Lead Opinion
The United States appeals from an order of the district court
During the course of an investigation into the disappearance of various pieces of mail, postal inspectors placed several marked bills and a bearer check in the mail trays at First City Bank of Sioux Falls, South Dakota. The inspectors interviewed Russell Corner, a mailroom clerk, after discovering that he had endorsed three stolen bearer checks. Corner stated that he had received the checks from Carter, another mailroom employee of the bank, and had cashed them at Carter’s request. At approximately 4:00 p.m. the same day, Carter was summoned to the office of the bank president, where he was interviewed by the inspectors for approximately an hour and a half. The bank’s security manager also was present.
After the interview had proceeded for approximately fifty-five minutes, the inspectors told Carter that they were investigating the disappearance of Canadian money and asked if they could look into his wallet. Carter complied with this request, and the agents discovered $63.00 in cash and a bearer check. These were the marked items that the inspectors had placed in the mail trays. After explaining this to Carter, the agents obtained from him various incriminating statements. The inspectors then warned Carter of his rights under Miranda v. Arizona,
Carter moved the district court to suppress his statements and the bait money as having been improperly obtained before he was given Miranda warnings. The district court granted the motion and suppressed the statements and the physical evidence. The court found that the interrogation occurred in a custodial setting and that Miranda warnings therefore should have been given. The court further found that the totality of the circumstances indicated that defendant’s consent to the search of his wallet was not freely and voluntarily given inasmuch as it occurred in a coercive atmosphere, no Miranda warnings were given, the inspectors made a misrepresentation to Carter to induce his consent, and Carter was not informed that he was not required to produce his wallet. The United
We agree with Carter’s contention that Miranda warnings should have been given earlier in the questioning than they were. The warnings must be given before interrogation begins when a suspect is taken into custody or otherwise significantly deprived of his freedom of action. Miranda,
The government first argues that the district court improperly considered testimony by one of the inspectors that the investigation had focused on Carter, citing United States v. Wallraff
However, we do not find, as the government contends, that the district court’s decision “placed considerable weight” on the focus of the investigation. The court mentioned focus in its analysis of the custody question only once, stating, “The purpose of the interview was not simply investigatory because the detectives, through previous interviews of others, had focused their investigation toward Carter.”
The government next draws our attention to cases in which questioning at a suspect’s place of employment was held to be noncustodial. E.g., United States v. Venerable,
The place where an interrogation takes place does not conclusively establish the presence or absence of custody. A deprivation of freedom may take place at one’s home as well as at the police station. Orozco v. Texas,394 U.S. 324 ,89 S.Ct. 1095 ,22 L.Ed.2d 311 (1969). By the same token, an interrogation at the police station may be noncustodial. Oregon v. Mathiason,429 U.S. 492 ,97 S.Ct. 711 ,50 L.Ed.2d 714 (1977); Iverson v. North Dakota,480 F.2d 414 , 423 n. 10 (8th Cir.[), cert. denied,414 U.S. 1044 ,94 S.Ct. 549 ,38 L.Ed.2d 335 (1973) ]. Determining if there has been a deprivation of freedom entails something more than simply identifying the place of interrogation.
United States v. Jones,
Each of the cases that the government relies upon with regard to the employment setting contains significant circumstances obviating a custodial situation, circumstances which are not present here. In Dockery, the suspect was advised that she did not have to answer any questions, that she was free to go, and that she was neither under arrest nor was she going to be arrested; moreover, she voluntarily initiated a second interview with the federal agents.
This case presents a different picture, however. Carter was not questioned at his workstation, but in the bank presi
This does not end our inquiry, however. The government argues that, even if the unwarned statement must be suppressed, Carter’s written confession, which he executed after receiving Miranda warnings, should be admitted under Oregon v. Elstad,
The Elstad opinion rejected the “fruit of the poisonous tree” and “cat out of the bag” analogies
Assuming arguendo that the first, unwarned, confession was voluntary, we find that the circumstances of this case do not warrant admission of the second, warned, confession. We begin by noting some important differences in the facts of this case and those in Elstad. In Elstad, an 18-year old burglary suspect was first questioned by the police in his own home.
Worth noting at this juncture is the Supreme Court’s concern in Elstad that technical violations of Miranda may arise from errors by the police in determining when a suspect is in custody or has had his freedom of movement significantly restrained. Id. at 309,
Moreover, the court in Elstad seemed chiefly concerned by the notion that a suspect is incapable of making a “subsequent voluntary and informed waiver ... for some indefinite period” once Miranda has been violated. Id. On the other hand, the Court gave no indication that it intended to give a green light to law enforcement officers to ignore the requirements of Miranda until after such time as they are able to secure a confession. While we do not intimate that the inspector’s state of mind establishes the existence of custody, we agree with the district court’s concern about
get[ting] practically all that you want out of a person before you ever give them the Miranda rights.... I don’t really think that there is [a] very good excuse for a person who concedes that he was a target — and that’s what [Inspector] O’Donnell says — but they don’t tell him about his rights until they have gotten everything out of him that they want.
Motion Hearing Transcript at 64.
We think Elstad did not go so far as to fashion a rule permitting this sort of end run around Miranda. In fact, the majority expressly rejected Justice Brennan’s “apocalyptic” dissenting remonstration that the Court’s holding dealt a “crippling blow” to Miranda by permitting the police to withhold warnings until the end of interrogation, and abjured what it viewed as Justice Brennan’s invitation to trial courts and prosecutors to distort the reasoning and holding of the Court’s opinion. 470 U.S. at
Moreover, the Miranda decision was prompted in large measure by judicial dissatisfaction with the difficulties and uncertainties inherent in case-by-case voluntariness determinations. 1 LaFave & Israel, supra § 6.3, at 451. The Supreme Court has recently reiterated the value of Miranda’s bright-line qualities: “A major purpose of the Court’s opinion in Miranda ... was to give concrete constitutional guidelines for law enforcement agencies to follow. As we have stressed on numerous occasions, one of the principal advantages” of Miranda is the ease and clarity of its application. Arizona v. Roberson,
Even assuming, however, that Elstad permits the second confession’s admission, we hold alternatively that the confession was the fruit of an unconstitutional search. See Wong Sun v. United States,
The government contends that the physical evidence, consisting of the “bait” money and bearer check discovered in Carter’s wallet, should not have been suppressed. For reasons similar to those supporting its suppression of the confession, the district court found that Carter’s consent to the search of his wallet was involuntar /. We look to the totality of the circumstances to determine whether consent to a search is given voluntarily. Schneckloth v. Bustamonte,
The district court found that Carter’s consent was involuntary as it was “given in a coercive atmosphere in which no Miranda warnings were given, misrepresentations were made by the postal inspectors to induce the defendant’s consent, and the defendant was not informed that he was not required to consent to the search.” The government contends that the district court erred in finding that the agents did not inform Carter that he need not consent to the search. The government asserts that the inspectors and the bank security officer’s testimony stated that Carter was warned that he was not required to consent. We have carefully reviewed the security officer’s testimony, however, and cannot find any reference in it to this issue. Carter testified that he was not so warned, and the district court was entitled to believe this testimony.
Next, the government argues that the inspectors’ deceptive statement to Carter that they were searching for Canadian money is “legally inconsequential,” as it overstated neither their authority nor the scope of the intended search. See Bumper
In this case, the deception was only one of the circumstances considered by the district court. In addition, Carter underwent custodial interrogation, which the Supreme Court continues to recognize as inherently coercive and compelling. Arizona v. Roberson,
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s order suppressing Carter’s statements and the physical evidence.
Notes
. The Honorable Fred J. Nichol, United States Senior District Judge, District of South Dakota.
. By “simply investigatory” the district court was apparently referring to Miranda's admonition that warnings are not required in the course of “[gjeneral on-the-scene questioning as to facts surrounding a crime or other general questioning of citizens in the fact-finding process...."
. See Wong Sun v. United States,
. The state stipulated that the questioning was custodial, and accordingly the Court assumed that the interrogating officer breached the Miranda requirements.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I respectfully dissent. In my view, the trial judge was clearly erroneous in his suppression of the evidence in this matter.
Mr. Carter was never in custody or otherwise deprived of his freedom of action in any significant way, a prerequisite to the need for the administration of Miranda warnings. Miranda v. Arizona,
Notwithstanding the noncustodial setting, Mr. Carter was ultimately given Miranda warnings after which warnings he prepared a statement in his own handwriting which statement, given after an oral question and answer session had ensued, inculpated him in a serious crime.
Carter’s written statement, in my view, also falls well within the ruling in Oregon v. Elstad,
Thus, I would reverse the district court and remand this matter for further proceedings at which the “warned” statement and physical evidence at issue may be used by the government in meeting its burden of proof.
