The United States appeals an order of the district court granting Rogers’ motion to suppress his confession. The district court found that Rogers made the statements while in custody and that the government failed to prove that the statement was made pursuant to a voluntary waiver of Rogers’ rights after he received proper warnings in accordance with
Miranda v. State of Arizona,
When reviewing a ruling from a pretrial suppression hearing, “[t]his Court must give credence to the credibility choices and findings of fact of the district court unless clearly erroneous.”
United States v. Raymer,
The trial court found:
Philip Thrasher had confessed to a state stolen guns charge and, as a result, the Lee County Sheriff’s Department learned that the guns might be in the possession of Hermon D. Rogers. On or about October 17 or 18, 1987, Deputy Sheriff James Partlow and investigating trainee John (“Buddy”) Bell visited with Rogers. Bell thought of Rogers as a victim of a thief [sic] and was not investigating a criminal offense. Partlow and Bell did not go to Rogers’ home to arrest him, and the conversation that took place in the front yard was not preceded by Miranda warnings. Bell and Partlow were only interested in obtaining the guns. In effect, Rogers asked the two men whether he would be charged if he cooperated. Although the precise answer is disputed, there is no conflict in the testimony that he was told “no.”
The next day, Rogers drove to Alabama where the relatives to whom he had sold the guns lived. He was so concerned with meeting a deadline to return the guns that he called the sheriff’s office to let Bell know he would be late.
On or about October 20 BATF Agent Steve Lewis was at the Lee County Sheriff’s Department. He does not recall if his presence was requested or if he happened to be there, but he was asked to help trace the firearms. That same day, Rogers received a telephone call advising him that “somebody wants to talk to you.” He went to the sheriff’s office.
Lewis spoke to Bell and Chief Deputy Nicky Hall, to whom Bell reported, for background information in advance of interviewing Rogers. He independently knew that Rogers was a convicted felon.
Lewis began by reading Rogers the Miranda rights and obtaining a signed waiver. Rogers, who assumed that this was a follow-up to the county investigation, was not given the reason for these steps. The statement he gave was the source of a three-count indictment related to the firearms.
This Court’s independent review of the suppression hearing evidence fully confirms the trial court’s findings of fact. We now turn to the proper legal conclusion to be drawn from these facts.
The applicable standard for determining whether a confession is voluntary is whether, taking into consideration the “totality of the circumstances,” the statement is the product of the accused’s “free and rational” choice.
Martinez v. Estelle,
First, the relinquishment of the right must have been voluntary in the sense that it was a product of a free and deliberate choice rather than intimidation, coercion, or deception. Second, the waiver must have been made with a full awareness both of the nature of the right being abandoned and the consequences of the decision to abandon it. Only if the ‘totality of the circumstances surrounding the interrogation’ reveal both an un-coerced choice and the requisite level of comprehension may a court properly conclude that the Miranda rights have been waived.
Id.
(quoting
Fare v. Michael C.,
We are mindful that a valid waiver of constitutional rights does not occur in a vacuum but rather in response to a particular set of facts.
United States v. McCrary,
Given the peculiar facts of this case, we find that Rogers’ confession was not voluntary for the purposes of the Fifth Amendment. Representatives of the Lee County Sheriff’s Office assured Rogers that he would not be arrested if he cooperated with them by retrieving the guns stolen by Thrasher. The following day, acting in reliance on this promise, Rogers retrieved and delivered the guns to the Sheriff’s Office. The next day Rogers received a telephone call from someone at the Sheriff’s Office who requested that he return to the office for further questioning concerning his purchase of the guns. The interview by two federal officers occurred in a secretary’s office at the Sheriff’s Department. The interviewers, knowing that Rogers was a convicted felon, did not apprise him of the purpose or consequences of their inquiry. The trial judge found, based upon his observation of Rogers during his testimony, that Rogers’ intellectual capacity was such that it was reasonable for him to conclude that this questioning was related to the original investigation and promise by the Sheriff’s Office.
The government points to
United States v. Long,
The Seventh Circuit rejected Long’s argument that the confession given to state authorities should be suppressed in federal court because of his failure to foresee his federal criminal liability. The court characterized Long as a “person experienced in the criminal justice system who [attempted] to strike the best possible bargain while his leverage remained high.”
In
United States v. Contreras, 755
F.2d 733 (9th Cir.),
cert. denied,
Here, Rogers was summoned to the sheriffs office by an employee of that department and informed that someone wanted to speak with him regarding the guns stolen by Thrasher. Rogers was then interviewed in a secretary’s office by two federal officers. Though the
Miranda
warning was given, Rogers indeed “misunderstood the consequences of speaking freely to the law enforcement officials.”
Colorado v. Spring,
For the foregoing reasons, the ruling of the district court is
AFFIRMED.
