Police arrested William Michael Cannon during a search of his ranch. Cannon appeals his conviction on charges of possession of ephedrine, a proscribed precursor chemical, with the intent to manufacture methamphetamine; conspiracy to manufacture methamphetamine; maintenance of a place for the purpose of manufacturing methamphetamine; and use of a firearm in relation to a drug trafficking offense. After police gave Cannon Miranda warnings, he requested the assistance of counsel. We are asked to pass on the admissibility of statements, he gave in response to later interrogation, but cannot do so in light of inadequately developed facts. We vacate the conviction and remand for fact findings.
I
On the morning of February 19, 1990, state and federal agents executed a search warrant on a ranch in Bandera County, Texas. The warrant authorized police to search the entire 140 acre property, including a house and barn, for evidence of methamphetamine manufacturing. As officers approached the barn, they saw Cannon running from it with his pants on fire. They chased Cannon, tackled him and extinguished the flames. When Cannon was tackled, a loaded .38 caliber pistol flew from his waistband.
Meanwhile, police entered the house on the property and arrested Sandra Green. Both Cannon and Green were given Miranda warnings. Cannon then requested the assistance of counsel, and Sergeant Land ceased questioning him. Cannon was placed under the supervision of Deputy Johnson while other officers searched the property.
Inside the barn, police found burning residue which analysis later showed to include methamphetamine. They also found implements usable to produce methamphetamine. These included litmus papers, rubber gloves, a scale, and a variety of glassware. Officers also found a partial recipe, apparently for making methamphetamine from the precursor chemical ephedrine. A shotgun hung on a wall of the barn. The barn smelled strongly of methamphetamine, and police found a small baggie of methamphetamine powder in a matchbox.
In a closet of the house, officers found a false circuit box, which concealed canisters holding marijuana and methamphetamine powder. Police also seized a small amount of methamphetamine powder from a bedroom dresser drawer. Later that day, officers discovered a soda bottle under a rock on the property. The liquid in the bottle contained methamphetamine in a 13 percent concentration. This liquid solution could have been converted into ingestible methamphetamine powder.
Q: What did he initially say when you started talking about the search warrant, got off the subject of the motorcycles?
A: That a friend of his had gotten in trouble and told the law about Mr. Cannon to get his self out of trouble and that the friend had told Mr. Cannon that there was going to be a search warrant on his place....
The use of “you” in the question is ambiguous. If it meant the singular it would indicate that Johnson initiated the discussion of the warrant.
Once the search became their topic, Johnson questioned Cannon about the manufacture and presence of drugs at the ranch. Cannon gave incriminating answers, including an admission that ephedrine was present. Johnson told Land that Cannon wanted to talk to Land. Land gave Cannon another Miranda warning, and Cannon sought to bargain for Green’s release be.fore providing information. Land could not agree to a deal, but Cannon repeated to Land what he had told Johnson. The character of this conversation is disputed, with the government saying Cannon volunteered information and Cannon claiming to have responded to police questioning. In any event, Cannon identified persons who had manufactured methamphetamine at the ranch, and admitted to receiving some of the product as payment. He also admitted to helping once manufacture methamphetamine. Later that day, Cannon led officers to a tire in whose inner tube ephedrine was hidden. Land testified that officers might not have found these chemicals without Cannon’s assistance.
II
Cannon claims that his statements to Johnson and Land, and evidence found as a result of them, should not have been admitted at his trial. He contends that such statements were obtained after his invocation of the right to counsel in violation of
Edwards ¶. Arizona,
A
Rule 12(b)(3) requires that motions to suppress evidence must be raised before trial. Rule 12(f) provides for waiver of argument for the suppression of evidence not made before trial. Cannon objected to the use of evidence seized at the ranch at a pretrial hearing. Although the memorandum submitted with Cannon’s motion to suppress cited Edwards, it did not allege nor did his counsel develop at the suppression hearing that Cannon had asserted his right to counsel. No witness at the hearing mentioned that Cannon requested to speak to counsel when first questioned. No evidence was sought to determine whether Johnson or Cannon initiated their incriminating discussion. Under these circumstances alone, we might conclude that Cannon has waived any Edwards claim.
Rule 12(f), however, states that a court may grant relief from a waiver for cause shown. In this case, unusual circumstances lead the government to agree that the equities weigh against waiver. The government’s response to Cannon’s motion to suppress stated that “at no time subsequent to the Defendant receiving his
‘Miranda
’ rights ... did he request an attorney or the assistance of counsel.” Although Cannon’s counsel might have discovered that this assertion was incorrect,
B
If Johnson began interrogating Cannon after Cannon invoked his right to counsel, Johnson violated the prophylactic rule of
Edwards v. Arizona,
Cannon argues that neither requisite for admitting his statements has been satisfied. We agree that the first element has not been established, and do not reach the second. The ambiguous record does not demonstrate that Cannon initiated the discussion of drugs with Johnson. Once the topic turned to illegal conduct, Johnson interrogated Cannon. The government urges us to infer that Cannon initiated the conversation.
See United States v. Reyes-Ruiz,
The government also argues that these facts do not present a violation of
Edwards,
as that holding is construed in this circuit. We disagree. The government correctly notes that in
Plazinich v. Lynaugh,
The government argues that even if Cannon’s statements to Johnson were inadmissible under
Edwards,
his later reiteration of the statement to Land would be admissible. If so, Land’s testimony would render the admission of Johnson’s essentially identical evidence harmless error. The government’s position overlooks that Cannon’s statements to Land may have resulted from improper questioning by
C
The discovery of ephedrine at the ranch resulted from Cannon’s disclosure of its location inside a tire. Cannon argues that if his statements to Johnson and Land were improperly obtained, the ephedrine would be inadmissible under the derivative evidence or “fruit of the poisonous tree” doctrine.
See United States v. Namer,
D
“Determining who initiated the conversation after [the suspect] invoked his right to counsel is essential to a Fifth Amendment inquiry.”
Bradford v. Whitley,
The government argues that the admission of Cannon’s statements, if erroneous, constitutes harmless error.
3
We test for harmless error by asking whether the trier of. fact would have found the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt with the contested evidence excluded.
United States v. Gomez,
Ill
Finally, we must address a separate point of error regarding the weapons charge alone.
4
Cannon argues that there was insufficient evidence to convict him of the weapons charge. The jury’s verdict will be upheld if evidence, with all inferences reasonably drawn in favor of the government, could allow a rational trier of fact to find each element of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.
United States v. Robles-Pantoja,
Cannon asserts that having a .38 caliber pistol on his person does not show use of the weapon to facilitate the crime. The government must establish some relationship between the firearm and the crime.
United States v. Wilson,
IV
We cannot say with certainty that the jury in this case would have found Cannon guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of these charges had his statements been excluded. We vacate the conviction and remand for a hearing to determine whether Cannon’s statements may be admitted under
Edwards v. Arizona.
If the district court finds either that Cannon did not initiate further communication or did not waive his right to counsel as required by
Edwards
and
Smith v. Illinois,
then it shall grant defendant a new trial. If the district court finds that Cannon initiated the communication and waived his right to counsel the judgment of conviction will be reinstated.
Cf. United States v. Gomez,
VACATED and REMANDED.
Notes
. Moreover, the trial court made no ruling on the Edwards issue, so we have no indication that the court reached such an inference sub silentio.
. We need not rule on the government’s contention that the ephedrine was admissible due to the inevitable discovery doctrine.
. A harmless error analysis may be performed to examine the effect of an
Edwards
violation.
See, e.g., United States v. Webb,
. We must reach this point in the event that the district court finds Cannon’s statements to have been admissible.
