We are asked to hold that hair samples voluntarily provided and a confession voluntarily given must both be suppressed because in the course of obtaining them investigating agents asked routine booking questions and requested the samples after *934 the defendant had invoked the fifth amendment and requested counsel and because, after the defendant reinitiated the conversation and reinvoked his rights, investigating agents remained in the room silently a brief time, after which the defendant again spoke and later confessed. We decline to do so, affirming the district court’s findings as to all matters.
Two men raped a Mexican American woman in an unoccupied apartment located on a military reservation. The woman described the heights, builds, approximate ages, complexions, facial characteristics, and dress of her two attackers in detail to FBI and Army CID agents. The description of the shorter of the two attackers almost exactly matched the defendant, Dougall. Additional information linked Dougall to the scene of the rape and to the rape: while investigating a previous incident in the same unoccupied apartment, CID agents uncovered Dougall’s identification card in the apartment; the tenant officially assigned to the apartment indicated Dougall and Vance Anderson used the apartment for “partying;” and Anderson, cooperating with the investigation, informed the CID agents that on the day of the rape Dougall offered to let Anderson have sex with a Mexican American woman Dougall had at the apartment. The CID agents consequently issued a look-out for Dougall, listing him as armed and dangerous.
The arresting military police officer, alone when he stopped Dougall’s car, arrested the other two occupants of the car as well, apparently to ensure his own safety. The two occupants were not questioned with respect to the rape. Although agents did question more than one suspect, Dougall was the only suspect matching the description of the shorter attacker.
Before questioning him, the agents read Dougall his rights; and he signed a waiver. After he requested an attorney, the agents requested minimal personal data from Dou-gall — name, social security number, birth date, birth place, height, weight, and address. As well, they requested a hair sample, informing Dougall that they would obtain a court order if he failed to comply voluntarily: Dougall agreed to permit the agents to take a hair sample at the V.A. Hospital. Dougall then began to talk about the charges and signed a second waiver. When he again requested an attorney and fell silent, the officers sat in the room in silence for a short time. Dougall resumed talking and confessed.
Dougall moved to suppress the hair samples and his confession. Finding probable cause for the arrest and no improper interrogation tactics, the district court denied the motion. Dougall appeals both findings, and we address each in turn.
Probable Cause
Despite the victim’s detailed description and the physical and testimonial evidence linking Dougall to the scene of the rape and to the rape, Dougall insists there was no probable cause for his arrest. We disagree. Finding that the CID and FBI agents who issued the “Look-Out” for Dougall had probable cause at the time, the district court engaged in the proper inquiry.
See Whiteley v. Warden,
No Improper Interrogatories
If a suspect in custody requests an attorney during his interrogation, all questioning must cease until he is given
*935
the opportunity to consult with counsel.
Miranda v. Arizona,
The court also stated that the conduct of the agents did not violate Miranda or Edwards. Dougall raises three issues as to the agent’s conduct: (1) the agents continued asking questions, albeit to fill out a personal information form, before any rein-itiation of communications by Dougall; (2) the agents requested a hair sample and threatened to obtain a court order before any such reinitiation, and; (3) the agents remained in the room after Dougall invoked his rights for the second time. We conclude that none of these actions constituted improper interrogation.
First, interrogation includes
words or actions
that the authorities should know are reasonably likely to elicit an incriminating response from the suspect.
Rhode Island v. Innis,
Second, requesting hair samples did not violate Dougall’s fifth amendment right against self-incrimination or his sixth amendment right to counsel. Hair samples, like handwriting samples and photographs, are real and physical evidence, non-testimonial in nature; and compulsion to submit the samples would not violate Dougall’s right against self-incrimination.
See Edwards v. Butler,
*936 Dougall asserts that the verbal request for the hair sample and the threat to pursue a court order, as opposed to the actual taking of the hair sample, violated his rights. While it might have been more prudent to request the hair sample after Dougall’s attorney had arrived to avoid incidentally pressuring Dougall, there is no evidence that the agents designed the request to elicit damaging statements. The request itself did not draw a damaging response, other than submission of the hair samples at a non-critical stage of the case. Accordingly, the district court did not err in refusing to suppress the hair samples that could otherwise have been compelled.
Third, the agents remained in the interrogation room after Dougall reinvoked his fifth and sixth amendment rights. The agents sat quietly. Such minor momentary inaction is not akin to the clearly impermissible “Christian burial speech” held to violate the fifth and sixth amendments in
Brewer v. Williams,
None of the actions of which Dougall now complains amounts to improper interrogation. Therefore, the admission of the hair samples and of his confession was proper.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Dougall raises a D.C. Circuit case,
United States
v.
Hinckley,
In
United States v. Webb,
.
See also Gilbert v. California,
. This is so even though one agent described the silence as a "tactic" and stated that the agents stayed and remained quiet to "[s]ee if [Dougall] would admit — you know, respond to the question [as to whether Dougall had sex with the victim].” Dougall eventually answered no to the question.
Where other silences have occurred during the interrogation, waiting a short moment, quietly, without staring, to ensure that the defendant has finished saying what he wishes to say accommodates the defendant’s comfort more than threatening to leave him alone.
