Opinion
Appellant, Gary Wayne Wass, was convicted in a bench trial of cocaine and marijuana possession and sentenced to serve concurrent terms of five years and thirty days, respectively. On appeal, Wass challenges the admissibility of statements he made to police officers during the search of his home and before being informed of his constitutional rights. He asserts that the statements were the result of custodial interrogation and should have been suppressed as violative of his rights under
Miranda v. Arizona,
In
Miranda,
the Supreme Court announced the now well established principle that statements stemming from custodial interrogation are inadmissible unless certain procedural safeguards
*30
effective to secure the privilege against self-incrimination are provided. Custodial interrogation is “questioning initiated by law enforcement officers after a person has been taken into custody or otherwise deprived of his freedom of action in any significant way.”
Miranda,
On May 10, 1985, officers from the Lynchburg Police Department raided a house in Lynchburg to execute a search warrant. Gary Wass and his sister-in-law, Vicky Wass, were at the house when the raid began. Approximately six officers first arrived on the scene by dump truck. The dump truck was followed by another truck containing five or six additional officers. Within three to four minutes after the two trucks appeared, four more officers arrived by helicopter. When Wass approached the officers in the dump truck, they informed him of the search warrant for his home. Wass testified that from the moment the first officers emerged from the dump truck, he did not feel free to go anywhere except with them.
The police officers knew before the search that two large Doberman Pinscher guard dogs and loaded firearms were kept at the house. When they arrived, both dogs were there and one tried to attack an officer. Wass was told to control the dogs or they would be killed. One dog was contained before the search but the other fled. Commander Reynolds who arrived in the helicopter was informed that the house had been secured but that one dog was loose. Reynolds directed the officers to set up an “exterior perimeter” around the house to prevent the second dog from returning and injuring someone. Reynolds also stationed an officer at the front door and another just inside the front door “in the event that the animal were to try to come and go back into the house.” All officers stationed at the door and in the perimeter defense were armed, some with shotguns. The officers remained at their stationed positions throughout the search even though the second dog was contained some time during the search.
*31 Reynolds approached Wass and asked “did he understand he was in fact not under arrest” and he “was free to go at any time, because he was not under arrest.” Wass stated that he understood. Reynolds then told Wass that when the police conducted a search they “liked for the property owner to be present if they wished to be present so that they can see what we do; if we open anything, they can see, if we remove anything they can see it; if anything is destroyed or damaged in any way, they can observe whether or not the police actually were the ones who did the damage if in fact it was alleged.”
Once inside the house, Wass was asked to sit in a chair while the downstairs was searched. Both contraband and drug paraphernalia were found downstairs, and Wass told the police that the downstairs bedroom was occupied by his brother and sister-in-law. Reynolds asked Wass what was upstairs. Wass replied that the upstairs bedroom was his, which he occupied alone.
Upstairs, the police found a thermos containing a bag of white powder later analyzed as cocaine. Reynolds asked Wass if the cocaine was his, and Wass admitted that it belonged to him. Also found in Wass’s bedroom was a “photo cube” containing three bags of marijuana and a “cake tin” containing marijuana and drug paraphernalia. Wass was specifically asked about the contents of the “cake tin,” and he admitted the items were his.
After the police completed the search, Wass was arrested. At no time prior to or after arrest was Wass given the Miranda warnings. After he was arrested, Wass was not subjected to interrogation and made no further statements.
The critical issue is whether Wass was in custody or otherwise deprived of his freedom of action in any significant way.
Miranda,
*32
Although the defendants in
Miranda
and its companion cases were questioned at police headquarters, the Supreme Court soon made it clear that an accused could be “in custody” and thus entitled to
Miranda
safeguards in locations other than police headquarters.
See Orozco
v.
Texas,
Questioning in a “coercive environment” alone is insufficient to trigger the need for
Miranda
warnings.
Oregon
v.
Mathiason,
The totality of circumstances must be considered in determining whether the suspect is in custody when questioned, but the “ultimate inquiry is simply ‘whether there is a formal arrest or restraint on freedom of movement’ of the degree associated with a formal arrest.”
California
v.
Beheler,
To determine whether a restraint is “custodial” for
Miranda
purposes, “a host of factors must be considered.”
United States v. Streifel,
However, no single factor alone may necessarily establish custody for
Miranda
purposes, and not all factors may be relevant in a given case. The fact that the investigation had become accusatory and focused upon a suspect is not necessarily determinative of custody,
Smith
v.
Commonwealth,
In the present case Wass was interrogated at his home, presumptively a non-coercive setting. But even in the home, police domination of the scene may produce a coercive environment and an abridgment of freedom, and
Miranda
warnings may be required before questioning.
See Orozco,
The police told Wass that he was not under arrest and was free to leave but they also told him that they liked the resident to be present when they conducted a search. “Though informing a suspect that he is not under arrest is one factor frequently considered to show lack of custody, it is not a talismanic factor.”
Davis
v.
Allsbrooks,
Wass was confronted by at least twelve officers, all armed, some of whom were carrying shotguns, arriving in two trucks and a helicopter. The trucks were parked at the driveway gate, and some of the officers surrounded the house. Wass was ordered to secure his dogs. One was confined in a car, and an officer threatened to kill the other if Wass could not control him. Commander Reynolds directed his officers to form an “exterior perimeter” around the house. Two more officers were stationed at the door of the house, and while all of these steps were taken to “prevent the second dog . . . from coming back and possibly injuring one of the officers,” the record indicates that the officers stayed in position after the second dog had been secured. The record portrays a situation in which the police officers, through an impressive display of force and manpower, seized control of Wass’s private residence and secured the premises in a manner suggestive of a military maneuver. In our view, the situation is susceptible of but one interpretation: a reasonable man confronted with this armed display of manpower at his house, even though earlier told he was not under arrest and was free to leave, could only conclude that he was in fact not free to leave and was expected to cooperate. The atmosphere was exactly the type of police dominated environment described in Miranda.
We do not suggest that when police are conducting a raid or searching premises where drugs may be found, or entering an unknown situation, that protective measures should not be employed for the safety and security of the officers. However, such protective measures may also give rise to a custodial situation for Miranda purposes. If security measures produce a coercive environment and restrict a suspect’s freedom of movement to the degree associated with a formal arrest, the suspect is entitled to the procedural safeguards afforded by Miranda.
In the present case the number of armed officers, their manner of arrival, the methods used to secure the house, and the threat to kill Wass’s dog, all contribute to a finding that a reasonable man in Wass’s position would have felt he was not free to leave the
*35
premises despite advice to the contrary. After the officers arrived and secured the house, Wass was taken inside and asked to sit in a chair while a search was conducted of the downstairs area. Drugs and paraphernalia were found at that time. The search moved upstairs, an area Wass admitted was occupied solely by him. More drugs and paraphernalia were found in Wass’s presence. At this point, when the police asked Wass about ownership of the drugs found in his bedroom, they contend, and the trial court accepted, that Wass was still free to leave. Regardless whether the officers would have allowed Wass to leave, no reasonable person would have felt free to leave. We therefore find that Wass was in custody at the time he admitted ownership of the drugs, and the statement was elicited in violation of
Miranda
and should have been suppressed. Because we cannot say that admission of Wass’s statement was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt,
see Chapman
v.
California,
Reversed and remanded.
Koontz, C.J., and Moon, J., concurred.
Notes
The term “custodial interrogation” has presented the need to define interrogation as well as custody, but for the purposes of this opinion we need only address the issue of what constitutes custody for purposes of Miranda. The issue of whether Wass was subjected to interrogation is not in dispute.
