MEMORANDUM OPINION
At issue here in this multi-count RICO
1
prosecution of seven defendants is the claim by one defendant that his statements to law enforcement officers must be suppressed pursuant to (i)
Miranda v. Arizona,
I.
Defendant Loc Tien Nguyen stands charged in three counts of a twenty-five count RICO Superseding Indictment, 2 including (i) conspiracy to commit assault with a dangerous weapon in aid of racketeering activity in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1959(a)(6), (ii) using and carrying a firearm during and in relation to a crime of violence in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 2, 924(c), and (iii) accessory after the fact to murder in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 3. According to the Superseding Indictment, Nguyen was an active member of a criminal enterprise known as the “Oriental Playboys” or “OPB,” a Vietnamese youth gang that engaged in various crimes including burglary, robbery, drug distribution, assault, and murder in Virginia, Maryland, and elsewhere. Co-defendant Cuong Gia Le is charged with two counts of murder in aid of racketeering in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1959(a)(1) and two counts of murder in the course of a firearms offense in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(j). These charges grow out of an incident at the Majestic Restaurant in Falls Church, Virginia on May 13, 2001, in which Le allegedly shot and killed two members of a rival criminal organization. Nguyen is charged as an accessory after the fact because he allegedly aided Le’s flight from these murders.
a. May 15, 2001 Interview
On May 14, 2001, two days after the Majestic murders, Detective-Sergeant Edgar Lancaster, a twenty-two year veteran detective of the Falls Church Police Department and a deputized member of the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Asian Organized Crime Task Force, called Nguyen by telephone and left a message requesting an opportunity to speak to him regarding his knowledge of the circumstances surrounding the murders. Later that evening, Nguyen returned Detective Lancaster’s call and agreed to meet him at 12:30 p.m. on May 15, 2001 on a street corner in Springfield, Virginia near Nguyen’s home. Detective Lancaster met Nguyen the following day on the designated street corner and the two engaged in a brief conversation. Although Detective Lancaster conducted a pat down search of Nguyen prior to the conversation, Detective Lancaster was not in uniform, was not driving a marked police vehicle, and did not handcuff Nguyen, arrest him, or brandish a weapon. During the course of the conversation, Nguyen agreed to ac
When Detective Lancaster and Nguyen arrived at the police department, Nguyen agreed to proceed with an interview with Fairfax County Police Detectives Boyle and Chris Flanagan. The interview was subsequently conducted in an interview room on the eighth floor of the police department. Whereas Detective Lancaster was present for all but thirty to forty-five minutes of the three hour interview, Detectives Boyle and Flanagan remained in the interview room for the duration of the interview with the exception of a few short breaks during which Nguyen remained in the room by himself. At Nguyen’s request, the interview was not audio-taped. Both Detectives Lancaster and Boyle reported that Nguyen responded to their questions in a manner that clearly reflected that he had no difficulty understanding English.
Nguyen was not placed under arrest by any of the detectives at any time during the course of the interview. Nor did any of the detectives exert force, make threats or promises with regard to future charges, or brandish weapons. Moreover, Nguyen was not denied access to an attorney or freedom to discontinue the interview at any time. In fact, partway through the interview, Nguyen was permitted, upon his request, to use the restroom located in the lobby of the police department unaccompanied by the detectives. Detectives Boyle and Lancaster testified that Nguyen remained calm and cooperative throughout the duration of the interview and agreed to future cooperation. At the conclusion of the interview, Detective Lancaster drove Nguyen home and on the way, the two discussed Nguyen’s safety, but not the murders. They also stopped at a McDonald’s Restaurant to purchase a soda.
According to Detective Flanagan’s report of the interview, set forth in Form 302, Nguyen provided conflicting information regarding the events that occurred on the night of the Majestic murders. 5 At the beginning of the interview, Nguyen stated that he saw Le in the parking lot of the Majestic Restaurant prior to the shootings, but that Le did not at that time have a gun. Nguyen further stated that while he was in the restaurant parking lot he heard gunshots fired inside the restaurant, after which he left the Majestic in a car with Tung Thanh and went to the Galaxy Club. He said he only became aware of Le’s involvement in the shooting after watching the news. Yet, Nguyen’s story apparently changed as the interview progressed. Thus, later in the interview, he told the detectives that he met Le in the parking lot of the Majestic Restaurant and, after speaking briefly, the two entered the restaurant together. Shortly thereafter, Nguyen said he heard gunshots fired outside the restaurant and after following a crowd into the parking lot, drove away from the restaurant with Le to the Galaxy Club. Accordingly to Nguyen, Le, who appeared nervous, brought a gun into the car and stowed it under the passenger’s seat.
The interview recessed briefly while Nguyen used the restroom. After Nguyen returned from the restroom, he provided
b. December 15, 2003 Interview
On December 15, 2003, Nguyen was again interviewed by Detective Lancaster and Detective Rob Grims of the Montgomery County, Maryland Police Department, also a member of the FBI’s Asian Organized Crime Task Force, this time at the Arlington County Police Department, Robbery Section Interview room. At the time of the interview, Nguyen was in custody in the Arlington County Detention Center on another charge. After serving Nguyen a soft drink, the detectives told Nguyen that he and several of his friends, including Le, had been indicted on federal charges, specifically RICO charges in relation to the Majestic shootings, and that the detectives were investigating the case. The detectives showed Nguyen a copy of his arrest warrant, but did not show him a copy of the then sealed indictment or provide details regarding the nature of the charges contained in the indictment.
Before asking him any questions, Detective ( Grims provided Nguyen a written copy of the FBI standard waiver of rights form and read Nguyen his Miranda rights from that form. Nguyen indicated orally that he understood his rights, agreed to proceed with the interview, and did not request an attorney, even though he told Detective Grims that he was already represented by an attorney concerning the Majestic murders. 6 He nonetheless declined, for unstated reasons, to sign the written waiver form. Moreover, Nguyen stated that (i) he did not want to talk about the Le murder investigation and (ii) did not want the detectives to video or audiotape the interview. Detectives Lancaster and Grims agreed to Nguyen’s requests and memorialized their agreement with regard to the taping of the interview in writing.
Throughout the interview, Nguyen was coherent and cooperative. At no time did either Detectives Grims or Lancaster use force or make threats or promises regarding the pending charges against Nguyen and other “OPB” members to coerce his cooperation. And, consistent with Nguyen’s request, Detectives Grims and Lancaster did not ask Nguyen about the Le murder investigation. Nor did they ask him about any criminal activity that had been specifically charged in the indictment or any indicted co-conspirators. The interview lasted approximately one hour and forty-five minutes. According to Detectives Grims and Lancaster, Nguyen had no difficulty understanding English at any time during the interview. In fact, throughout the interview, his responses made clear that he understood the questions posed.
Thus, based on the testimony presented and two Form 302 interview reports, the question is whether Miranda or Rule 5(a), Fed.R.Crim.P., and the corollary McNabb-Mallory rule bar admission of Nguyen’s statements from either of the interviews. 7
II.
Well-settled legal principles provide the lens through which these findings must be viewed. In
Miranda v. Arizona,
Supreme Court authority also makes clear that statements made during a custodial interrogation must be suppressed unless an individual's waiver of his
Miranda
rights is knowing and voluntary.
See Patterson v. Illinois,
While Miranda’s suppression rule only applies to custodial interrogations,
12
Su
In sum, based on the principles elucidated above, analysis of Nguyen’s motion to dismiss based on Miranda and its progeny must address the following three questions: (1) Was Nguyen “in custody” for Miranda purposes at each interview? (2) Did Nguyen knowingly and voluntarily waive his Miranda rights prior to the custodial interview(s)? (3) Were Nguyen’s statements voluntary? Thus, the government has the burden to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that Nguyen’s statements are admissible under the general principles elucidated here. 16
a. May 15, 2001 Interview
The evidence presented at the suppression hearing points persuasively to the conclusion that Nguyen was not in custody on May 15, 2001 when he was interviewed
Moreover, the evidence presented by the government makes pellueidly clear that Nguyen’s statements were voluntary. Nguyen came to the station with Detective Lancaster voluntarily and chose to stay and continue through the end of the interview even though he was free to leave at any time. Nguyen was not subjected to threats, force, coercion or promises and was not, by nature of his age, intelligence, or lack of education, especially likely to succumb to the detectives’ influence. Therefore, there is no doubt that Nguyen maintained his “capacity for self-determination” throughout the course of the interview and that the “totality of the circumstances” makes clear that Nguyen’s statements were voluntary.
See Photogrammetric Data Services, Inc.,
In sum, because the May 15, 2001 interview was non-custodial and because Nguyen’s statements during the interview were voluntary, it follows that Miranda and its progeny do not bar the admissibility of the statements Nguyen made in the course of this interview.
b. December 15, 2003 Interview
The parties do not dispute that Nguyen was in custody at the December 15, 2003 interview as he was then incarcerated in the Arlington County Detention Center on unrelated state charges.
See Mathis v. United States,
It is also clear that Nguyen knowingly and voluntarily waived his
Miranda
rights when he orally agreed to proceed with the interview after Detective Grims advised him of his rights, even though he refused to sign the written waiver form. The evidence offered at the suppression hearing shows that Nguyen was adequately informed of his rights and the consequences of his waiver of those rights when Detective Grims read him his rights and provided him with the written form. There is no evidence that Nguyen was threatened, coerced, or unduly influenced to waive his rights, nor any doubt that Nguyen understood his rights. Indeed, so clear was Nguyen as to his rights that he
Nguyen seeks to avoid this result by arguing that the statement must be suppressed because Detectives Grims and Lancaster interrogated him about matters related to the Le murder investigation even after Nguyen refused to proceed with questioning on this subject. Nguyen is clearly mistaken in this regard. Detectives Grims’ and Lancaster’s testimony and Detective Grims’ 302 report make clear that the interview did not in fact cover Le or the Majestic murders; nor did it relate specifically to any offenses charged in the pending Superseding Indictment or any indicted conspirators. Therefore, because Nguyen’s Miranda waiver did not exclude any subjects other than the Le murder investigation and the interview did not cover this investigation or indeed any other crimes specifically charged in the Superseding Indictment, suppression on this ground is not warranted. 17
Furthermore, Nguyen contends that his statement must be suppressed because, without the advice of an attorney, he was not fully aware of the consequences of his statements and therefore did not act knowingly and intelligently when he waived his rights. This contention is clearly unavailing. It is well-established that “a full and complete appreciation of all of the consequences flowing from the nature and quality of the evidence in the case” is not a
“sine qua non
for a knowing and voluntary waiver of the right to remain silent....”
Oregon v. Elstad,
Nguyen next argues that even assuming arguendo that the admission of the December 15 statement would not violate his Fifth Amendment right to counsel, the statement must nonetheless be suppressed because the government and law enforcement investigators conspired to delay Nguyen’s arraignment so that investigators could interview him before he had access to an attorney and full knowledge of the charges against him in the Superseding Indictment and thus violated Nguyen’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel. 19 As evidence of the government’s and investigators’ combined efforts to delay his arraignment, Nguyen points to the government’s ex parte motion to continue his arraignment from December 12, 2003 to December 19, 2003, fifteen days after the grand jury returned the Superseding Indictment. 20 Nguyen’s contention that this fifteen day delay violated his Sixth Amendment right to counsel is meritless. The government’s proffer credibly establishes that it sought to delay the arraignment to enable investigators to coordinate simultaneous arrests of five newly indicted co-defendants during the week of December 15. 21 Although Nguyen was in custody and thus did not present a flight risk, it is reasonable for the government to conclude that arraigning Nguyen prior to the arrest of the indicted co-conspirators would create a risk that others would flee. Thus, given the lack of any credible evidence that the government and investigators conspired to deprive Nguyen of counsel at the interrogation, there is no basis to conclude that Nguyen’s Sixth Amendment rights were violated on this ground. Nor is it sensible to conclude that Nguyen’s Sixth Amendment rights were violated simply because he might have been more likely to have had counsel at the interrogation had he been arraigned on December 12, 2003, instead of December 19, 2003. This is particularly true given that Nguyen apparently was already represented by counsel concerning the indicted charges and could have requested the presence of his counsel at the December 15 interview.
This does not, however, end the Sixth Amendment analysis. Although there is no evidence that the government
Nguyen’s contention that this analysis is inadequate to protect his Sixth Amendment right to counsel in light of the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Fellers v. United States,
540 U.S. -,
Finally, Nguyen contends that Rule 5(a), Fed.R.Crim.P., which requires that “[a] person making an arrest within the United States ... take the defendant
without unnecessary delay
before a magistrate judge,” compels suppression because there was a fifteen day delay between Nguyen’s indictment and his arraignment. Rule 5(a)(1)(A), Fed.R.Crim.P. (emphasis added). Nguyen presumably relies on the
Rule 5(a), Fed.R.Crim.P.,
McNabbMallory,
and § 3501 are exclusively concerned with delays between a defendant’s arrest or detention and his arraignment.
25
Nothing in Rule 5(a) or
McNabb-Mallory
concerns delays between a defendant’s indictment and his arraignment. And here, Nguyen complains only of the delay between the return of the Superseding Indictment on December 4, 2003 and his arraignment on December 19, 2003. In
United States v. Alvarez-Sanchez,
In sum, the December 15, 2003 statement need not be suppressed because (i) Nguyen was informed of the pending indictment against him, (ii) Nguyen was adequately advised of his Miranda rights, and (iii) Nguyen knowingly waived his Miranda rights. Moreover, Nguyen has shown no credible evidence to establish that the government investigators and prosecutor conspired to delay Nguyen’s arraignment to avoid appointment of counsel. Nor is there any basis to suppress the statements based on Rule 5(a), Fed. R.Crim.P., or the McNabb-Mallory rule.
Accordingly, the motion to suppress must be denied and an order to this effect will issue.
Notes
. Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, codified at 18 U.S.C. § 1961 et seq.
. There have been five indictments in this case, the latest denominated the Fourth Superseding Indictment, which is referred to here simply as the "Superseding Indictment.” For a description of each of the indictments, see
United States v. Cuong Gia Le, et al.,
. Hatcher's testimony was not in fact relevant to the circumstances surrounding Nguyen's interviews and statements. Rather, Hatcher, who was working as a private security officer at the Majestic Restaurant on May 13, 2001, the night of tire shootings, testified that he heard the shots fired by Le and soon thereafter saw Nguyen drive away from the restaurant with two other individuals.
. The government initially offered the testimony of Detective Lancaster. Yet, because Detective Lancaster was not present for thirty to forty-five minutes of the May 15, 2001 interview, the government requested permission to present additional testimony, namely the testimony of Detectives Boyle and Grims. This request was granted. Thereafter, Nguyen, by counsel, objected to the ruling permitting the government to present additional testimony on the ground that the additional witnesses had not been sequestered. This objection was overruled on the ground that Nguyen’s barebones motion to suppress did not comply with (i) Rule 47, Fed.R.Crim.P., requiring that "[a] motion must state the grounds on which it is based,” (ii) Local Rule 7(A) requiring that ''[a]U motions shall state with particularity the grounds therefor...”, and (iii) Local Rule 7(F)(1) requiring that "[a]ll motions ... shall be accompanied by a written brief setting forth a concise statement of the facts and supporting reasons....” As a consequence, the government did not have sufficient notice prior to the hearing of Nguyen’s grounds for suppression.
See generally United States v. Gallop,
. Initially, the government made copies of Detective Flanagan’s Form 302 report available to Nguyen. At the hearing on this motion, Nguyen, by counsel, requested a copy of Detective Flanagan’s notes that were used to prepare the 302 report. While the government objects on the grounds that these notes need not be disclosed under the Jencks Act, 18 U.S.C. § 3500 et seq., the government did permit Nguyen to review a copy of the notes on March 15, 2004.
. Because counsel had not yet been appointed to represent Nguyen on the indicted charges, Nguyen presumably had retained counsel either because he was already aware of the pending indictment or was anticipating the charges against him. Yet, it is also possible that Nguyen, although not yet represented concerning his involvement in the charged offenses here, mistakenly believed he was represented on these charges even though counsel had only been appointed to represent him on other matters.
. Neither addressed nor decided here is whether Nguyen's statements may be inadmissible for reasons other than those addressed here, including relevancy, Rules 401 & 402, Fed.R.Evid., and his co-defendant's Sixth Amendment confrontation rights.
See Bruton v. United States,
.
See Oregon v. Mathiason,
. Put differently, a waiver is “valid only if it reflects 'an intentional relinquishment or abandonment of a known right or privilege.’ ”
See Patterson,
.
See United States v. Cristobal,
.
See Butler,
. See
United States v. Braxton,
. U.S. Const. Amend. V.
.
See Braxton,
.
See Photogrammetric Data Services, Inc.,
. See United States v. Braxton,
.
See Michigan v. Mosley,
. See id.; LaFave, Israel, & King, 2 Criminal Procedure 586 (2d ed. 1999) ("A waiver may be knowing and intelligent in the sense that there was awareness of the right to remain silent and a decision to forego that right, but yet not knowing and intelligent in the sense that the tactical error of that decision was not perceived.”).
.Nguyen's Sixth Amendment right to counsel was triggered when he was indicted on December 4, 2003.
See Brewer v. Williams,
. See United States v. Cuong Gia Le, et al., Criminal No. 03-48-A (E.D.Va. December 9, 2003) (Ex Parte Order).
. Only one of the six charged defendants — • Cuong Gia Le — had been charged prior to the return of the Superseding Indictment.
.
See Schwartz,
. The statute also provides a limited "safe harbor" for a voluntary confession made after arrest, but before arraignment, "if such confession was made or given by such person within six hours immediately following his arrest or other detention.” 18 U.S.C. § 3501(c).
It is worth noting here that in
Dickerson,
.
See United States v. Alvarez-Sanchez,
.See
18 U.S.C. § 3501; Rule 5(a)(1)(A), Fed. R.Crim.P.;
Schwartz,
