After Stacy Briggs was charged with possession of a controlled substance with intent to distribute, 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1), he moved to suppress incriminating statements he made to police. He argued that the statements resulted from improper “interrogation” by police after he had invoked his right to counsel. The district court declined to suppress the statements. Af *739 ter entering a conditional guilty plea, Briggs filed this appeal. We affirm.
I. Background
Around 1:00 a.m. on August 31, 2000, Indiana State Police trooper Andrew Sparks stopped a 1985 Chevrolet pick-up truck driven by Briggs because the vehicle’s license plate light was burned out. Officer Sparks ran a license check on Briggs and his passenger, Clemmie Trigg, and learned that neither had a valid Indiana driver’s license. Sparks also discovered that the truck was registered to Jeff Lattimore, whom Briggs claimed was his cousin. Sparks issued a citation to Briggs for driving on a suspended license and, after determining that the truck could not be left on the side of the road without posing a safety hazard, called for a tow truck. Additional police officers arrived shortly thereafter. In accordance with police policy, the police searched and inventoried the truck before towing. They found a baggie of crack cocaine under the driver’s seat. Briggs and Trigg were arrested and taken to the Wells County Jail.
At the jail, Detective Lieutenant Barry Story advised Briggs of his rights under
Miranda v. Arizona,
Lt. Story testified to a different version of events. He claimed at the suppression hearing that immediately after he read Briggs his rights, Briggs announced without any prompting that the drugs did not belong to Trigg. Story recalled asking Briggs again if he was going to sign the waiver, and Briggs replied that “he’d probably better talk to an attorney first.” Story said that he would take him back to the holding cell. Briggs then reportedly asked Lt. Story what would happen to Trigg, and Story replied that he thought both men would be charged with possession of cocaine. According to Story, Briggs said “that’s not fair” because the drugs belonged to him and not Trigg. Briggs then described how he had planned to sell the drugs in Marion. As Briggs continued to describe his activities, Story recalled warning him to stop talking because he said he wanted an attorney present. But Briggs replied, “[I]t doesn’t matter anyway. I’m going to die.” Story, concerned that Briggs might be suicidal, asked Briggs what he meant by that statement. Briggs said he thought he would either be killed by the people who gave him the drugs or would spend the rest of his life in prison.
After he was charged with possession of drugs with intent to distribute in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1), Briggs moved to suppress his incriminating statements, arguing that they resulted from improper “interrogation” by Lt. Story after he had invoked his right to counsel. The district court, after hearing testimony from both Story and Briggs, credited the officer’s account. The court determined that Briggs had initiated further communications with the police, thus making his statements voluntary. Briggs later entered a conditional guilty plea, reserving his right to appeal the issues decided in the suppression hearing. The court sentenced Briggs to 70 months’ imprisonment *740 and five years’ supervised release. Briggs filed a timely notice of appeal.
II. Discussion
A person who is interrogated while in police custody has the right to request the assistance of a lawyer.
Miranda,
“Interrogation,” so as to trigger the right to counsel, means direct questioning by the police, as well as “any words or actions on the part of the police (other than those normally attendant to arrest and custody) that the police should know are reasonably likely to elicit an incriminating response from the suspect.”
Rhode Island v. Innis,
We review de novo a district court’s determination whether conversations between the accused and a law enforcement officer constituted “interrogation.”
Jackson,
In denying Briggs’s motion to suppress, the district court heard the conflicting testimony of Lt. Story and Briggs and determined that the officer’s account was more credible. We defer to the court’s credibility determination. Lt. Story’s account is not inherently implausible, and facets of his testimony are bolstered by Briggs’s own account of their conversation. For example, at the suppression hearing, Briggs stated that he was concerned about Trigg’s well-being; this acknowledgment supports Lt. Story’s assertion that Briggs spoke up spontaneously in an attempt to clear Trigg of any wrongdoing. In short, Briggs has not pointed us to anything in the record to suggest that the district court committed clear error in crediting Lt. Story’s testimony.
Accepting the truthfulness of Lt. Story’s account, as did the district court, we conclude that Briggs himself initiated further communication with police by asking Lt. Story what would happen to Trigg. In response to that question, Lt. Story said that he thought both men would be charged with possession of drugs. A police officer’s response to a direct inquiry by the defendant does not constitute “interrogation.”
See United States v. Conley,
Moreover, the only direct question that Lt. Story asked Briggs during this exchange was what Briggs meant when he said he was “going to die.” Although direct questioning by a police officer is the most obvious form of improper interrogation, not all direct questions constitute “interrogation.”
United States v. Foster,
For these reasons, we agree with the district court that Briggs’s statements were voluntary.
AFFIRMED.
