The United States appeals from an order suppressing statements made by defendant Danielle Faux during a two-hour interview that was conducted in her home while a search warrant was being executed. The underlying allegation is that Faux fraudulently submitted bills for physical therapy sessions (which would be insurable) that were in fact (uninsured) sessions
BACKGROUND
Following an evidentiary hearing, the district court described the factual background in its ruling on suppression. Our summary of the facts is taken from the district court’s ruling. However, the district court did not purport to make actual findings of fact on several contested issues — especially on points where the record evidence was inconsistent — choosing instead to summarize the evidence.
Danielle Faux owns and operates a physical therapy practice in Norwalk, Connecticut; she is also part-owner of a gym in the same building. Faux sometimes refers her physical therapy patients for sessions with personal trainers at her gym. Only physical therapy services provided by a licensed physical therapist are covered by Medicare and by the insurance companies for which Faux was a participating provider; personal training services are of course not covered by insurance.
A former business partner of Faux approached the Govеrnment about a scheme to defraud Medicare and insurance companies by billing personal training sessions as physical therapy. The Government conducted an 18-month investigation into Faux’s business: grand jury subpoenas were issued for Faux’s billing and financial records, and Faux’s former partner wore a wire to record conversations with Faux and with Faux’s patients.
A search warrant was executed at her home on December 8, 2011, “just as the sun was coming up.” Approximately 10 to 15 agents
The agents entered the house through a door between the garage and the main front door. Faux was at the end of the hallway, fully dressed and toting luggage. The two agents tasked with questioning Faux, FBI Special Agent Matthew McPhil-lips and HHS-OIG Special Agent Lucille Fontes, approached her and told her they had warrants to search her residence and her physical therapy practice. Faux volunteered that the use of personal trainers was entirely separate from her physical therapy practice. McPhillips testified that he “responded very bluntly, very directly, back to her in a manner in which she would understand that I didn’t believe what she was telling me.” United States v. Faux,
Faux informed the agents that she was about to leave for vacation. According to Faux, McPhillips replied that she was “not going anywhere.” Id, It is unclear whether in context the statement would be an order or a prediction, and McPhillips denied making that statement, or otherwise telling Faux to cancel her plans, or making any similar threats. The district court made no explicit finding as to whether the statement was made; instead, the district court found that “[w]hether or not McPhil-lips made that statement, that is the message that would have beеn communicated to a reasonable person in Faux’s situation.” Id. at 277.
The district court further inferred that “[i]t is impossible to believe that Faux voluntarily chose to answer questions for two hours rather than choosing to go on a vacation with relatives.” Id. This inference was reinforced for the district court by the seizure of her cell phone, which left her with “no means to tell the others traveling that the vacation had been interrupted.” Id. It is “undisputed” that both agents heard Faux inform her husband that their vacation wоuld be cancelled because agents were there to discuss the “crossover” of the businesses, and neither agent reassured Faux that cancellation or postponement was unnecessary. Id. at 265.
During the execution of the warrant and the interview, McPhillips and Fontes were dressed in business attire. Many of the other agents wore jackets that identified them as law enforcement. Neither McPhil-lips nor Fontes drew a weapon while at Faux’s residence. However, according to Faux’s аffidavit, she knew or believed that most, if not all, of the agents present at her home were armed. (She was correct.)
The questioning took place in Faux’s dining room. Faux asserts that she was escorted there while an agent held her arm, whereas Fontes testified that Faux went “on her own volition” and that the agents did not touch her. Faux’s husband, Corwin, was questioned in the living room, and the agents did not offer Faux an option to be in the same room.
During the two-hour interview, Faux was not allowed to move freely in her home: Fontes accompanied her to the bathroom and stood outside the door, and accompanied Faux to her bedroom when she wanted to get a sweater. The agents testified that the restrictions on Faux’s movement and on her ability to communicate (her cell phone was seized) were for the purposes of (1) officer safety and (2) evidence preservation; but there is “no indication that Faux was ever informed of those rationales.” Faux,
Faux was never specifically informed that her participation was voluntary, that she did not have to answer questions, or that she was free to leave. However, 20 minutes into the interview she was told that she was “not under arrest.”
After the investigation was complete, Faux was indicted for health care fraud.
DISCUSSION
On appeal from a suppression ruling, we review factual findings for clear error and we review questions of law de novo. United States v. Rodriguez,
I
Statements made during a custodial interrogation are generally inadmissible unless a suspect has first been advised of his or her rights. Miranda v. Arizona,
“‘[CJustody’ for Miranda purposes is not coterminous with ... the colloquial understanding of custody.” United States v. FNU LNU,
Although both elements are required, the second is the “ultimate inquiry” because a “free-to-leave inquiry reveals only whether the person questioned was seized.” Newton,
An individual’s subjective belief about his or her status generally does not bear on the custody analysis. Nor does the officer’s perceptions, although an officer’s knowledge or beliefs “may bear upon the custody issue if they are сonveyed, by word or deed, to the individual being questioned,” but “only to the extent they would affect how a reasonable person in the position of the individual being questioned would gauge the breadth of his or her freedom of action.” Stansbury,
An individual who understands that her detention is “not likely to be temporary and brief’ and feels that she is “completely at the mercy of police” could reasonably deem her situation comparable to formal arrest. Newton,
The location of the interrogation in this case — Faux’s home — is important. The home is “the most constitutionally protected place on earth”; thus, the right to terminate the interrogation and be “free to leave” is “hollow” if the one place that the individual cannot retreat to, or exclude law enforcement from, is her home. See United States v. Craighead,
The home may sometimes become a custodial setting. In Orozco v. Texas, the defendant was determined to be in custody when four officers entered his bedroom at 4 a.m., questioned him without providing warnings, and testified explicitly that defendant was “under arrest and not free to leave.”
In Newton, the defendant was held to be in custody in his own home because he was placed in handcuffs—notwithstanding that the police assured him that he was not under arrest and that the handcuffs were for safety reasons. See Newton,
In Craighead, the Ninth Circuit concluded that an interrogation was custodial based on the presence of eight officers in defendant’s home, which was deemed a “police-dominated environment”:
When a large number of law enforcement personnel enter a suspect’s home, they may fill the home such that thеre are no police-free rooms or spaces to which the suspect may retreat should he wish to terminate the interrogation. Similarly, when the number of law enforcement personnel far outnumber the suspect, the suspect may reasonably believe that, should he attempt to leave, he will be stopped by one of the many officers he will encounter on the way out.
With these principles in mind, we review the circumstances of this case and the district court’s analysis.
II
The district court identified “numerous aggravating factors” that it relied upon to distinguish this case from those where home interviews were held noncustodial.
First, the district court observed that Faux was interrogated while “about a dozen” agents from three federal agencies executed the warrаnt, which the district court determined “would have been intimidating and would have communicated a show of force to a reasonable person, even if weapons were not drawn.” Faux,
The number of officers present for the search of Faux’s home gives considerable pause. It is unclear from the record how
Second, Faux was physically separated from her husband and was never explicitly told whether the agents would accommodate a request by Faux to see her husband. As the Miranda Court observed, it is a police interrogation technique to separate the person being questioned from others who might give support and caution.
Third, Faux was not permitted to move freely about her home during the two-hour interrogation; agents accompanied her to the bathroom and to her bedroom tо fetch a sweater. Although monitoring her movements had a legitimate law enforcement purpose (i.e., to preserve evidence), she was not told the reason she was being shadowed. The district court found that a reasonable person in her position would have understood this restriction as a marker of custody.
The condition imposed on her movements did not amount to custody. Cf. United States v. Ross,
Fourth, the district court found that Faux was “never told that she was free to leave or that she had a choice whether to respond to questioning.” Faux,
Fifth, the district court found that Faux and her husband canceled their vacation in order to remain at the house during the search. Without finding that the agents actually told Faux she had to cancel, the district court concluded that “that is the message that would have been communicated to a reasonable person in Faux’s situation.” Faux,
In sum, the district court accorded too much weight to these circumstances, which it classed as “aggravating factors.” See Faux,
Ill
Under our prеcedents, the circumstances of Faux’s interrogation militate against a finding of custody. Faux was questioned in the familiar surroundings of her home. See FNU LNU,
On this record, and given our precedents, it must be concluded that Faux was
Faux’s statements should not have been suppressed, because no Miranda warnings were necessary.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we vacate the order of the district court and remand for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Faux elected not to testify at the evidentiary ■ hearing. It appears likely, however, that the district court was not able to credit her version of the events when it conflicted with the Government’s version. Faux’s account was presented in an affidavit and was not subject to cross examination; the Government’s evidence included live testimony from the two agents who conducted the interview and were subject to cross examination.
. The district court did not еxplicitly resolve whose testimony was most reliable regarding the number of agents and instead appeared to rely on all available testimony in making its estimate. One agent testified that there were approximately ten agents; another agent testified that there were approximately eleven agents; and Faux’s affidavit asserted that there were thirteen to fifteen agents.
.The FBI; the U.S. Dep't of Health and Human Services, Office of the Inspector General ("HHS-OIG”); and the Criminal Investigаtions Division of the IRS.
. In its ruling the district court stated that McPhillips told Faux that she was "not in custody.” Faux,
. Specifically, she has been charged with health care fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1347, obstruction of a federal audit, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1516, filing a false statement on a tax return, in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7206, and aiding arid abetting under 18 U.S.C. § 2.
. We hаve jurisdiction over this interlocutory appeal pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3731.
. As an alternative basis for affirmance, Faux argues that her statements were the tainted fruit of an illegal detention under the Fourth Amendment and should be suppressed. But, for the reasons already discussed, Faux has failed to demonstrate that the officers exceeded the scope of their authority to properly execute a search warrant. See Michigan v. Summers,
. This distinguishes our case from the "police-dominated environment” thаt led to a custody finding by the Ninth Circuit in Craig-head. There, the agents unholstered their weapons in the presence of the defendant several times.
