OPINION AND ORDER
Before the Court is Defendant Jordan Monroe’s Motion To Suppress Statement (EOF No. 20), and the Government’s Response in Opposition (ECF No. 23).
1. Background
The facts underlying this Motion are largely not in dispute. The Court gleans the following facts from the testimony at the evidentiary hearing and. recordings of Monroe’s police interviews.
On May 12, 2016, at approximately 6:00 a.m., law enforcement arrived at Jordan Monroe’s residence to execute a search warrant for evidence of child pornography-related crimes.
At the beginning of the first interview, which occurred at Monroe’s home at 6:24 a.m., Special Agent Richardson told Monroe that he was not under arrest, but that Special Agent Richardson was going to read Monroe his rights.
The interview continued and, after giving the officers a password to his server, Monroe stated, “I don’t even have a [l]aw-yer, I don’t know if I should be giving you passwords.”
Later in the same interview, after Detective Houston accused Monroe of being sexually attracted to children, Monroe stated, “Oh ok conversation’s over.”
The interview continued until 6:59 a.m.
Law enforcement recommenced questioning at Monroe’s home at 7:34 a.m., and Monroe was not re-informed of his Miranda rights.
After arriving at the Barracks, Special Agent Christopher Braga (“Special Agent Braga”) of the FBI, and Special Agent Richardson, conducted a so-called “pre-polygraph” interview with Monroe, beginning at approximately 9:27 a.m.
Shortly after this interaction, Special Agent Braga began to create a narrative for the interview that reassured Monroe that his job was simply to determine whether Monroe was a “predator” or “monster,” while reassuring Monroe that what Monroe did was “not the end of the world.”
Special Agent Braga then read Monroe his Miranda rights at approximately 9:50 a.m.
After the pre-polygraph interview proceeded for a while, Monroe stated: “I’m still thinking in the back of my mind, lawyer, lawyer, these guys are going to
Monroe then submitted to an unrecorded polygraph examination, followed by a recorded post-polygraph examination.
During the post-polygraph interview, Special Agent Braga told Monroe that he failed the polygraph examination “in regards to additional sexual contact ... with minorst,]” and if he did not tell the truth, “people are going to draw their own conclusions.”
Shortly after this interaction, Monroe then stated, “[Ljawyer, this, this is done.”
Defendant alleges additional violations of his Miranda rights after this point in the interrogation.
II. Discussion
A. The Interrogation at Monroe’s Home
1. Whether the Interrogation at Monroe’s Home Was Custodial
Monroe argues that the interrogation at his home was custodial because he was separated from his family and he was not free to leave.
Law enforcement need only respect Miranda rights during custodial interrogations.
[the First Circuit has] identified several factors that guide the analysis. Those factors include “whether the suspect was questioned in familiar or at least neutral surroundings, the number of law enforcement officers present at the scene, the degree of physical restraint placed upon the suspect, and the duration and character of the interrogation.”53
The original interrogation of Monroe occurred at his home, he was not handcuffed, and the questioning lasted approximately an hour and a half; it began at 6:24 a.m.
Of particular note, when Monroe asked to smoke a cigarette, Special Agent Richardson stated, “I’ll go upstairs and speak to somebody and uh maybe they’re gonna let you go outside right there and smoke a butt.”
The government argues that the physical control was necessary to preserve potential evidence within the house and protect the safety of the officers.’ While that may be so, this justification does not answer the very different question of whether a reasonable person ... would believe he was not at liberty to terminate the interrogation and leave.61
The fact that Monroe had to obtain permission to smoke on his own patio, even if this control was solely for bfficer safety purposes, when combined with having fifteen to twenty officers in his home, at 6:00 a.m., while still in his bathrobe, and after being separated from his family,
In order for Monroe’s statements to be admissible, the Government must prove Monroe waived his Miranda rights by a preponderance of the evidence and the waiver must be made “voluntarily, knowingly and intelligently.”
3. Whether Monroe Unequivocally Invoked His Right to Counsel at-His Home
Monroe argues that he clearly and unambiguously invoked his right to counsel in the first interview when he stated: “I don’t even have a lawyer, I don’t know if I should be giving you passwords.”
Once a suspect waives the right to counsel, until the suspect makes an “unequivocal” request for counsel, officers may continue questioning the suspect.
In the instant case, Monroe stated, “I, I don’t even have a lawyer, I don’t know if I should be giving you passwords.”
4. Whether Monroe Invoked His Right to Remain Silent at His Home
Monroe next argues that he invoked his right to remain silent when he stated, “Oh ok conversation’s over,” in response to Detective Houston accusing him of being sexually attracted to children.
The same standard applies for invoking the right to retaain silent as for invoking the right to counsel; invocation of the right must be “unambiguous” and the inquiry into whether the right was invoked is objective.
Monroe’s statement, in context, is a close call. Monroe did state, “Oh ok conversation’s over.” Nevertheless, the audio recording makes clear that Detective Houston was speaking at the same time as Monroe. At almost exactly the second syllable of the word “conversation,” Detective Houston asked a follow-up question, to which Monroe immediately responded.
Second, because Monroe continued to speak immediately after stating “conversation’s over,” Monroe initiated “further communication ... with the police.”
B. The Questioning at the. Police Sta- . .tion
1. Whether Monroe’s Miranda Rights Were Violated During the Pre-Polygraph Interview
Monroe argues that his right to counsel was violated because he unambiguously invoked his right to, counsel three times during the pre-polygraph interview and, after each invocation, officers continued to question him.
Defendant argues that he invoked first when he stated, “[N]ow I’m thinking, maybe lawyer”,
As stated above, an invocation of the right to counsel must be “unequivocal,” otherwise officers may continue questioning a suspect.
Monroe’s three statements, “now I’m thinking, maybe lawyer”; “even if I ask for a lawyer at this point, that could [be] next fucking week before somebody showed up”; and “I’m still thinking in the back of my mind, lawyer, lawyer,” are all equivocal.
Monroe’s argument that Special Agent Braga misrepresented Monroe’s rights and dissuaded him from invoking also falls flat. He contends that Special Agent Braga’s statement “encourage[ed] his misconception,” but as discussed above, the Court concludes that Monroe did not misunderstand his rights.
With respect to Special Agent Braga’s purported dissuasion, more than the comment, “[proceeding without an attorney] makes it ,.. quicker,” is needed to constitute a Miranda violation.
Monroe argues that he invoked his right to counsel and his right to remain silent several times in the post-polygraph interview.
The framework here is once again clear: invocation of the right to counsel must be “unequivocal,” and if invocation occurs, questioning must cease.
a defendant “must be free to deny all the elements of the case against him without thereby giving leave to the Government to introduce by way of rebuttal evidence illegally secured by it, and therefore not available for its case in chief. Beyond that, however, there is hardly justification for letting the defendant affirmatively resort to perjurious testimony in reliance on the Government’s disability to challenge his credibility.”109
Monroe’s statement, “Lawyer,” is an unequivocal invocation of the right to counsel, and questioning should have ceased immediately. That Special Agent Braga continued the interview was a blatant disregard of Monroe’s right to an attorney. “[L]aw-yer, this, this is done,” was also a clear, unequivocal invocation. There is, in fact, not much issue with this second statement: Special Agent Richardson, at the hearing on this motion conceded, “[a]t that one point I should have at least stopped the interview and clarified with him what he wanted to do.”
This aside, statements made after these invocations are suppressed and may be admissible only to the extent they are used to impeach Defendant and are otherwise admissible under the Federal Rules of Evidence.
Monroe argues that his statements were involuntary because they were obtained using the “Reid Technique;” officers used threats and promises to gain his cooperation; and the officers did not stop the questioning when Monroe invoked his Miranda rights.
The Fifth' Amendment bars the admission of involuntary confessions.
1.Whether Threats Rendered Monroe’s Statements Involuntary
Monroe claims that his statements were involuntary because he was subjected to threats and promises,
Monroe claims he was threatened with “harsher than normal legal consequences” unless he made incriminating statements.
• The remaining alleged “threats” at issue relate to the inconvenience of executing the -search warrant at his home.
2. Whether Promises Rendered
Monroe’s Statements Involuntary .
Monroe also claims' that he “received constant reassurances that his cooperation would be noted and' conveyed to the prosecutor and judge so that they may be more lenient in their treatment of him.”
3. Whether the Reid Technique Rendered Monroe’s Statements Involuntary
Monroe also claims that the use of the Reid Technique rendered his state-
The Reid Technique is the most-used interrogation technique by law enforcement in the United States.
Minimization involves
presenting the suspect with a theme that reduces the import of the crime. Themes usually convey the interrogator’s opinion that the crime was not so serious, that the victim deserved his fate, or that anyone else would have acted in the same way. ... [Experiments show that minimizing themes are understood by lay people as implicit promises of leniency.142
Maximization, on the other hand, involves
depicting the case against the suspect as being beyond any doubt. The implicit message is that the suspect is bound to be convicted even absent a confession, and that he faces harsh consequences, especially given the seriousness of the criminal charge ... and the severity of the corresponding punishment . Cooperating with the interrogators is portrayed as the only possible way to mitigate the direness of [the suspect’s] situation.143
The fact that the Reid Technique is the most widely used interrogation method, and that up to a quarter of exonerations involve false confessions, is no doubt a cause for great concern in our criminal justice system; it is, however, a different question from whether the technique, in and of itself, overbears “the will of the defendant” in the instant case.
[T]he agents’ statements exaggerating the quality of their evidence, minimizing the gravity of Jacques’s offense, and emphasizing the negative media attention that would attend Jacques’s trial all fall safely within the realm of the permissible “chicanery” sanctioned by this and other courts. Jacques points to no federal authority supporting a finding of an involuntary confession under similar circumstances.151
While Monroe argues the Reid Technique was used “to discourage [him] from
The problem with this result, of course, is that it implicitly condones police interrogation tactics, such as lie detector tricks and the minimization and maximization of crimes, which, again, can lead to—or are at least present in—false confessions.
Indeed, all agents in the criminal justice system—prosecutors, defense attorneys, and judges—want a system that does not wrongfully convict innocent people. If law enforcement agents are led to believe incorrectly that the Reid Technique possesses a kind of special power to root out the truth
A change in direction is- needed. This is a point advocated by Professor Simon, in his book, In Doubt.
4. Whether the Violation of Monroe’s Miranda Rights Renders Monroe’s ■ Statements Involuntary
Finally, Monroe alleges that, because he was subjected to an “utter refusal to honor his constitutional rights to end questioning and have an attorney appointed,” his statements were involuntary.
III. Conclusion
For the reasons discussed above, the Defendant’s Motion To Suppress (ECF No. 20) is DENIED in part and GRANTED in part.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Def.’s Mot. to Suppress Statement (“Def. Mot.”), ECF No. 20; Resp. to Def.’s Mot. to Suppress Statements ("Gov't. Resp.”), ECF No. 23.
. Hr’g Tr. 7:16-9:12, June 1, 2017.
. Id. at 9:13-10:10.
. Id. at 8:15.
. Id. at 10:14-17, 13:4-7.''
. Exhibit A ("Interview at Home Tr.”), ECF No. 23-1; Exhibit C ("Interview at Station Tr.”), ECF No. 23-3; Hr’g Tr. 25:19-21, June 1, 2017; Hr’g Tr. 65:10-15, June 1, 2017.
. See generally Def. Mot.
. Interview at Home Tr. 1.
. Id.; Exhibit B. ("Miranda Form 1”), ECF No. 23-2.
. Interview at Home Tr. 1-2.
. Id. at 2.
. Id, at 4.
. Id, at 6-7.
. Id. at 18.
. Audio Recording at 22:45, Jordan Monroe RISP-HIS Statement, Ex. F (“Audio of In Home Interview”), ECF No. 23-6 (on file with Court); Hr'g Tr. 15:11-13, June 1, 2017.
. Interview at Home Tr. 28.
. Id.
. Hr’g Tr. 16:5-8, June 1, 2017.
. Interview at Home Tr. 28.
. Id. at 45.
. Id. at 47.
. Hr’g Tr. 17:18-18:11, 53:12-14, June 1, 2017.
. Id. at 54:5-10, 55:14-20.
. Interview at Station Tr. 2:45-46.
. Id. at 4:90-94, 4:100.
. Id. at 13:379-87.
. Exhibit D ("Miranda Form 2”), ECF No. 23-4; Interview at Station Tr. 14:395-96.
. Interview at Station Tr. 14:398-399.
. Id. at 14:400-01,
. Id. at 14:402-03, 14:407.
. Id. at 34:999-1000.
. Id. at 34.
. Id. at 101:3052-53, 101:3055. Monroe avers that, "[o]nly at that point, two hours into this third interrogation, after being denied his right to an attorney, and after being denied food and water, did Monroe admit that he had had sex with his step-daughter.” (Def. Mot. 9.) The Government refutes the notion that Monroe was deprived of essential needs. (Gov’t Resp. 36.) This issue is not discussed herein as Defendant does not develop the argument, and, in any event, waiting thirty-five minutes does not qualify as a "bald disregard of ... [a] rudimentary need for food.” See Culombe v. Connecticut,
. Interview at Station Tr. 102:3057-62.
. Id, at 103:3101-3103, 104:3125-3129, 104:3144-105:3147.
. Hr’gTr. 31:7-8, June 2, 2017; Interview at Station Tr. 100:2995, 101:3052, 113:3389-114:3417. Regarding the approximate end time of the pre-polygraph interview, note that the interview began around 9:27 a.m., the timestamp on the transcript runs from this time until roughly two hours and fifty-seven minutes later, when the interview ends. Hr’g Tr. 55:14-16, June 1, 2017; see also Interview at Station Tr. 1:2, 115:3443.
. Hr’gTr. 64:9-12, June 1, 2017; Interview at Station Tr. 116.
. Gov’t Resp. 39-40; Hr’g Tr. 24:19-21, June 1, 2017.
. Interview at Station Tr. 117:3476-77, 123:3682-83.
. Id, at 127:3823-31.
. Id, at 128:3837.
. Id, at 128:3838-39.
. Id. at 129:3863.
. Id. at 129.
. Hr'g Tr. 97:17-19, June 1, 2017.
. Def. Mot. 16,
. Hr'g Tr. 35:23-36:7, 40:22-41:1, June 2, 2017.
. Id at 39:14-22; Interview at Home Tr. 28.
. Hr'g Tr. 12:6-10, June 2, 2017.
, Gov’t. Resp. 13; Interview at Home Tr. 1.
. United States v. Infante,
. Id at 396 (quoting Thompson v. Keohane,
. Id. (quoting United States v. Hughes,
. Interview at Home Tr. 1,. 28, 47. Precedent suggests that a one-hour interview is relatively short. See Hughes,
. See Hughes, 640 F,3d at 435-37 (finding that a lack of “meaningful physical restraint" over the suspect, that the suspect was interrogated in his own home, 'and that the interrogation was ninety minutes, to be factors weighing in favor of finding the interview non-custodial).
. See United States v. Mittel-Carey,
. Interview at Home 1; Hr’g Tr. 10:9-10, June 1,2017; Def. Mot. 4 n.2.
. Interview at Hqme Tr. 8, ,18.
. C£ Hughes,
. Interview at Home Tr. 28.
. Mittel-Carev,
. Compare United States v. Rang, No. 1:15-cr-10037-IT-1,
. Colorado v. Connelly,
. Interview at Home Tr. 1.
. Def. Mot. 3.
. Hr'gTr. 41:21-42:5, June 2, 2017.
. |d. at 29:18-30:3.
. Def. Mot. 3; Interview at Home Tr. 7.
. Gov’t Resp. 17-18.
. Davis v. United States,
. Id at 459,
. Id.
. Id. at 461,
. Def. Mot. 3.
. See Davis,
. Def. Mot. 16; Interview at Home Tr. 18.
. Gov’t Resp. 19-20.
. Id.
. Berghuis v. Thompkins,
. Davis,
. Dudley,
. United States v. Thongsophaporn,
. Audio of In Home Interview 22:45. A transcript of this portion of the questioning at Monroe’s home is reproduced below:
Houston: So, so we’ve been doing this a long time, alright. You know what I think the reason why you’re doing it is because just bluntly you’re afraid to say that you’re sexually attracted to children.
Monroe: Oh ok con ... ■
Monroe %CO Houston concurrently: .. .ver-sation's over. %CO I'm right aren’t I? Monroe: No I'm not, I’m not [-] there's not one child in this neighborhood that I want anything to do with.
.The value of the audio recording to this holding cannot be overstated, Without the recording it would be difficult to conclude that both Detective Houston and Special Agent Richardson did not hear Monroe's statement. But listening to the audio makes that contention not only plausible but probable. Moreover, situations like this not only show the value of recording—a topic on which this court has expressed strong views in the past, see United States v. Mason,
. Dudley,
. Thongsophaporn,
. The Court concludes that Monroe fully understood his Miranda rights during questioning at the State Police Barracks. After being asked if he understood his rights, Monroe answered affirmatively, (Interview at Station Tr. 14:394-96.) The argument that Monroe did not understand his rights is unavailing,
." Def. Mot. 18.
. Id. at 18; Interview at Station Tr. 2:46.
. Interview at Station Tr. 14:398-99. .
. Id. at 14:400-01; Def. Mot. 18-19.
. Def. Mot. 18; Interview at Station Tr. 34:999-1001.
. Gov’t Resp. 28-36.
. See Davis,
. Id. at 459,
. See Davis,
. Davis,
. Hr’g Tr. 50:3-4, June 2, 2017.
. See Kyger v. Carlton,
. Def. Mot. 18-19.
. Id at 19; Interview at Station Tr, 128:3837.
. Interview at Station Tr. 128:3838-3839.
. Id. at 128:3840.
. Id at 129:3863.
. Id. at 129:3866.
. Gov’t Resp. 2 n.l, 39-40.
. Davis,
. James v. Illinois,
. Id. (quoting Walder v. United States,
. Hr’g Tr. 97:17-19, June 1, 2017.
. The Court notes that this holding could result in the Court suppressing other evidence, if that evidence was obtained based on the suppressed statement and does not fall within an exception to the Exclusionary Rule.
. Def. Mot. 19-23.
. Id. at 23.
. Gov’t Resp. 24. “Fuckin great, great show and I like when it came on HBO ... I missed season five ... I’ve got to see the whole ' thing.” (Interview at Home Tr. 46.) it does indeed appear that Monroe missed Season Five. In that year’s Season Premier, in January 2008, a suspect is tricked into inculpating himself when the officers convince the suspect that a photo-copy machine can detect if he is lying. The Wire: More with Less (Blown Deadline Productions and Home Box Office television broadcast Jan. 6, 2008). Had Monroe not missed this episode, perhaps he would have recognized the trickery afoot in his own situation, as the agents used the polygraph to facilitate Monroe’s self-incrimination. Such trickery and deception has long been a tool of law enforcement, endorsed by the courts. See Frazier v. Cupp,
. Gov't Resp. 20, 27-28.
. Id. at 38; Hr’g Tr. 32:4-8, June 2, 2017.
. United States v. Jacques,
. Id. (quoting Bryant v. Vose,
. Id (citing United States v. Hughes,
. Id. (citing Hughes,
. Id. (citations omitted).
. Def. Mot. 20.
. United States v. Tingle,
. Jacques,
. Def. Mot. 21.
. Id.
. For example, Detective Houston told Monroe, "[W]e’re gonna, be here for a long time unless you cooperate as far as giving, us the passwords, we’re gonna be here for a long time, it’s gonna be an inconvenience for your wife and daughter," (Interview at Home Tr, 9.) Detective Houston also told Monroe, ”[W]e can search anywhere in your house for that, you don’t wanna do that, you got a beautiful home here alright," (Id.)
. Compare Lynumn v. Illinois,
. Def. Mot. 21.
. Jacques,
. Def. Mot. 22-23.
. Id.
. Dan Simon, In Doubt: The Psychology of the Criminal Justice Process 121-22 (2012).
. The Original, John E. Reid & Associates, Inc. (July S, 2017, 1:46 PM), http://www.rdd. com/training_programs/r_.traimng,html,
. Douglas Starr, The Interview, -The New Yorker, Dec. 9, 2013, at 43; Simon, supra note 133, at 127-34,
. Simon, supra note 133, at 127.
. Id, at 132¡ Starr, supra note 135,
. Simon, supra note 133, at 134.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id. at 135.
. Id.
. Id. There is no direct evidence, of course, that the officers here employed the Reid Technique. Special Agent Richardson testified that he had not been trained in the Reid Technique, and Special Agent Braga did not testify. (Hr’g Tr, 31:18-23, June 1, 2017.) Despite the lack of direct evidence, however, the
.Behavioral Analysis Interview, John E. Reid & Associates, Inc. (Aug. 1, 2017, 12:16 PM), http://www.reid.com/services/r_ behavior.html; see also Simon, supra note 133, at 122.
. Simon, supra note 133, at 131.
. Id.
. See generally Richard J. Ofshe & Richard A. Leo, Symposium on Coercion: An Interdisciplinary Examination of Coercion, Exploitation, and the Law: II, Coerced Confessions: The Decision to Confess Falsely: Rational Choice and Irrational Action, 74 Denv. U.L. Rev. 979 (1997); see also Simon, supra note 133, at 136-38.
. Simon, supra note 133, at 121; see also False Confessions and Admissions, Innocence Project, (July 14, 2017 3:41 PM), https://www. innocenceproject.org/causes/false-confessions-admissions/.
. Jacques,
. Id. at 812.
. Id.
. Def. Mot. 22-23.
. While this is not that case, it is not difficult to imagine circumstances where, depending on how the Reid Technique is employed or misemployed on a juvenile or an individual with an intellectual disability, the tactics would have an impermissible, coercive effect. See, e.g., In re Elias V.,
. See generally Of she & Leo, supra note 147; see also Simon, supra note 133, at 136-38.
. See generally Innocence Project (Aug. 1, 2017 10:22 AM), https://www.innocence project.org/. The problem is compounded by the John E. Reid & Associates, Inc.’s own promotional propaganda that purports to imbue the interview aspect of the technique with nearly magical properties to ferret out lies, leading law enforcement to put unbounded faith in its value. See Behavioral Analysis Interview, John E. Reid & Associates, Inc. (Aug. 5, 2017, 10:37 AM), http://www.reid. com/services/r_behavior.html; see also Simon, supra note 133, at 131 (noting that the claim is not scientifically substantiated and that "[i]t appears that for [law enforcement agencies using the Reid Technique], the lure of the protocol lies with offering law enforcement personnel a pseudoprofessional framework for justifying their preconceptions and thus enabling them to proceed with the interrogation of the suspect at hand.”).
. See Ofshe & Leo, supra note 147, at 983. For example, studies show that the Behavior Analysis Interview, which is followed by interrogation and distortion tactics if the investigator thinks the suspect is not being truthful, does not actually separate the liars from the truth-tellers. See Simon, supra note 133, at 131. Rather, it simply "validates police investigators’ beliefs in erroneous cues of deceit.” Id.
. Simon, supra note 133, at 127-32.
. Behavioral Analysis Interview, John E. Reid & Associates, Inc. (July 5, 2017, 1:57 PM), http://www.reid.com/services/r_ behavior.html.
. See Simon, supra note 133, at 140.
. See generally Simon, supra note 133,
. Id. at 143,
. Id. at 216.
. Def. Mot. 23.
.Defendant filed a second Motion To Suppress (see ECF No, 24) while the instant Mo- ■ tion was pending. The Court will address the second Motion To Suppress in a separate order.
