CARROLL D. BESADNY, Secretary Department of Natural Resources
Game wardens employed by the Department of Natural Resources are authorized to enforce state laws relating to conservation which include the fish and game laws set out in ch. 29, Stats. The penalty for an initial violation of many of the provisions of ch. 29, Stats., is a forfeiture which may be imposed in a civil lawsuit. Sections
You have requested my opinion with respect to the applicability of constitutional and procedural protections afforded to one accused of a crime when an otherwise civil forfeiture violation becomes a criminal violation by virtue of sec. 29.995, Stats. Specifically you ask:
*Page 1371. May a citation issued pursuant to sec.
23.62 , Stats., serve as a pleading in a criminal prosecution?2. At what point do the protections afforded the accused in a criminal case have application to a prosecution based upon sec. 29.995, Stats.?
3. Do the answers to the above questions change if, at the time a citation is issued, the officer is aware that the person may have previously violated the law so as to be subject to prosecution under sec. 29.995, Stats.?
A citation issued pursuant to sec.
In the decision of State v. White,
Every criminal complaint must set out the essential facts demonstrating probable cause, a standard defined in the decision of State ex rel. Evanow v. Seraphim,
What is the charge? Who is charged? When and Where is the offense alleged to have taken place? Why is this particular person being charged? . . . Who says so?
A citation which does not include the fact of the previous game law violation and which does not disclose sec. 29.995, Stats., to be a basis of the prosecution certainly would be insufficient as to the first question above. It is also entirely possible that a court might find that a *Page 138
particular uniform citation fails to answer satisfactorily the fourth question. White,
The initiation and prosecution of criminal violations are governed by the Wisconsin criminal procedure code which provides constitutional and procedural protections to every person accused of a crime. Chs. 967 through 979, Stats. There exists no valid legal proceeding to which the penalty provisions of sec. 29.995, Stats., could apply until the prosecution is commenced in the manner specified at sec.
One obvious area of difficulty, noted as an example in your request for this opinion, arises when a warden conducts an interrogation of a person before or during the issuance of a civil forfeiture citation pursuant to sec.
The question presented is whether interrogation before or during the issuance of a citation constitutes "custodial interrogation." I believe that there is a substantial basis to conclude that the issuance of a citation constitutes the assertion of custodial control over an accused person. Moreover, it is also possible that in a particular circumstance, a court may conclude that interrogation by a warden prior to actual issuance of a citation was custodial, thus necessitating thatMiranda warnings be given, particularly interrogation that continued after the warden believed that there was already probable cause to issue a citation.
Wisconsin law permits a game warden to undertake temporary questioning of a person when the officer reasonably suspects that the individual is involved in a game violation, sec.
After the enforcing officer has issued a citation, the officer:
(1) May release the defendant;
(2) Shall release the defendant when he or she:
(a) Makes a deposit under s.
(b) Makes a deposit and stipulation of no contest under s.
23.67 .(3) Shall proceed under s.
23.57 , if the defendant is not released.
At the point that the citation is issued, the person to whom it has been issued is in custody pending a release or arrest pursuant to the above statute. Clearly, any interrogation after the issuance of a citation would be custodial interrogation and aMiranda warning would be necessary in order to be able to use in a criminal prosecution a statement obtained. An interrogation pursuant to sec.
The fact that a warden does not realize at the point that a citation is issued that the accused is liable for prosecution under sec. 29.995, Stats., does not change the applicability of the Miranda doctrine. A warden may well not know at the point a citation is issued that the accused person has been convicted of a prior game law violation so as to justify a criminal prosecution. A criminal prosecution is, however, certainly a possibility whenever a citation is issued and presumably there will be only few instances in which a warden is certain that the repeater statute cannot apply. A warden issuing a citation is in a situation very similar to that of an agent of the Internal Revenue Service whose investigation may lead either to civil or to criminal action. The fact that an IRS agent did not know that his interrogation would lead to a criminal charge was held not to excuse the failure to offer a Miranda warning prior to interrogation of a suspect in custody. Mathis v. United States,
The application of the Miranda doctrine in the enforcement of game laws may cause administrative difficulty and I wish, therefore, to make clear the limited and specific effect of a failure to offer the Miranda warning prior to a custodial interrogation. The failure to give the Miranda warning means that a statement taken in the course of that interrogation may later be excluded in a criminal trial. The failure to give the warning does not invalidate an otherwise proper arrest nor does it require exclusion of evidence other than the defendant's statement. Michigan v. Tucker,
BCL:DTF
