In this interlocutory appeal, the United States seeks review of a district court’s pretrial order suppressing several incriminating statements made by Shequita Revels as having been obtained in violation of
Miranda v. Arizona,
I
A
Based on information provided by a confidential informant, officers from the Tulsa, Oklahoma Police Department (“TPD”) and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (“ATF”) obtained a warrant tо search a residence belonging to Marco Dewon Murphy and his girlfriend, Shequita Revels. The informant indicated that Murphy possessed a large amount of cocaine and that he was selling the drug from the joint residence. 1 On August 2, 2006, at approximately 6:00 a.m., seven officers from TPD and ATF gathered to execute the search warrant at the couple’s home. When no one answered the door after officers knocked and announced their presence, thе police forcibly entered the residence. Once inside, the officers encountered Murphy and Revels, whom they immediately handcuffed and placed face down on the floor in the hall near the main living room. The officers then found a young girl and a small infant in separate *1271 bedrooms in the house. As soon as the officers had located all of the occupants of the home and otherwise secured the scene, they began their search for сontraband.
Having been roused from her bedroom in the early hours of the morning, Revels was dressed only in her underwear when officers first detained her. After approximately ten minutes of searching the home, however, the police removed Revels’ handcuffs and escorted her to a rear bedroom where they permitted her to dress. They also allowed Revels to care temporarily for her infant, who required feeding through a tube inserted into his stomach. Oncе Revels had dressed herself and cared for the child, an officer escorted her back to the living room, where she remained with Murphy and the two children for a short time while the officers continued their search of the residence. Revels was not again placed in handcuffs at this point in time.
During the course of the search, officers seized several items of potential evidence. They found 251 grams of cocaine powder and $6,014 in cash in an open safe located in one of the rooms. They also discovered approximately 45 grams of crack cocaine hidden in a coffee can with a false bottom, as well as paraphernalia used in manufacturing crack cocaine. Finally, officers found a loaded semiautomatic handgun “lying on the headboard” of the bed that Revels and Murphy shared.
After approximately 80 minutes, the officers had substantially completed their search effоrts and uncovered all of the material evidence. At that time, the officers decided to separate the two adults in order to interview each. According to ATF Special Agent McFadden, the police intended to interview Revels and Murphy to determine whether they “would be willing to cooperate with the investigation.” Revels was interviewed first. Agent McFadden and TPD Detectives Hickey and Henderson escorted her to a bedroom in the rear of the homе, and closed the door behind them. Murphy and the two children remained in the main living room under the supervision of the other officers. Revels was free from handcuffs at this time, and had not been told by any of the officers whether she was under arrest. Each of three officers who took Revels to the back bedroom was armed, but none had a weapon drawn. Inside the bedroom, there were no chairs or other places to sit; Revels and the officers stood during the tеn to twelve minutes of questioning.
Revels’ questioning began with Agent McFadden’s explanation that the police were executing a state search warrant at the residence and that, during their search, they had discovered narcotics and a loaded firearm. Agent McFadden then asked Revels whether she “would be willing to cooperate” with their investigation. Revels answered the agent’s question with several incriminating statements. She stated that she knew Murphy was selling drugs from the residence and that Murphy had recently obtained the handgun to protect her and the children from the threat of robbery. 2 After Revels offered these initial responses to the officer’s question, Agent McFadden and Detective Henderson left the rear bedroom for a short time; both Revels and Detective Hickey remained behind. Detective Henderson then returned to the room a few moments later, conspicuously carrying a bag of cocaine that hаd been seized during the officers’ search of the residence. According to Detective Henderson, Revels responded to this action by making another incriminating statement. She *1272 stated: “Oh, my god I didn’t know he had that much.” 3 Indisputably, the officers did not advise Revels of her Miranda rights at any time before or during this questioning.
Once the officers had completed their interview with Revels, they escorted her back to the main living room and took Murphy to the bedroom for a similar interview. Around that same time, a family member arrived and was asked to care for the two young children. The officers then told Revels that she was under arrest, handcuffed her, and transported her, along with Murphy, to the police station. Only upon arriving at the station was Revels advised of her rights under Miranda, which prompted her to immediately request legal counsel.
B
On September 7, 2006, a federal grand jury indicted Revels on three counts: (1) possession with intent to distribute five grams or more of crack cocaine in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) & (b)(l)(B)(iii); (2) possession of cocaine with intent to manufacture crack cocaine in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) & (b)(1)(C); and (3) possession of a firearm in furtheranсe of a drug trafficking crime in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(A)(i). Revels entered a plea of not guilty to all charges.
Prior to her scheduled trial, Revels filed a motion to suppress the incriminating statements that she made while officers interviewed her in the rear bedroom of her home on the day of her arrest. She argued that the government had obtained the statements in violation of her Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination, as articulated by the Supreme Court in
Miranda.
Specifically, Revеls contended that because she had been subjected to a custodial interrogation and had not been advised of her rights under
Miranda
prior to the interview, the statements she made were not voluntary within the meaning of the Fifth Amendment.
See
At the suppression hearing, the district court received testimony from both Agent McFaddеn and Detective Henderson. Finding that the search had been completed and the incriminating evidence uncovered before the officers escorted Revels to the rear bedroom for an interview, the court concluded that Revels was subjected to a custodial interrogation for purposes of the Fifth Amendment. It ordered that because the officers had not advised Revels of her rights under Miranda, her incriminating statements would be suppressed and could not be admitted at trial.
In seeking reconsideration, the government argued that Revels was subject only to an “investigative detention” at the time of her interview, and that she was therefore not “in custody” for Fifth Amendment purposes. The district court denied the government’s motion for reconsideration, and the government subsequently brought this timely interlocutory appeal under 18 U.S.C. § 3731.
II
“It is well established that ‘police officers are not required to administer
Miranda
warnings to everyone whom they question.’ ”
United States v. Erving L.,
A suspect is in custody for purposes of
Miranda
if the suspect has been “deprived of [her] freedom of action in any significant way.”
A
Before applying a reasonable person inquiry to the facts, we first address the government’s primary argument against suppression. According to the government, the officers held Revels under a permissible “investigative detention” when they questioned hеr in the rear bedroom, and therefore did not have a duty to advise Revels of her
Miranda
rights prior to their interrogation. By characterizing Revels’ detention in Fourth Amendment terms (i.e., “investigative detention”), the government asks us to conflate
Miranda’s
traditional “in custody” inquiry with the analysis we use to determine whether the “seizure” of a criminal suspect is reasonable under the Fourth Amendment. As a matter of precedent, however, both the Supreme Court, in
Berkemer,
and this court, in
United States v. Perdue,
have definitively foreclosed any attempt to equate the two analytically distinct inquiries.
See Berkemer,
In
Berkemer,
the Supreme Court held that motorists subjected to garden-variety traffic stops&emdash;reasonable seizures within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment&emdash; are not entitled to
Miranda
warnings.
Berkemer,
In
Perdue,
we faced the precise scenario contemplated by the Supreme Court in
Berkemer
and unequivocally recognized the analytical distinction between the Fourth Amendment reasonableness analysis and
Miranda’s,
in custody inquiry. We inquired in
Perdue
whether several incriminating statements made by a criminal defendant had been admitted in violation of either the defendant’s Fourth or Fifth Amendment rights.
We held on appeal that the officers’ detention of Perdue was reasonable under the Fourth Amendment as a lawful investigative detention.
Id.
at 1463. Both the officers’ concerns for their own safety and their reasonable suspicion that Perdue had committed a crime justified the intrusivеness of their actions for purposes of the Fourth Amendment.
Id.
Notwithstanding our Fourth Amendment ruling, we also held, for purposes of the Fifth Amendment, that the officers’ very same actions in detaining Perdue “created the ‘custodial’ situation envisioned by
Miranda
and its progeny.”
Id.
at 1464. Noting that “[a]ny reasonable person in Mr. Perdue’s position would have felt ‘completely at the mercy of the police’ ” at the time of his detention, we concluded that Perdue was in custody as a matter of law when he mаde the incriminating statements.
Id.
at 1465 (quoting
Berkemer,
In short, both
Berkemer
and
Perdue
establish that merely because a particular police-citizen encounter can be neatly packaged under the label “investigatory detention” for purposes of the Fourth Amendment, it does not necessarily follow that police are freed of their obligation to inform the citizen of her rights under
Miranda
in appropriate cases. Consequently, and counter to the government’s argument, whether the police subjected Revels to a lawful investigative detention in this case is not dispositive of whether the officers should have advised Revels of her
Miranda
rights.
See Berkemer,
*1275
We turn then to the proper question raised&emdash;whether, within the meaning of the Fifth Amendment, Revels was in custody at the time she made the incriminating statements at issue. Taking into account the totality of the circumstances, we must decide whether a reasonable person in Revels’ position would have understood her freedom of action to have been restricted to a degree consistent with formal arrest.
See Berkemer,
First, a reasonable person in Revels’ position would have perceived a police-dominated atmosphere. Relatively early in the morning, at approximately 6:00 a.m., seven police officers abruptly roused Revels and Murphy from their bedroom after forcibly entering their home. Revels was immediately detained, restrained in handcuffs, and placed face down on the floor. She was made to sit under the supervision of officers while police executed the search warrant. Then, before any questioning began, three male officers separated Revels from her boyfriend and two children, and escorted her to a rear bedroom for questioning. Once inside the room, the officers isolated Revels from the other occupants of thе home, and closed the door behind her. For much of the interview, all three of the officers remained in the room with Revels. Taken together, these facts demonstrate that the police were unequivocally in control of the circumstances both before and during Revels’ questioning.
See Griffin,
That Revels was in her own home at the time of thе interview does nothing to alter our conclusion that this was a police-dominated environment. We accept that the home is generally a more familiar, comfortable atmosphere than a police interrogation room.
See United States v. Ritchie,
Second, the nature of the questioning indicates that Revels was in custody. Officers purposefully separated Revels frоm her boyfriend and children and removed her to a back room. Then, once Revels was inside the room, one of the officers confronted her with a bag of cocaine that had been seized during the search. Although she was not questioned directly on point, it is difficult to ignore the effect that this display of the recently seized drugs had on the tone of the interrogation.
Cf. United States v. Rith,
Turning to the third factor, the police never indicated to Revels that she was free to leave or otherwise at liberty to terminate the police questioning. Although none of the officers expressly told Revels that she was under arrest, they did not indicate to the contrary.
4
See Griffin,
We also consider it significant that the district court specifically found that the search had been completed prior to Revels’ questioning. With the search concluded, there was little remaining for the officers to do inside the home other than to formally place Revels and Murphy under arrest. Considering the extensive discovery of evidence, an arrest was likely and a reasonable person in Revels’ position would have recognized as much.
Taking the totality of the circumstances into account, we conclude that a reasonable person in Revels’ position would have considered herself under a degree of restraint equivalent to formal arrest and that officers should have extended Miranda ad-visements prior to their questioning. The undisputed facts demonstrate that the officers’ actions created the type of coercive environment that Miranda was designed to address.
Ill
For the forgoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s decision to suppress Revels’ statements.
Notes
. Murphy was the only individual identified as a target in the search warrant.
. For purposes of this appeal, the government agrees that Revels' response to Agent McFadden’s question consisted of incriminating statements.
. The government also admits that Revels' response to Detective Henderson’s aсtion with the bag of cocaine constituted an incriminating statement.
. Revels devotes much of her argument to the fact that Agent McFadden testified at the suppression hearing that Revels was not free to leave at any point in time. Because Agent McFadden never disclosed this viewpoint to Revels, however, we decline to consider the agent’s subjective understanding of the situation.
See Stansbury,
