MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT Reporter of Decisions
Decision: 2013 ME 92
Docket: Oxf-13-4
Argued: September 9, 2013
Decided: October 31, 2013
Panel: SAUFLEY, C.J., and ALEXANDER, LEVY, SILVER, MEAD, GORMAN, and JABAR,
JJ.
STATE OF MAINE
v.
KRISTINA LOWE
SAUFLEY, C.J.
[¶1] Eighteen-year-old Kristina Lowe lay in the hospital, sedated,
frostbitten, immobilized, and severely injured when a Maine State Police trooper,
without providing Miranda warnings, questioned her about the car accident that
caused Lowe’s injuries. After a pause in the questioning, during which the trooper
received more information about the crash, the trooper told Lowe that two of her
friends who had been in the backseat of the car were dead, and that a fourth person
was likely the front seat passenger. The trooper urged Lowe to tell the truth about
who was driving.
[¶2] The State appeals from the order entered in the trial court (Clifford, J.)
finding that, although Lowe’s statements were voluntary, all statements after the
pause in questioning would be suppressed because after that pause, Lowe became a
suspect, was in custody because she reasonably did not believe that she was free to
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terminate the interview and, consequently, should have been given Miranda
warnings. Lowe cross-appeals from the determination that her statements were
voluntary. We affirm the court’s determinations related to custody and
voluntariness.
I. BACKGROUND
[¶3] Shortly after midnight on January 7, 2012, eighteen-year-old Lowe was
badly injured in a single-vehicle accident. She and three other young people were
in the car. She was taken by ambulance from Stephens Memorial Hospital to
Maine Medical Center. Lowe was sedated with morphine and fentanyl for several
hours at Stephens Memorial Hospital and while being transported to Maine
Medical Center. She had suffered a compression fracture of her vertebrae, a
broken nose, a possible concussion, multiple contusions, a lacerated knee, an
abdominal injury, and frostbite from walking some distance in the snow with only
one shoe on to seek help after the accident.
[¶4] Soon after Lowe arrived at Maine Medical Center, a Maine State Police
trooper began to interview her. A State Police sergeant had contacted the trooper
to ask that she interview Lowe. The trooper met with another State Police sergeant
at the hospital and obtained the consent of the nurses to speak with Lowe. The
trooper, who was in uniform and carrying a sidearm, asked Lowe’s mother if she
could speak with Lowe alone. Lowe’s mother left the room. Present in the room
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were Lowe, the trooper who was conducting the interview, a police sergeant, and
nurses and other medical personnel who were in and out frequently to monitor
Lowe’s condition.
[¶5] The trooper took notes and tape-recorded her conversation with Lowe.
The trooper told Lowe that she could stop the interview at any time, but she did not
read Miranda warnings because she did not consider Lowe to be in custody. Lowe
agreed to be interviewed. During the interview, despite being sedated and
vomiting twice, Lowe appeared to understand the questions that were asked, and
she gave appropriate answers.
[¶6] Lowe almost immediately asked about the two passengers in the
backseat of the car, but the trooper did not respond to the question. Lowe said that
she could not see those passengers after the accident and was unable to make any
contact with them. Lowe said that she had lost her cell phone and therefore she
and Jake, whom Lowe, at first, said was the driver, walked away from the car in
order to get help.
[¶7] The trooper repeatedly asked Lowe to tell the truth, told her that the
police had ways of finding out who was driving and who was not, and said that the
investigation would continue beyond that night. Lowe asked if she was going to
have to go to court, and the trooper again asked her to admit if she was the driver.
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As the interview progressed, Lowe began to question whether Jake had been
driving and said she was eighty percent sure that it had been Jake.
[¶8] The trooper then took a five-minute break and learned that two people
had died in the accident. Upon returning to Lowe’s hospital room, she informed
Lowe that the police now believed that Jake may have been in the front passenger
seat, not the driver’s seat. In addition, the trooper told Lowe that her friends had
died. Immediately thereafter Lowe cried uncontrollably and made inculpatory
statements. After another pause, and without Miranda warnings, the trooper
continued the interview for several minutes.
[¶9] In June 2012, Lowe was indicted on two counts of manslaughter
(Class A), 17-A M.R.S. § 203(1)(A) (2012); two counts of aggravated criminal
OUI (Class B), 29-A M.R.S. § 2411(1-A)(D)(1-A) (2012); and one count of
leaving the scene of an accident that resulted in serious bodily injury (Class C),
29-A M.R.S. § 2252(5) (2012).
[¶10] Lowe moved to suppress all of the statements she made to the trooper
on the grounds that they were not voluntary and were obtained while she was in
custody but was not read Miranda rights. The court held an evidentiary hearing at
which the trooper and four medical professionals testified, and several medical
exhibits as well as a recording and a transcript of the interview were admitted.
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[¶11] The trial court entered an order in which it concluded that Lowe’s
responses were voluntary but that all statements after the pause in the interview
would be suppressed. The trial court reasoned that after the trooper discovered that
the passengers had died, Lowe became a suspect, was in custody, and should have
been given Miranda warnings. With the consent of the Attorney General, the State
appealed from the suppression of evidence. See 15 M.R.S. § 2115-A(5) (2012);
M.R. App. P. 21(b). Lowe cross-appealed from the determination that her
statements were voluntary.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
[¶12] “A trial court’s factual findings on a motion to suppress are reviewed
for clear error, while the ultimate determination of whether the statement should be
suppressed is reviewed de novo.” State v. Bragg, 2012 ME 102, ¶ 8, 48 A.3d 769
(quotation marks omitted).
[¶13] “The determination of whether an individual was in custody is a
mixed question of fact and law. In reviewing a court’s custody determination, we
defer to the court’s factual determinations, but we review de novo the
determination of whether an individual was in custody.” State v. Jones, 2012 ME
126, ¶ 21, 55 A.3d 432 (quotation marks omitted).
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[¶14] Here, the trial court’s findings are properly supported by competent
evidence in the record, and neither party challenges those factual findings. See id.
The question is whether those facts demonstrate as a matter of law that a
reasonable person in Lowe’s situation “would have felt he or she was not at liberty
to terminate the interrogation.” Id. ¶ 22.
B. Custody Determination
[¶15] The State argues that the court’s rationale for suppression constituted
error because Lowe was not in custody when she confessed to being the driver.
Specifically, the State contends that the trooper lacked probable cause to arrest
Lowe, even after the break, until Lowe said that she remembered she was driving.
[¶16] “An interrogation is custodial if a reasonable person standing in the
shoes of [the defendant] would have felt he or she was not at liberty to terminate
the interrogation and leave.” Id. (alteration in original) (quotation marks omitted).
For individuals whose mobility is limited for reasons unrelated to restraint by law
enforcement, “the appropriate inquiry is whether a reasonable person would feel
free to decline the officers’ requests or otherwise terminate the encounter.”
Florida v. Bostick, 501 U.S. 429, 436 (1991). A court will consider a number of
factors to make this objective determination, including
(1) the locale where the defendant made the statements;
(2) the party who initiated the contact;
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(3) the existence or non-existence of probable cause to arrest (to the
extent communicated to the defendant);
(4) subjective views, beliefs, or intent that the police manifested to the
defendant, to the extent they would affect how a reasonable person in
the defendant’s position would perceive his or her freedom to leave;1
(5) subjective views or beliefs that the defendant manifested to the
police, to the extent the officer’s response would affect how a
reasonable person in the defendant’s position would perceive his or
her freedom to leave;
(6) the focus of the investigation (as a reasonable person in the
defendant’s position would perceive it);
(7) whether the suspect was questioned in familiar surroundings;
(8) the number of law enforcement officers present;
(9) the degree of physical restraint placed upon the suspect; and
(10) the duration and character of the interrogation.
Jones, 2012 ME 126, ¶ 22, 55 A.3d 432 (quotation marks omitted). The factors
must be considered “in their totality, not in isolation.” Id. (quotation marks
omitted).
[¶17] Many courts have considered whether patients were in custody during
hospital-room interrogations; overwhelmingly, they have held that voluntarily
hospitalized patients are not in custody by virtue of that hospitalization. See, e.g.,
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Here, because Lowe was medically immobilized, her freedom to leave is equivalent to her freedom
to terminate the interview. See Florida v. Bostick, 501 U.S. 429, 436 (1991).
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United States v. Martin, 781 F.2d 671, 672-73 (9th Cir. 1985) (holding that a
defendant was not in custody when he went to the hospital after an explosion in his
apartment, had received Demerol, appeared to be groggy but was coherent, asked
and answered questions, and spoke with a local police detective and a special
agent); State v. Melton, 476 N.W.2d 842, 843-45 (Neb. 1991); State v. Cain, 400
N.W.2d 582, 584 (Iowa 1987); see also Wayne R. LaFave et al., Criminal
Procedure § 6.6(e) nn. 71, 74 (2012) (citing cases). Even where a patient had
multiple fractures and was administered pain medication, the Supreme Court of
Connecticut held that he was not in custody because he had been immobilized for
treatment, not interrogation; he was not especially vulnerable due to age or
intelligence; and a nurse indicated that he was capable of speaking with the police.
State v. Jackson, 40 A.3d 290, 296, 310-13 (Conn. 2012).
[¶18] Moreover, a determination that a person is in custody requires more
than that the hospitalized person is a focus of the investigation. See State v.
Warrior, 277 P.3d 1111, 1126 (Kan. 2012) (“[T]he fact [that] a suspect is the focus
of an investigation, standing alone, does not trigger the need for Miranda
warnings.”). To create custody, additional police conduct is necessary. See, e.g.,
State v. Stott, 794 A.2d 120, 133-35 (N.J. 2002) (holding that a patient in a
psychiatric hospital was in custody when he was singled out for a recorded
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interrogation in a secluded basement area on two separate days by a total of four
law enforcement officers).
[¶19] Here, the court properly determined that the hospitalization did not, in
itself, create a custodial situation and that the question was whether Lowe felt free
to stop answering questions. Considering all of the Jones factors and the
circumstances present, the trial court did not err in determining that Lowe was in
custody after the pause in the interview. When the trooper took a break to confer
with the investigators, she gained sufficient information to consider Lowe a
suspect in a criminal case. Consequently, the trooper’s questioning became more
focused, aggressive, and insistent. She told Lowe that Jake was not likely the
driver. She urged Lowe to tell the truth. She did not repeat that Lowe was free to
stop speaking. Along with the exclusion of Lowe’s mother from the room, when
the trooper told Lowe that the backseat passengers had died, the trooper conveyed
to Lowe that she should consider herself the focus of a criminal investigation.
Viewed objectively, the information that the trooper learned during the break and
communicated to Lowe produced a change in Lowe’s liberty to end the interview.
A reasonable person in Lowe’s position would not have felt at liberty to end the
interrogation. Accordingly, we affirm the determination that Lowe was in custody
after the pause in the interview.
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C. Voluntariness Determination
[¶20] Lowe contends that, given her medical treatment, sedation, and
emotional distress, the evidence was insufficient for the court to find beyond a
reasonable doubt that Lowe’s statements were voluntary. “[I]n order to find a
statement voluntary, it must first be established that it is the result of [the]
defendant’s exercise of his own free will and rational intellect.” State v. Caouette,
446 A.2d 1120, 1123 (Me. 1982).
[¶21] We review findings of fact for clear error and legal conclusions de
novo. State v. McCarthy, 2003 ME 40, ¶¶ 11, 12, 819 A.2d 335. We will not
disturb the motion court’s determination that the State proved, beyond a reasonable
doubt, that a confession was voluntary “if there is evidence providing rational
support for [its] conclusion.” State v. Cyr, 611 A.2d 64, 66 (Me. 1992) (quotation
marks omitted); see Caouette, 446 A.2d at 1124.
[¶22] A statement may be voluntarily made even if the defendant was
injured, medicated, or in distress. See State v. Philbrick, 481 A.2d 488, 494 (Me.
1984) (upholding the voluntariness of a confession made while the defendant was
traumatized from the victim’s shooting); see also State v. Lockhart, 2003 ME 108,
¶ 33, 830 A.2d 433 (“The fact that an individual is mildly sedated does not,
standing alone, establish that any statement he or she makes is no longer the
product of a free will and rational intellect.”); State v. Bleyl, 435 A.2d 1349, 1360
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(Me. 1981) (“The fact that a person being interrogated in custody is under the
influence of drugs does not, in itself, render a confession involuntary.”).
[¶23] A judge may conclude that, despite those circumstances, the
statements were, beyond a reasonable doubt, made in “exercise of [a defendant’s]
own free will and rational intellect.” Caouette, 446 A.2d at 1123; cf. Martin, 781
F.2d at 673-74 (affirming finding by a preponderance of the evidence that a
defendant who was injured but awake and relatively coherent voluntarily spoke
with police in the hospital).
[¶24] Here, the court found that Lowe spoke with the trooper voluntarily.
This finding is supported not only by the trooper’s testimony but also by that of the
nurse who attended to Lowe during the interview. The nurse testified that she
monitored Lowe to determine whether she was intoxicated, drowsy, emotionally
overwhelmed, or otherwise at medical risk from speaking with police. The nurse
was present periodically throughout the interview and did not observe Lowe
presenting slurred speech, drowsiness, or difficulty answering questions. A nurse
from Stephens Memorial Hospital also testified that Lowe was alert and oriented
when in her care after the accident, and the paramedic who attended to her while
she was transferred to Maine Medical Center testified that Lowe was aware of
what was going on around her. The recording of the interrogation supports the
nurses’ and paramedic’s opinions.
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[¶25] Thus, despite Lowe’s medical condition at the time of the interview,
we affirm the court’s determination that the statements were made voluntarily.
III. CONCLUSION
[¶26] We conclude that the court did not err in finding that Lowe’s
statements throughout were voluntary and that Lowe was in custody after the break
in the interview.
The entry is:
Order suppressing evidence affirmed.
On the briefs:
Norman R. Croteau, District Attorney, and Joseph M. O’Connor and
Richard R. Beauchesne, Asst. Dist. Attys., Office of District Attorney, South
Paris, for appellant State of Maine
James P. Howaniec, Esq., Lewiston, for appellee Kristina I. Lowe
At oral argument:
Richard R. Beauchesne, Asst. Dist. Atty., for appellant State of Maine
James P. Howaniec, Esq., for appellee Kristina I. Lowe
Oxford County Superior Court docket number CR-12-162
FOR CLERK REFERENCE ONLY