Eric Harris confessed to burning the church where he worked as a pastor. Pri- or to trial, Harris moved to suppress that confession. After the district court
1
denied his pretrial motion, Harris pleaded guilty. On appeal, Harris contends that law enforcement officers violated the constitutional principle enunciated in
Edwards v. Arizona,
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Harris pastored the Kentucky Missionary Baptist Church in Benton, Arkansas. Over time, the church congregation divided into factions regarding an issue of church discipline. Harris sought to contrive a project that the members of the congregation could work on together, thereby promoting unity of purpose.
On Saturday, August 24, 1996, Harris visited the church in the evening to turn on the air conditioning in preparation for the next morning’s service. Hoping to provide [the] church with a project to heal the division,” Harris set fire to one of the walls of the church. Harris lit рaper towels with a match and placed the flaming towels underneath an air conditioning outlet. He then left the church and returned home to watch a televised football game. Approximately one half-hour later, the church became engulfed in flames. Harris returned to assist passersby in fighting the blaze, but the church building burned down. Harris later claimed that he had intended only to scorch a small area of the church wall that could then have been repaired by members of his сongregation.
Federal, state, and local law enforcement officials interviewed Harris about the church fire over the course of the next few years. But Harris did not admit that he had started the fire. Harris subsequently moved to Oklahoma. On February 3, 1999, FBI Special Agent Chester Lucas contacted Harris about taking a polygraph examination. Harris volunteered to take the exam the next day at the local Stephens County Sheriffs Office. On February 4, Agent Lucas — accompanied by an FBI polygrapher, Special Agent Phillip Gadd — met Harris at the sheriffs office at 1:30 PM. Harris read and executed both a Consent to Interview with Polygraph Form and a Miranda waiver-of-rights form. Agents Lucas and Gadd specifically informed Harris that he was not in сustody and could leave at any time.
Harris flunked the polygraph exam. Following the exam, Agent Gadd questioned Harris further about several inconsistencies in his story. Agent Gadd interrogated Harris for roughly Vk to 2 hours following the administration of the polygraph examination. Agent Lucas was absent from the room during the polygraphing and most of the questioning that followed, but he returned to participate in the questioning of Harris. Agent Gadd eventually left to visit the restroom; *1050 Harris then told Agent Lucas, “I have something for you, but not today. I want to see a lawyer.” Harris then left the sheriffs office and returned home.
Agents Lucas and Gadd left the sheriffs office and drove back to their base in Oklahoma City. During the ride, they discussed whether to reinitiate contact with Harris in viеw of his statement that he wanted a lawyer. After consulting with agents in a divisional FBI office, Agents Lucas and Gadd decided that Harris had not been “in custody,” and that they were free to contact Harris again.
Agent Lucas called Harris at home that same evening, approximately three hours after the post-polygraph interrogation ceased. Agent Lucas expressed interest in learning the “something” that Harris “had for them.” After a brief conversation, Harris agreed to meet the аgents for another interview the following day at the sheriffs office.
The next day, February 5, 1999, Harris met Agents Lucas and Gadd at the sheriffs office at 11:00 AM. Harris did not bring a lawyer. The Agents did not read Harris the Miranda warnings. Shortly after the interview began, Harris confessed to burning down his сhurch in Benton. Harris then reduced his confession to writing.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On March 3, 1999, a grand jury in the Eastern District of Arkansas indicted Harris with violating 18 U.S.C. § 844(i), the federal arson statute, 2 by burning the church in Benton. Prior to trial, Harris moved to suppress his confession on two grounds.
First, Harris contended thаt he was in custody on February 4. He claimed that by asserting his right to a lawyer at the close of the February 4 interrogation, he insulated himself from the second interrogation on February 5.
See Edwards,
Second, Harris contended that even if he had not been in custody during the February 4 interrogation, he should nevertheless have gained the benefit of Miranda’s protections when the Agents read him the warnings. When he later asserted that right at the close of the first day’s interrogation, Harris argued, Edwards protected him from interrogation on the second day.
A magistrate judge held an evidentiary hearing and issued findings and conclusions. The judge rejected both of Harris’s *1051 arguments and recommended to the district court that the suppression motion be denied. The district court affirmed the magistrate judge’s recommendation in a written opinion. Once the district court ruled that Harris’s confession would not be suppressed, Harris pleaded guilty. The district court acceрted the plea and sentenced Harris on February 11, 2000. Harris reserved the right to appeal the suppression decision, and he timely filed an appeal challenging the district court’s denial of his motion to suppress.
DISCUSSION
We review for clear error a district court’s findings of fact made in connection with a defendant’s pretrial motion to suppress evidence and statements.
See United States v. Brown,
Harris concedes for purposes of this appeal that he was not in custody during the February 4 interrogation. But Harris contends that he should be treated as if he were in custody because the FBI agents read him the Miranda rights. 3 Hаrris argues that the government must honor the rights he was read, even if he was not otherwise entitled to those rights. In contrast, the government objects that the reading of the Miranda warnings to Harris was superfluous, since Harris was not in custody, and was not entitled to Miranda’s protections in any event.
We hаve not addressed the transformation argument in any of our prior cases. Several circuits and state supreme courts have discussed the transformation argument with varied results. Some courts have held that the reading of the
Miranda
rights during a non-custodial interrogation does
not
afford the suspect any of those rights, since the reading is unnecessary.
See, e.g., Davis v. Allsbrooks,
Although we are disinclined to adopt the transformation argument as an extension of our Miranda jurisprudence, we need not decide that issue in this appeal. Even if Harris had been entitled to Miranda’s protections, the break between his request for a lawyer on February 4 and his confession on February 5 defeats the protection Hаrris seeks under Edwards.
A suspect who invokes the
Miranda
right to counsel may not be reapproached by police unless counsel is made available.
See Edwards,
At least six circuits have adopted a rule consistent with this dictum.
See McFadden v. Garraghty,
The seminal case was Skinner. In Skinner, a defendant went to the poliсe station for an interview voluntarily, but left after expressing a desire to speak with an attorney. The next morning, Skinner was arrested and signed a Miranda waiver before confessing. The Ninth Circuit refused to bar Skinner’s reinterrogation under Edwards because of the break between his invocation of the Miranda right to counsel and his subsequеnt voluntary confession. The court distinguished the facts in Edwards:
Edwards was under arrest and in custody continuously from the time he requested an attorney through the next day when the guard told him “he had to” talk and officers interrogated him again. Skinner, however, was not in cоntinuous custody. Skinner went to the police station voluntarily on July 10. He was free to leave the station after questioning, and did leave after he said he wanted to talk to a lawyer before answering more questions. When Skinner left the station that аfternoon, he had the opportunity to contact a lawyer or to seek advice from friends and family if he chose to do so.
Skinner,
Although we have not explicitly adopted the
Skinner
limitation on
Edwards,
we recently indicated our amenability to limit
Edwards
in a fashion that surpasses
Skinner’s
limitation.
See Holman v. Kemna,
“Edwards
thus established another prophylactic rule designed to prevent police from badgering a defendant into waiving his previously asserted
Miranda
rights.”
Michigan v. Harvey,
Harris was not in continuous custody between the time he requested a lawyer on February 4 and the time he was reinterrogated and later confessed on February 5. The result would not be different if
*1053
we viewed Agent Luсas’s phone call to Harris’s home on the evening of February 4 as the reinitiation of interrogation. That phone call took place at least three hours after Harris left the interview room in the local sheriffs office. In light of the circumstances of this case, we conclude that a three-hour break in time defeats
Edwards
protection, since Harris had ample opportunity to consult his family, friends, or a lawyer.
See Dunkins v. Thigpen,
We affirm.
Notes
. The Honorable Susan Webber Wright, Chief Judge, United States District Court fоr the Eastern District of Arkansas.
. Last Term, the Supreme Court was asked to review the constitutionality of § 844(i) as applied to private homes. See
Jones v. United States,
- U.S. -, - - -,
. We refer to this argument as the “transformation” argument. Harris argues that the Agents’ reading of the Miranda rights transformed an otherwise noncustodial interrogation into a custodial interrogation, one in which a suspect deserves Miranda's protections.
