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Opinions of The and the Court of Appeals To be used in
conjunction with the CPS Criminal Procedure Textbook |
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CPS Commonwealth
Police Service, Inc. and the Law Office of Patrick Michael Rogers |
Commonwealth
v. Mark,
Present: Doerfer, McHugh, & Mills, JJ.
A pretrial motion to suppress evidence was heard by
Carol Gibson Smith, J.
Robert C. Thompson, Assistant District Attorney, for
the Commonwealth.
Frederick M. McDermott, III, for the defendant.
MILLS, J.
The Commonwealth appeals from the order of a
judge of the Brockton Juvenile Court allowing the juvenile defendant's motion
to suppress inculpatory statements.[1] A delinquency complaint had
issued charging him with indecent assault and battery on a child under fourteen
years of age (G. L. c. 265, § 13B) and accosting or annoying a
person of the opposite sex (G. L. c. 272, § 53). We vacate the order
and remand for further findings.
1. Background. According to a factual summary in the judge's memorandum of
decision, the thirteen year old juvenile, accompanied by his grandmother (who
was also his legal guardian), went to the East Bridgewater police department
for an interview by Detective Scott C. Allen. The meeting had been scheduled by
telephone several days prior to the visit. Allen met the juvenile and
grandmother in his office, informed them that he was conducting a criminal
investigation, and recited rights warnings to them under Miranda v. Arizona,
384 U.S. 436 (1966). He then provided a written set of the Miranda warnings,
which the juvenile and grandmother each read and signed. After they
acknowledged that they understood the Miranda rights, the juvenile, with his
grandmother's consent, but without any consultation between the two, agreed to
speak with Allen and, throughout the initial interview, the juvenile was calm
and cooperative.
Allen told the juvenile of allegations made
against him that he had indecently touched a young girl while they were
watching television at her grandmother's home. The juvenile stated that he had
not acted inappropriately, that they had been watching television when a
commercial for a "Playboy" video came onto the screen, and that he
then changed the channel so that the girl would not see the commercial.
After the juvenile mentioned the video in his version of the events, the
grandmother asked him if he would be more comfortable speaking with the
detective alone. The juvenile responded affirmatively. Allen then left them in
the room and went to confer with his superior regarding the appropriateness of
the request. After receiving affirmation from his superior, Allen escorted the
grandmother to a conference room. She was aware that Allen was going to
continue questioning the juvenile about the allegations.
Allen returned to his office and renewed the
questioning (second interview), whereupon the juvenile made incriminating
statements, the subject of the suppression motion. In his motion the juvenile
alleged, inter alia, that the statements were not voluntary.[2] In
granting the motion, the judge reasoned that the juvenile did not have the
opportunity to consult with his grandmother, that the questioning began
immediately after he was given Miranda warnings, and that there was no evidence
that Allen advised the two that they had the right to consult before waiver of
the juvenile's constitutional rights. The first reason is not supported by the
judge's limited subsidiary findings, and such advice of right to consult is not
required. The matter requires further analysis and findings.
2. Governing principles. The constitutional
right against self-incrimination is fully applicable to cases involving
juveniles. See In re Gault, 387
A statement made following a violation of a
suspect's Miranda rights is presumptively tainted. See Commonwealth v. Smith,
412 Mass. 823, 836 (1992).[4] The Commonwealth can overcome the
presumption of taint by showing that either: "(1) after the illegally
obtained statement, there was a break in the stream of events that sufficiently
insulated the post-Miranda statement from the tainted one; or (2) the illegally
obtained statement did not incriminate the defendant, or, as it is more
colloquially put, the cat was not out of the bag." Commonwealth v. Torres,
424
"[W]here the defendant is a juvenile, courts must proceed with 'special
caution' when reviewing purported waivers of constitutional rights."
Commonwealth v.
The Commonwealth need not prove "that the juvenile, and the adult
assisting him, made full use of the opportunity provided to them actually to
discuss the juvenile's rights and the possible consequences of a waiver."
Commonwealth v. Philip S., 414
3. Discussion. The judge ultimately found that
the juvenile did not have "an opportunity to consult with his
grandmother" because (1) police questioning began immediately after he
received a Miranda warning, and (2) neither before nor after administering that
warning did the interrogating detective inform the grandmother and the juvenile
that they had a right to consult in deciding whether or not to talk to him.
Without such knowledge, the judge concluded, there could be no "meaningful
opportunity for consultation," notwithstanding the fact that the
grandmother and juvenile had been left alone for a period of time.
(a)
(b) The right to consult. Secondly, the judge appears to have ruled (1) that
the police were required to inform "the [j]uvenile and [his grandmother]
that they had a right to consult prior to waiving any of the [j]uvenile's
constitutional rights," and (2) that it was necessary for the grandmother
and juvenile to know of the right to consult in order for there to be a
meaningful opportunity to consult.
There is no requirement that the police inform
of the right to consult. We recognize that the
(c) Further findings. Concluding that the
judge's subsidiary findings did not provide adequate support for her ultimate
finding that the juvenile did not have a "meaningful opportunity" for
consultation with the grandmother does not, for two reasons, end the analysis.
First, decided cases require that the adult understand the Miranda warning's
content.
Second, and perhaps more important, the opportunity for consultation is designed
to ensure that, before talking to police, "the juvenile has understood his
rights and the potential consequences of waiving them." Commonwealth v.
Alfonso A., supra at 381, quoting from Commonwealth v. MacNeill, 399
We therefore vacate the order allowing the
motion to suppress and we remand the case for further findings as to whether
(1) the juvenile's initial statement was incriminating, and, if so, whether
there was a sufficient break in the stream of events to insulate the second
statement from the initial illegality; (2) the grandmother and juvenile
understood the content of the Miranda warnings; (3) the grandmother understood
her role as the potential source of advice for the juvenile on whether he
should waive his rights and talk to the police; and (4) the juvenile's waiver
of his Miranda rights was knowing, voluntary and intelligent.
So ordered.
FOOTNOTES:
[1] The judge's
[2] In his motion, the
juvenile alleged, inter alia, that he was "not afforded a meaningful
opportunity to consult with . . . [an] interested adult while speaking to the
police," that he "did not knowingly and intelligently waive his
Miranda Rights before speaking with the police," that his grandmother
"left the interview as he agreed to speak to the police officer"
(and, thus, he "was not afforded the ability to have an interested adult
present"), and that his "statements . . . were not voluntary."
The motion was accompanied by only the
grandmother's
affidavit, in which she stated (as is relevant to the motion) that she left
the interview room with no other adult present. The motion was subject to the
requirement that it be supported by an affidavit detailing all facts relied
upon. Mass.R.Crim.P. 13(a)(2), 378
[3] "Relevant factors to consider include, but
are not limited to, 'promises or other inducements, conduct of the defendant,
the defendant's age, education, intelligence, and emotional stability,
experience with and in the criminal justice system, physical and mental
condition, the initiator of the discussion of a deal or leniency (whether the
defendant or police), and the details of the interrogation, including the
recitation of Miranda warnings.'" Commonwealth v.
[4] In some circumstances, absent a significant break
in the stream of events, suppression of a post-Miranda statement may be
required even where the suspect made no incriminating statement during the
course of the illegal initial interrogation.
[5] We note three
comments (two in footnotes) which, while dicta, create ambiguity:
"Juveniles under age fourteen must actually consult with an interested
adult before a valid waiver of rights can occur." Commonwealth v.
consultation actually occurred when the grandmother and the juvenile were
left alone in the room while Allen conferred with his superior officer. The
above comments in
[6] In our analysis of this case, by analogy to the
"presumptive taint" rule of the Miranda cases, we hold that when
interrogation of a juvenile takes place without an "actual
opportunity" for the juvenile to consult, a subsequent statement is
presumptively tainted. The Commonwealth can overcome the presumption of taint
in the same way as in the case of an initial Miranda violation.