1 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
2 Opinion Number: _______________
3 Filing Date: October 16, 2014
4 NO. 32,460
5 STATE OF NEW MEXICO,
6 Plaintiff-Appellant,
7 v.
8 CHRIS TALAYUMPTEWA,
9 Defendant-Appellee.
10 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF McKINLEY COUNTY
11 Louis E. DePauli Jr., District Judge
12 Gary K. King, Attorney General
13 Santa Fe, NM
14 M. Victoria Wilson, Assistant Attorney General
15 Albuquerque, NM
16 for Appellant
17 Law Offices of the Public Defender
18 Jorge A. Alvarado, Chief Public Defender
19 Will O’Connell, Assistant Appellate Defender
20 Santa Fe, NM
21 for Appellee
1 OPINION
2 VIGIL, Judge.
3 {1} The State appeals from an order of the district court suppressing statements
4 made by Defendant during police questioning. The district court suppressed
5 Defendant’s statements on the basis that they were the product of coercive police
6 conduct in the form of promises of leniency and were involuntary under the totality
7 of the circumstances. We affirm the district court.
8 BACKGROUND
9 {2} The alleged victim gave a SAFE house interview in which she accused
10 Defendant of sexual assault. Officers from the McKinley County Sheriff’s Office left
11 messages at Defendant’s home that they wanted to speak with him, and Defendant
12 came to the Sheriff’s Office voluntarily, and agreed to speak with police. Defendant
13 was questioned there by two police officers, Anthony Ashley and Owen Pena, for
14 around ninety minutes. During the course of the interview, Defendant made a written
15 statement, in the form of an apology letter, and oral statements. Defendant moved to
16 suppress the statements arguing that they were involuntary because police did not
17 give him Miranda warnings prior to questioning him and because they were induced
18 by promises of leniency by the police.
1 {3} After an evidentiary hearing, at which both officers testified, and review of the
2 transcript of the interview, the district court ordered Defendant’s statements
3 suppressed. In its written order, the district court first rejected Defendant’s Miranda
4 argument, finding that he was not in custody during the interview, and Miranda
5 therefore did not apply. The district court specifically found that Defendant was not
6 in custody because he was informed at the outset of the interview that he was free to
7 leave, the officers told him that he would not be arrested that day, and the officers did
8 not threaten him. However, the court found that his statements were nonetheless
9 involuntary because of police overreaching in the form of implied promises of
10 leniency. The district court found that immediately at the start of questioning, the
11 officers began making implied promises of leniency, which continued throughout the
12 interview. The district court found that the multitude of the implied promises of
13 leniency outweighed other factors that might indicate the statements were voluntary.
14 The State appeals. Additional facts are included in the discussion below.
15 ANALYSIS
16 {4} The State challenges both the district court’s determination that officers made
17 implied promises of leniency and its ruling that the implied promises of leniency
18 outweighed other factors that might indicate that the statements were voluntary. “We
19 review de novo the voluntariness of confessions.” State v. Evans, 2009-NMSC-027,
2
1 ¶ 32, 146 N.M. 319, 210 P.3d 216; see also State v. Leeson, 2011-NMCA-068, ¶ 21,
2 149 N.M. 823, 255 P.3d 401 (same). “Voluntariness means freedom from official
3 coercion.” State v. Sanders, 2000-NMSC-032, ¶ 6, 129 N.M. 728, 13 P.3d 460
4 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). Promises of leniency on the part of
5 police can be coercive and may render a subsequent statement involuntary. See
6 Evans, 2009-NMSC-027, ¶ 42 (noting that threats and promises may rise to the level
7 of coercive behavior by the police); see also State v. Tindle, 1986-NMCA-035, ¶ 25,
8 104 N.M. 195, 718 P.2d 705 (stating that an express promise of leniency “renders a
9 confession involuntary as a matter of law”); State v. Gutierrez, 2011-NMSC-024, ¶
10 25, 150 N.M. 232, 258 P.3d 1024 (stating that “unlike an express promise of leniency,
11 which can render a confession inadmissible as a matter of law, evidence of an implied
12 promise is only a factor in the totality of the circumstances that courts consider in
13 determining whether a confession is voluntary”).
14 Implied Promises of Leniency
15 {5} We first address the State’s argument that the district court erred in determining
16 that police made implied promises of leniency during the interview. “The test in such
17 a case is ‘whether the accused could reasonably have inferred a promise going to the
18 punishment for the crime to be confessed.’” State v. Munoz, 1998-NMSC-048, ¶ 34,
19 126 N.M. 535, 972 P.2d 847 (quoting State v. Wickman, 1935-NMSC-035, ¶ 36, 39
3
1 N.M. 198, 43 P.2d 933). Our review of the transcript supports the district court’s
2 determination that the officers made numerous implied promises of leniency to
3 Defendant throughout the interview in exchange for statements that accorded with the
4 alleged victim’s version of events.
5 {6} Defendant responded to the officers’ questions by saying that he could not
6 remember what happened because he was intoxicated when the alleged incidents
7 occurred. In response, the officers repeatedly told Defendant they would be meeting
8 with the district attorney, that his claims not to remember were legally invalid, and
9 that they had the ability to influence the district attorney with respect to the level of
10 charges Defendant faced. Among other similar statements, Officer Pena told
11 Defendant:
12 You’re giving us nothing and that’s what we’re gonna [sic] go to the
13 D.A.s with . . . is that he gave us nothing . . . he tried to use the old . . .
14 I don’t remember because I was intoxicated defense . . . . And that’s
15 what we’re gonna tell the D.A. . . . . He came in and he gave us a
16 convenient excuse . . . . Oh I was drunk . . . . Oh I don’t remember . . . .
17 It coulda [sic] happened, but I don’t know if it did . . . or anything like
18 that. . . . So if you do remember what happened, just come clean with us
19 . . . . We’re trying to help you here . . . . Okay, but we can only help
20 you so much. . . . Okay, I can’t go to the D.A.s and be like hey let’s
21 . . . you know let’s cut this guy a break or . . . or let’s . . . you know let’s
22 do this or . . . let’s uh . . . you know let’s think about it second [sic] if
23 you won’t tell us what happened cuz [sic] I can’t go to the D.A. with that
24 . . . . Okay, I can’t . . . . The D.A. ain’t gonna [sic] buy that either.
4
1 {7} The officers also began to inform Defendant that he was facing multiple felony
2 charges and that they could help him, but only if he remembered. Officer Pena told
3 Defendant:
4 Okay . . . . I tried to help you here, I tried to give you a life line, I tried
5 to help, I tried to give you that life preserver for you to help yourself,
6 you don’t wanna [sic] take it that’s fine. . . . I’ll . . .we . . . Investigator
7 Ashley will go forward to the . . . to the D.A.s with what we have based
8 off what her . . . what she’s saying ‘cuz [sic] you don’t want to recant
9 anything she’s saying by just saying I was intoxicated, I don’t
10 remember. . . that’s fine, if that’s . . . that’s the road you wanna [sic] go
11 down . . . that’s fine, okay. . . when the warrant comes and when we’re
12 putting you in jail . . . for multiple felonies okay . . . don’t say oh wait a
13 minute, I wanna [sic] talk now, because that’s gonna [sic] be gone, once
14 you get cuffed and put in jail.
15 In the specific exchange cited by the district court, the officers also discussed the
16 range of prison terms for different degrees of felonies in response to Defendant’s
17 question about how much jail time he was facing. The following discussion then
18 occurred:
19 Defendant: Is there a way I can like . . . . The only way I can
20 help myself is to remember, right?
21 Officer Pena: That would be a big help.
22 Defendant: And then if I remember and that is what happened
23 I’m still looking at those right?
24 Officer Pena: No[t] necessarily, uh . . . it’s still . . . we still have to
25 . . . it’s not like we sit here and we’re like okay,
26 we’re gonna [sic] charge him for this okay . . . we
5
1 need to get everything done . . . we still got some
2 interviews to do and stuff like that, we’re gonna [sic]
3 do . . . we’re gonna [sic] interview everybody then
4 we take our whole case and we give it to the D.A.s
5 and the D.A.s is the one who say . . . this and that . . .
6 okay?
7 Officer Ashley: [S]eriousness of the crime is way up here, we can
8 help eventually bring it back down to maybe almost
9 down to nothing. . .
10 Officer Pena: That also depends on . . . us being able to go to the
11 D.A.s . . . being able to say to the judge you know,
12 he was very . . . sorry it was an accident, it was [a]
13 stupid mistake that he did while he was intoxicated
14 . . . he came in he was honest about it, he was up
15 front about it . . . he did remember finally, he came
16 back in and said hey this is what I remembered.
17 {8} These statements and the others like them constitute implied promises of
18 leniency because their import was that Defendant would be arrested on serious felony
19 charges if he continued to claim a lack of memory, but that if he made certain
20 admissions, officers would intercede with the district attorney on his behalf, and that
21 they had the ability to have charges reduced or not brought at all. See Munoz,
22 1998-NMSC-048, ¶ 34 (stating that an implied promise of leniency occurs when the
23 accused could reasonably have inferred a promise going to the punishment for the
24 crime to be confessed); cf. State v. Lobato, 2006-NMCA-051, ¶ 18, 139 N.M. 431,
25 134 P.3d 122 (finding no implied promise of leniency where the officer told the
6
1 defendant he would get treatment if he confessed, but did not tell the defendant he
2 would receive treatment instead of prison time).
3 {9} The State characterizes the officers as merely suggesting to Defendant that his
4 claims not to remember were not believable and that cooperation would be more
5 helpful to him than denial. See Evans, 2009-NMSC-027, ¶ 43 (“[T]hreats that merely
6 highlight potential real consequences, or are ‘adjurations to tell the truth,’ are not
7 characterized as impermissibly coercive.”). The State also argues that Defendant
8 could not have inferred a promise of leniency because the officers told him that any
9 charging decision was ultimately up to the district attorney. Defendant counters that
10 Officer Ashley’s statement that the charges could be reduced “maybe down to almost
11 nothing” rose to the level of an express promise of leniency, and the statements are
12 therefore inadmissible as a matter of law. See Lobato, 2006-NMCA-051, ¶ 19
13 (stating that an express promise of leniency will render a confession inadmissible as
14 a matter of law).
15 {10} We cannot agree with Defendant’s argument that Officer Ashley’s statement
16 rose to the level of an express promise because it was not an unequivocal guarantee
17 that Defendant would receive leniency if he gave a statement. See State v. Munoz,
18 1990-NMCA-109, ¶ 13, 111 N.M. 118, 802 P.2d 23 (stating that a promise of
19 leniency was implied where the officer merely speculated about what might happen
7
1 if the defendant was cooperative). However, we also disagree with the State’s
2 assertion that the officers only suggested that Defendant could help himself by being
3 cooperative. The transcript contains numerous statements by the officers throughout
4 the interview, the effect of which was to say that if Defendant gave a statement they
5 would act on his behalf and had the ability to get the charges reduced. This was more
6 than a mere offer to bring Defendant’s cooperation to the attention of the district
7 attorney, which courts have found acceptable. See State v. Sanders,
8 2000-NMSC-032, ¶ 10 (stating that “merely promising to bring a defendant’s
9 cooperation to the attention of the prosecutor is not objectionable”).
10 {11} Additionally, the fact that the officers told Defendant that the final decision on
11 charges was up to the district attorney does not mean that there was no official
12 promise of leniency. See State v. Benavidez, 1975-NMCA-013, ¶ 7, 87 N.M. 223,
13 531 P.2d 957 (stating that an unlawful inducement that renders a confession
14 involuntary need not be made by a person in an actual position of authority, but the
15 situation must be such that the person confessing might reasonably consider the
16 promisor as a person able to afford him aid). The officers’ other statements during
17 the interview gave rise to the understanding that, if Defendant made a statement, they
18 had the ability to influence the district attorney, and Defendant would face less time
19 in prison, if any. The reasonableness of this understanding was reinforced by Officer
8
1 Pena talking about another suspect who “finally remembered” and confessed to
2 burglary, who it “still worked out for” because the confession gave Officer Pena the
3 ability to argue for leniency with the district attorney. Cf. State v. Barr,
4 2009-NMSC-024, ¶¶ 10, 27, 146 N.M. 301, 210 P.3d 198 (finding no implied
5 promise of leniency where the officer told the suspect that he could not offer him a
6 deal but offered to speak to the district attorney on his behalf if he made a statement),
7 overruled on other grounds by State v. Tollardo, 2012-NMSC-008, 275 P.3d 110;
8 Munoz, 1990-NMCA-109, ¶ 16 (holding the confession voluntary where the officer
9 responded to the defendant’s question by stating that “in his experience, first
10 offenders who cooperated were less likely to go to jail than other defendants”).
11 Under these circumstances, we believe that Defendant could reasonably infer a
12 promise going to the crime confessed based on the officers’ statements during the
13 interview. See Munoz, 1998-NMSC-048, ¶ 34 (stating that an implied promise of
14 leniency occurs when the accused could reasonably have inferred a promise going to
15 the punishment for the crime to be confessed).
16 Voluntariness
17 {12} We next turn to the overall question of voluntariness. See Gutierrez,
18 2011-NMSC-024, ¶ 25 (stating that “evidence of an implied promise is only a factor
19 in the totality of the circumstances that courts consider in determining whether a
9
1 confession is voluntary”). “On a claim that police coerced a statement, the
2 prosecution bears the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that a
3 defendant’s statement was voluntary.” Evans, 2009-NMSC-027, ¶ 34. “[W]e review
4 the entire record and the circumstances under which the statement or confession was
5 made in order to make an independent determination of whether a defendant’s
6 confession was voluntary.” State v. Fekete, 1995-NMSC-049, ¶ 34, 120 N.M. 290,
7 901 P.2d 708. “[T]he preponderance of the evidence must establish that the
8 confession was not ‘extracted from an accused through fear, coercion, hope of
9 reward, or other improper inducements.’” State v. Cooper, 1997-NMSC-058, ¶ 30,
10 124 N.M. 277, 949 P.2d 660 (quoting State v. Turnbow, 1960-NMSC-081, ¶ 41, 67
11 N.M. 241, 354 P.2d 533).
12 {13} Again, our review of the transcript of the interview supports the district court’s
13 ruling. As the district court found, there were a multitude of implied promises of
14 leniency that started at the outset of the interview and continued throughout,
15 constituting coercive police overreaching. We also find it significant that prior to
16 making both the oral and written statements at issue, Defendant indicated that he was
17 acting in an effort to avoid prison. See Munoz, 1998-NMSC-048, ¶ 21 (stating that
18 “[f]or the confession to be involuntary, there must be an ‘essential link between
19 coercive activity of the State . . . and a resulting confession by a defendant’”
10
1 (omission in original)). Before writing the apology letter at the request of the
2 officers, Defendant said: “I’ll do anything to avoid jail cuz [sic] I don’t wanna [sic]
3 to miss out on my daughter[’]s life.” Also, while making statements purporting to
4 remember the events of the evening, Defendant repeatedly said that his motivation
5 was to avoid jail: “I’m trying to remember because I really don’t want to go to jail or
6 anything else . . . . I’m trying to remember because I wanna [sic] be able to just put
7 this behind me and just move on.” “I’m trying to remember but it’s . . . like I will do
8 anything it takes to avoid jail time.” “I’m just trying to remember so I don’t . . . I just
9 . . . you know, I don’t wanna [sic] to go to jail.” See State v. Watson,
10 1971-NMCA-104, ¶ 11, 82 N.M. 769, 487 P.2d 197 (stating that “[i]f the accused
11 confesses because he was induced by the promise that his punishment will not be so
12 severe as it otherwise might be, the confession is not admissible because it was not
13 voluntary”); cf. Gutierrez, 2011-NMSC-024, ¶ 28 (rejecting the argument that a
14 confession was obtained through promises of leniency where the suspect indicated
15 that he did not expect leniency upon confession).
16 {14} The State points to the fact that Defendant came voluntarily to the police
17 station, was informed that he was free to leave, and did not appear sleepy, nervous,
18 or intoxicated to the officers. The State also notes that the officers reminded
19 Defendant that they personally would not be making the charging decision. However,
11
1 while these factors may weigh in favor of voluntariness to some extent, based on the
2 totality of the circumstances, we agree with the district court that they are insufficient
3 to outweigh the coercive effect of the numerous implied promises of leniency made
4 to Defendant by the officers throughout the interview. See Barr, 2009-NMSC-024,
5 ¶ 24 (stating that a confession is coerced when the defendant’s will is overborne and
6 his capacity for self-determination is critically impaired). We therefore agree with
7 the district court the State did not meet its burden to show that the statements were
8 voluntary by a preponderance of the evidence, and we affirm its order suppressing the
9 statements. See Evans, 2009-NMSC-027, ¶ 34 (stating that the State’s failure to make
10 such a showing requires a ruling that the confession was involuntary as a matter of
11 law).
12 CONCLUSION
13 {15} The order of the district court is affirmed.
14 {16} IT IS SO ORDERED.
15 ______________________________
16 MICHAEL E. VIGIL, Judge
12
1 WE CONCUR:
2 ___________________________________
3 JAMES J. WECHSLER, Judge
4 ___________________________________
5 MICHAEL D. BUSTAMANTE, Judge
13