated by Agents Mitchell and Tarango. Except for some minor issues addressed below, the Government does not challenge the district court’s factual findings. Rather, the Government argues that the district court improperly weighed the evidence in finding that Cavazos was subjected to a custodial-interrogation.
“Miranda
warnings must be administered prior to ‘custodial interrogation.’ ”
United States v. Bengivenga,
Custody for
Miranda
purposes requires a greater restraint on freedom than seizure under the Fourth Amendment.
Bengivenga,
*194
Here, thе totality of circumstances, drawn from the record as seen in the light most favorable to Cavazos, indicates Cavazos was in custody at the time he made his incriminating statements. Just after 5:80 a.m., Cavazos was awakened from his bed, identified and handcuffed, while more than a dozen officers entered and searched his home; he was separated from his family and interrogated by two federal agents for at least an hour
1
; he was informed he was free to use the bathroom or get a snack, but followed and monitorеd when he sought to do so; and he was allowed to make a phone call, but only when holding the phone so that the agents could overhear the conversation.
2
An interrogation under such circumstances, and those others discussed above, would lead a reasonable person to believe that he was not “at liberty to terminate the interrogation and leave,”
In arguing
Miranda
warnings were not nеcessary, the Government relies on the fact that Cavazos was interrogated in his own home, a fact which, taken alone, lessens the likelihood of coercion.
See United States v. Fike,
The Government places significant emphasis on the fact that the agents informed Cavazos that the intеrview was “non-custodial.” Such statements, while clearly relevant to a
Miranda
analysis, are not a “talismanic factor.”
See Hargrove,
In engaging in the inquiry required by
Miranda,
the Court is mindful that no single circumstance is determinative, and we make no categorical determinations. Reviewing, in totаlity, the unique circumstances presented in the record here, in the light most favorable to Cavazos, the party prevailing below, we find a reasonable person in Cavazos’s position would not feel “he or she was at liberty to terminate the interrogation and leave.”
See J.D.B.,
Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, the order of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. "[A] detention of approximately an hour raises considerable suspicion” that an individual has been subjected to a custodial interrogation.
United States v. Harrell,
. The legality of such detention pending the execution of the search warrant, which Cavazos does not disputе here, does not change the Court's inquiry with respect to Miranda.
. While only two officers interrogated Cavazos, the presence of other officers at the location is also relevant to the Court’s inquiry.
See Fike,
. Although the Government asserts Cavazos was informed that “he was free to go,” the record provides no clear support for such proposition. Rather, the district court found that the agents’ only statement was that the interview was "non-custodial,” and the Government fails to demonstrate clear error in such determination.
