dissenting. Because I do not agree that the single question asked of the juvenile by the arresting officer concerning new suspicious conduct she committed after being arrested and brought to the police station constitutes custodial interrogation within the meaning of Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966), I would reverse the trial court’s ruling granting her motion to suppress her statement. Therefore, I respectfully dissent.
I
.1 do not dispute the facts as recited by the majority, but add some details drawn from the testimony at the adjudicatory hearing and at the suppression hearing. Such details help in understanding the precise context in which the question was asked and the answer given, which is important to a resolution of the propriety of the police action. The arresting officer, Eric Pappalardo, was called to the Rockingham Mall at approximately 4:30 p.m. on May 28, 2011, to respond to an incident of shoplifting. Upon arrival, Pappalardo spoke with a mall security officer as well as a representative of Claire’s Store, who showed him merchandise from the store that had been recovered from the juvenile when she was detained. Pappalardo then placed the juvenile under arrest, handcuffed her, and transported her to the Salem Police Department. There is no evidence indicating that at the time of the arrest the juvenile was searched, frisked, interrogated, or advised of her Miranda Tights. During the booking process at the police station and after her handcuffs had been removed, the juvenile asked if she could use the bathroom. Pappalardo allowed her to do so, and directed her to a toilet located in a row of cells adjacent to the booking room. Although *350the perimeter of the combined cellblock and booking room area was secured, so that the juvenile could not leave this area, the door between the booking room and the cellblock was open, as was the door to the cell the juvenile entered to use the toilet. Pappalardo did not accompany the juvenile into the cell; rather, he returned to the booking room, from which he could not see the cell that the juvenile entered.
The. cellblock area of the police department is monitored by video cameras. While the juvenile was in the cell, Lieutenant Peddle, who was in his office, observed on the video monitor that the juvenile appeared to flush the toilet without having used it. Peddle immediately went to the booking room and informed Pappalardo about what he had observed, indicating that it looked like the juvenile had flushed something down the toilet. When the juvenile returned, Pappalardo asked her, without first advising her of her Miranda rights, what she had flushed down the toilet. The juvenile responded that she had flushed a necklace that she had taken and had concealed in her pants.
II
Before turning to the specific issue before us, I believe it helpful to review generally the circumstances in which the prophylactic protections of Miranda have been held not to come into play. The majority correctly observes that two basic conditions must be met before Miranda warnings are required: (1) custody and (2) interrogation. See Miranda, 348 U.S. at 478. But as both United States Supreme Court and our own case law make clear, for Miranda purposes “custody” and “interrogation” have become terms of art with specialized meanings more limited than common usage or the dictionary definitions of the terms would indicate. See Howes v. Fields, 132 S. Ct. 1181, 1189 (2012) (“As used in our Miranda case law, ‘custody’ is a term of art that specifies circumstances that are thought generally to present a serious danger of coercion.”). For example, a person who has been “seized” by the police during ,a Terry1 stop might, in common understanding, be thought to be in custody because the person has been restrained by the police and is not free to leave. But the law is very clear that such a person is not in custody for Miranda purposes. See State v. Turmel, 150 N.H. 377, 383 (2003). Because police must have reasonable suspicion to believe that the person has engaged, is engaging, or is about to engage in criminal activity as a prerequisite to effectuating a Terry stop, see id. at 380, there is reason to believe that the person may provide self-incriminating responses when the officer makes inquiry regarding such activity. Notwithstanding that the person’s response may confirm a police *351officer’s suspicions, the officer is entitled to ask a “moderate number of questions” during the stop without advising the suspect of his or her Miranda rights. Id. at 383. The Terry doctrine is completely consistent with that portion of the Supreme Court’s earlier decision in Miranda, in which it stated that “[g]eneral on-the-scene questioning as to facts surrounding a crime or other general questioning of citizens in the fact-finding process is not affected by our holding.” Miranda, 384 U.S. at 477.
Courts also have recognized several other circumstances in which Miranda does not apply even though a suspect is unquestionably in the custody of police or correctional authorities and is subjected to interrogation, i.e., is asked questions, by such authorities. In New York v. Quarles, 467 U.S. 649 (1984), the Supreme Court recognized a public safety exception to Miranda, holding that “the doctrinal underpinnings of Miranda [do not] require that it be applied in all its rigor to a situation in which police officers ask questions reasonably prompted by a concern for the public safety.” Quarles, 467 U.S. at 656.
In Pennsylvania v. Muniz, 496 U.S. 582 (1990), a four-justice plurality of the Court recognized a “routine booking question exception” that “exempts from Miranda’s coverage questions to secure the ‘biographical data necessary to complete booking or pretrial services.’ ” Muniz, 496 U.S. at 601. Although rejecting Pennsylvania’s assertion that the booking questions should not be regarded as custodial interrogation because they were “not intended to elicit information for investigatory purposes,” id., the plurality concluded that “the questions fall outside the protections of Miranda” because they were “reasonably related to the police’s administrative concerns.” Muniz, 496 U.S. at 601-02. Muniz is consistent with the Court’s earlier decision in Rhode Island v. Innis, 446 U.S. 291 (1980), in which it held that “‘interrogation’ under Miranda refers not only to express questioning, but also to any words or actions on the part of the police (other than those normally attendant to arrest and custody) that the police should know are reasonably likely to elicit an incriminating response from the suspect.” Innis, 446 U.S. at 301 (emphasis added; footnotes omitted);2 see also South Dakota v. Neville, 459 U.S. 553, 564 n.15 (1983) *352(“In the context of an arrest for driving while intoxicated, a police inquiry of whether the suspect will take a blood-alcohol test is not an interrogation within the meaning of Miranda.”); United States v. Woods, 711 F.3d 737, 741 (6th Cir. 2013) (holding that police officer’s question to arrested subject about contents of his pockets did not constitute custodial interrogation requiring Miranda warnings; “[t]o say that [the police officer] had the right to physically go through Woods’s pockets but could not simply ask him ‘What is in your pocket?’ would be illogical”).
In Illinois v. Perkins, 496 U.S. 292 (1990), the Court held that Miranda did not apply to a situation in which an undercover government agent was placed in the cellblock of a suspect who had been incarcerated for two days* *3 while awaiting trial, and engaged him in conversation designed to elicit the suspect’s involvement in an unrelated murder. Perkins, 496 U.S. at 300. The Court
rejected] the argument that Miranda warnings are required whenever a suspect is in custody in a technical sense and converses with someone who happens to be a government agent. Questioning by captors, who appear to control the suspect’s fate, may create mutually reinforcing pressures that the Court has assumed will weaken the suspect’s will, but where a suspect does not know that he is conversing with a government agent, these pressures do not exist.
Id. at 297. The Court distinguished Perkins from Mathis v. United States, 391 U.S. 1 (1968), in which it had held that an incarcerated person must be given Miranda warnings even if the questioning relates to an offense unrelated to the basis for incarceration, on the ground that in Mathis the suspect knew his interrogator was a government agent. Perkins, 496 U.S. at 299. Significantly, however, the Court also added: “The bare fact of custody may not in every instance require a warning even when the suspect is aware that he is speaking to an official, but we do not have occasion to explore that issue here.” Id. (emphasis added).
Yet another circumstance in which Miranda has been held not automatically applicable despite the fact that both custody and interrogation in a generic sense clearly exist, involves the questioning of persons who are *353incarcerated in a jail or prison about conduct other than that on which the incarceration is based. Although Mathis established the rule that a person who is otherwise in custody must be given Miranda warnings even if he is questioned about a subject unrelated to the reason for his incarceration and even if there is no criminal investigation pending when the questioning occurs, it did not address the core question of whether incarceration itself is sufficient to constitute custody. See Fields, 132 S. Ct. at 1188. Answering the question left open in Mathis and Perkins, the Court made it clear in its later decisions in Maryland v. Shatzer, 559 U.S. 98 (2010), and Fields, that “service of a term of imprisonment, without more, is not enough to constitute Miranda custody.” Fields, 132 S. Ct. at 1191; see also State v. Dorval, 144 N.H. 455, 455-56,457 (1999) (holding that defendant was not in custody for Miranda purposes when questioned by police about unrelated offense while serving a sixty-day sentence for parole violation). Although Shatzer and Fields involved individuals who were serving sentences, both this and other courts have applied the rule that incarceration does not automatically equal custody for Miranda purposes even when the person questioned was not serving a sentence, but, rather, was being held in jail or prison awaiting trial. See United States v. Ellison, 632 F.3d 727, 730 (1st Cir. 2010); State v. Ford, 144 N.H. 57, 59, 64 (1999); State v. Pehowic, 147 N.H. 52, 53, 55 (2001).
Finally, courts have recognized a “new crime” exception to Miranda. Under this exception, a statement made by a person who is under arrest and is subject to questioning not preceded by Miranda warnings is admissible as evidence if the statement itself constitutes a new crime. See State v. Tucker, 145 N.H. 723, 726-27 (2001); accord United States v. Paskett, 950 F.2d 705, 707-08 (11th Cir. 1992); United States v. Kirk, 528 F.2d 1057, 1062 (5th Cir. 1976) (“[N]o fifth amendment problem is presented when a statement is admitted into evidence which is not confessional in nature, but in and of itself constitutes the crime charged”).
Application of the Miranda rule is not a cost free exercise. As a prophylactic rule, it by definition excludes from evidence some statements that are made freely and voluntarily. And of course, “Voluntary confessions are not merely a proper element in law enforcement, they are an unmitigated good, essential to society’s compelling interest in finding, convicting, and punishing those who violate the law.” Shatzer, 559 U.S. at 108 (quotations and citations omitted). Collectively, the cases discussed above demonstrate a variety of circumstances in which, for one reason or another, courts have found that the costs of applying Miranda are too high. As explained below, this case fits comfortably within the Miranda exception recognized in Cervantes v. Walker, 589 F.2d 424 (9th Cir. 1978), and its *354progeny for on-the-scene questioning of incarcerated individuals regarding suspected ongoing or recently-committed suspicious activity within the place of confinement.
Ill
The majority’s conclusion that the defendant was in custody for Miranda purposes when Pappalardo asked her what she had flushed down the toilet is based primarily on its determination that this case is distinguishable from Fields. In particular, the majority focuses on the fact that, unlike the defendant in Fields, who was already serving a prison sentence at the time he was questioned and thus did not experience the shock and sudden isolation that normally accompanies an arrest, the juvenile here was still subject to these coercive pressures because the questioning took place shortly after she was arrested and “whisked away” to the police station. The majority also relies on the fact that this case involves a minor who may be more likely than an adult to feel coercive pressure as a result of police questioning. See J.D.B. v. North Carolina, 131 S. Ct. 2394, 2403 (2011). I acknowledge that this case is distinguishable from Fields both in terms of the temporal proximity between the juvenile’s removal from the community (by arrest) and the questioning at issue, and because of her status as a minor, and that both of these factors weigh in favor of a finding that she was in custody for the purposes of Miranda. But, in my view, these factors are outweighed by a number of countervailing considerations that persuade me that what occurred here did not amount to custodial interrogation within the meaning of Miranda.4
As the Court makes clear in Fields, the seminal question for purposes of determining Miranda custody is not simply the degree to which a person’s *355freedom of movement has been restricted, but “whether the relevant environment presents the same inherently coercive pressures as the type of station house questioning at issue in Miranda!’ Fields, 132 S. Ct. at 1190 (emphasis added). To determine whether such Miranda-like coercive pressures exist, a court must examine all the relevant circumstances, not just the age of the arrestee and the time interval between the arrest and the questioning. Among the other factors that are relevant to the determination of Miranda custody are the location of the questioning, its duration, the language used in summoning the person, statements made during the interview, the presence or absence of physical'restraints, and the release of the interviewee at the end of the questioning. See id. at 1189, 1192.
As noted above, in Miranda, the Supreme Court explicitly excepted from the prophylactic warnings requirement “[g]eneral on-the-scene questioning as to facts surrounding a crime.” Miranda, 384 U.S. at 477. Relying on this exception, a substantial body of case law has developed which holds that warnings need not precede general questioning of this type even when the crime scene is a jail, prison, or detention facility and the person questioned is being held there for an earlier offense. The seminal case on point is Cervantes v. Walker, 589 F.2d 424 (9th Cir. 1978). In that case, the defendant was an inmate at a county jail. While he was being moved to a new cell, a prison officer searched his belongings and found a matchbox containing what looked like marijuana. Cervantes, 589 F.2d at 426-27. Without administering Miranda warnings, the officer asked, “What’s this?” The defendant replied, “That’s grass, man.” Id. at 427. Relying on Mathis, the defendant argued that because he was incarcerated at the time of questioning, his Miranda rights had been violated. The court disagreed, writing:
To interpret Mathis as Cervantes urges would, in effect, create a per se rule that any investigatory questioning inside a prison requires Miranda warnings. Such a rule could totally disrupt prison administration. Miranda certainly does not dictate such a consequence. . . .
Adoption of Cervantes’ contention would not only be inconsistent with Miranda but would torture it to the illogical position of providing greater protection to a prisoner than to his nonimprisoned counterpart. We cannot believe the Supreme Court intended such a result.
Id.
The court went on to hold that for a prisoner to be considered in custody for Miranda purposes, there must be “a change in the surroundings of the prisoner which results in an added imposition on his freedom of move*356ment”; that is, “some act which places further limitations on the prisoner.” Id. at 428. Applying this standard, the court relied on the following circumstances in concluding that the defendant had not been subjected to custodial interrogation within the meaning of Miranda:
The marijuana was uncovered in the course of a routine search. [The officer’s] question sought to ascertain the nature of the substance. The questioning took place in the prison library and appears to have been a spontaneous reaction to the discovery. Under these circumstances, we also conclude that neither the prison setting nor the presence of [the two officers] exerted a pressure to detain sufficient to have caused a reasonable person to believe his freedom of movement had been further diminished. Rather, this was an instance of on-the-scene questioning enabling [the officer] to determine whether a crime was in progress.
Id. at 429.
Cervantes has been followed by other state and federal courts, see Garcia v. Singletary, 13 F.3d 1487, 1491-92 (11th Cir. 1994); United States v. Conley, 779 F.2d 970, 972-74 (4th Cir. 1985); United States v. Scalf, 725 F.2d 1272, 1276 (10th Cir. 1984); Herrera v. State, 241 S.W.3d 520, 527-33 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007), and its reasoning essentially formed the basis for the “additional limitations” test we employed in Ford. See Ford, 144 N.H. at 63-64.
Courts also have routinely applied the Cervantes rationale to cases involving juveniles who are questioned about ongoing or recently-occurring offenses committed while they are incarcerated on other charges. For example, in In re D.F., 951 N.E.2d 99 (Ohio Ct. App. 2011), residents in a juvenile detention facility were lined up when a pen (a potential weapon) was discovered missing. In re D.F., 951 N.E.2d at 100-01. The appellant volunteered that another resident had taken the pen and flushed it down the toilet. Id. at 101. Questioning of the other resident revealed that he had possession of a pill that had been dispensed by the staff to the appellant. Id. When the appellant was then asked, without benefit of Miranda warnings, how the other resident came to possess the pill, he admitted that he had “cheeked it” rather than consume it. Id. The court rejected the appellant’s claim that the questioning violated Miranda:
The encounter lasted only one to two minutes in appellant’s own cell. He was not handcuffed, searched, or removed from the general facility population. This was an on-the-scene investigation of a missing potentially dangerous object and then a contemporaneous investigation of a drug offense by corrections officers in a *357prison setting. Under the totality of the circumstances, appellant’s freedom of movement was not imposed upon over and above the normal situation in the detention facility environment. Therefore, Miranda warnings were unnecessary.
Id. at 103; see also In re Jacob R., No. 1 CA-JV 09-0143, 2010 WL 1729881,. at *3 (Ariz. Ct. App. Apr. 29, 2010); In re JOE L., No. B180443, 2006 WL 696693, at *2-3 (Cal. Ct. App. Mar. 21, 2006).
The majority asserts that “the State has not cited, nor have we found, any case in which a court has allowed ‘on-the-scene questioning’ of a suspect who is already in custody for Miranda purposes.” Ante at 347. This assertion is unpersuasive because it assumes the very point at issue. The question in Cervantes and all the eases that follow it was whether the person was in fact in custody for Miranda purposes. In each of those cases, the defendant contended that he was in custody because he was incarcerated, and therefore, not free to leave. In each case, the court rejected the argument because the circumstances of the questioning did not present sufficient additional indicia of coercive pressures beyond the baseline inherent in incarceration itself. That is the same point at issue here — whether, despite being incarcerated at the police station, the defendant was in custody for Miranda purposes when questioned by Officer Pappalardo. Merely because the majority chooses not to apply the reasoning of these cases to the circumstances presented here does not mean that the cases can simply be ignored.
This case is distinguishable from Fields in two crucial respects that the majority fails to recognize. First, unlike this case, Fields did not involve questioning about recently-committed suspicious conduct occurring at the place of incarceration after the suspect was jailed for other reasons. On the contrary, in Fields, the defendant was questioned about alleged sexual assaults that occurred before he began serving his sentence. Fields, 132 S. Ct. at 1185. Second, unlike the single question asked of the juvenile here, Fields was questioned by the sheriffs deputies for five to seven hours. Id. at 1186. In short, the facts and circumstances of Fields are such that no one could seriously contend that the questioning there at issue was justified under Miranda’s on-the-scene questioning rubric. By contrast, in this case, Pappalardo’s “what did you just flush” inquiry that immediately followed the juvenile’s return from the toilet constitutes a prototypical example of the type of crime-scene questioning that Miranda and its progeny hold need not be preceded by warnings.
*358The above distinctions between this case and Fields are significant because, as Miranda, Terry,5 the Cervantes-Ford line of cases, and cases such as Wolff v. McDonnell, 418 U.S. 539 (1974), recognize, law enforcement and correctional authorities have an especially strong interest both in being able to respond quickly to emergent criminal activity and in maintaining the integrity of facilities that house those held for or convicted of violating the criminal law. The majority’s refusal to employ the Cervantes-Ford analysis to this case produces the strange result that, by timing the commission of her new crime sufficiently close to her arrest that she may claim to be still subject to the coercive pressures of that event, the juvenile is able to preclude the police from conducting the normal on-the-scene questioning they would typically be able to employ in investigating a new crime. As the State aptly observes, if upon his arrival at the mall but prior to placing the juvenile under arrest, Officer Pappalardo had observed her attempting to discard the stolen jewelry, Terry unquestionably would have permitted him to ask her what she was doing without advising her of her Miranda rights. By the same token, under the majority’s reasoning, if the juvenile’s mother had not been available to pick her up and she instead had been transferred to a detention facility or detained at the police station for a sufficient period of time to have “settled in” to her new environment before she attempted to' discard the jewelry, she also presumably could have been asked about what she was doing without Miranda warnings. See Ford, 144 N.H. at 63. Like Goldilocks’s third bowl of porridge, however, the majority finds the juvenile’s timing to be “just right” to preclude application of the Miranda exception for on-the-scene questioning. I see no justification for this odd outcome, which expands the scope of Miranda beyond its doctrinal underpinnings, and permits the juvenile, through the timing of her own bad behavior, to effectively create an “on-the-scene-questioning-free-zone” that precludes the police from employing what would otherwise be standard police crime-scene procedures.
Far from being cowed by the “shock and awe” of arrest, as the majority hypothesizes, the juvenile’s actions objectively demonstrate that she was so unfazed by her arrest that, virtually without losing a beat, she promptly set about committing a new crime after arriving at the police station. Under the Cervantes-Ford rationale, which I believe should control our analysis, Officer Pappalardo was permitted to question the juvenile about the suspicious activity Lieutenant Peddle had just observed on the surveillance camera without administering Miranda warnings, provided that the cir*359cumstances of the questioning did not impose significant additional limitations beyond those inherent in her status as a person held under incarceration. The facts here easily satisfy this standard. The juvenile proceeded to and from the cellblock toilet on her own, unaccompanied by officers. She was not handcuffed at the time. Although the circumference of the booking room and cellblock area was secure, the door between the two was open and the individual cells were not locked, meaning that the open area to which the juvenile had access appears to have been far larger than, say, a typical interview room. When the juvenile emerged from the cellblock, Pappalardo did not physically restrain her or engage in any other threatening words or conduct. Rather, he simply approached her and asked a single question — “What did you flush down the toilet?” Upon admitting that she had flushed a necklace that she had taken and concealed in her pants, she was not asked any further questions, and simply remained in detention at the police station until her mother picked her up.
Despite the fact that the trial court made no finding on this point, the majority opines that the State is incorrect in asserting that the question asked by Pappalardo was “not about the shoplifting offense for which [the juvenile] was arrested,” ante at 344, and it later asserts that “[t]he pointed question in this case, asking the juvenile what she had flushed down the toilet, ‘was not benign.’ ” Ante at 347-348. If what the majority means by these statements is that, given the nature of the charge for which the juvenile had been arrested (shoplifting), Pappalardo might reasonably have anticipated that one possible answer to his question would be that the juvenile had sought to dispose of evidence of the crime, I do not disagree that such an answer was one of many reasonable possibilities. But as discussed earlier, even police officers questioning a suspect whose freedom has been curtailed from that which existed immediately before he is subjected to a Terry stop may ask questions that, by definition, may reasonably confirm (as well as dispel) the officer’s suspicions. There is no reason for a different result where, as here, the juvenile’s freedom at the time of Pappalardo’s question was not further curtailed from that which already existed as a result of her arrest and detention at the police station. Moreover, as Pappalardo explained at the suppression hearing, “he wasn’t sure if it was evidence or drugs or what it was” that she had flushed. It just as plausibly could have been some other small object that could be used as a weapon or that potentially could have interfered with the proper operation of the toilet. The important point is that, irrespective of these various possibilities, the circumstances were sufficiently suggestive of new criminal conduct beyond that for which the juvenile had already been arrested to justify on-the-scene questioning regarding such conduct. It might be the case that, once the juvenile’s answer clearly established the connection between the new *360crime and the one for which she had been arrested, further questioning about the related matters would no longer be justified without administering Miranda warnings, but we are not faced with that issue here because Pappalardo asked no further questions.
The two Minnesota federal court cases on which the majority relies are readily distinguishable from this case, and one of them actually supports my conclusion that the questioning in this case did not involve custodial interrogation. United States v. Stately, Criminal No. 13-280(1) (DWF/LIB), 2014 WL 668167 (D. Minn. Feb. 20, 2014), is inapposite in that it did not involve a situation in which, after being arrested or incarcerated for a crime, the defendant then committed a new offense. Thus, the additional limitations test was simply not implicated in that case. Nonetheless, the court’s conclusion that the defendant in Stately was in Miranda custody merely because he had been handcuffed, placed in a police cruiser, and advised that he was being detained is questionable. See State v. Reid, 135 N.H. 376, 381-82 (1992) (defendant who was frisked, handcuffed, and placed in police cruiser was seized but not arrested prior to arrival of another officer who identified him).
In United States v. Thomas, Crim. No. 12-128 (MJD/JJK), 2012 WL 6812536 (D. Minn. Dec. 19,2012), the defendant was suspected of assaulting a fellow inmate. In contrast to this case, Thomas was questioned by a corrections supervisor several minutes after the staff had gained control of the situation and while she was handcuffed and physically held from behind by the officer as she was escorted to a special area of the prison where inmates are segregated from the general population. Thomas, 2012 WL 6812536, at *1-3. The court found that these circumstances involved sufficient additional restrictions beyond those inherent in incarceration to constitute Miranda custody. Id. at *9. However, in an observation that is prescient of what the proper result should be in this case, the court observed: “This might be a different case if, upon reaching [the crime scene], Lieutenant Dern had excitedly blurted out What happened? What’s going on? What is that rope for?’ and Defendant made her statements then.” Id. The circumstances of this case are, I submit, far closer to those of the foregoing hypothetical than they are to the actual facts presented in Thomas, and consequently the outcome of that case should not control the result here.
Although the majority does not explicitly say as much, its holding effectively reads Fields as limiting the Cervantes-Ford line of cases so as to allow questioning of incarcerated persons without Miranda warnings only when such persons are sufficiently settled into incarceration that the putative upheaval of removal from the community has dissipated. I believe that this is far too broad a reading of Fields, given that: (1) the case dealt *361only with a sentenced prisoner; and (2) did not involve the situation of an on-going or recently-committed offense occurring within the place of confinement. Law enforcement and corrections authorities obviously have an interest in being able to respond quickly and decisively to emergent criminal conduct, especially that occurring in the often highly-charged environment of a prison or detention facility. That interest exceeds even the weighty governmental interests at stake in investigating past criminal conduct. Indeed, recognition of this interest is the very foundation of the Terry doctrine. Moreover, as noted previously, unlike sentenced prisoners, persons held in pretrial status may very well feel pressure to respond to police questioning in the hopes of securing release from detention or more favorable disposition of their pending charges, and this pressure may increase — not decrease — the longer the person is held. Minnick v. Mississippi, 498 U.S. 146, 153 (1990). Yet, this prospect has not prevented courts, including our own, from applying the additional limitations test to persons held in pretrial status. Thus, the majority’s broad reading of Fields is not only at odds with the Cervantes on-the-scene questioning rationale, but also calls into question the continuing validity of our decisions in Ford and Pehowic. In light of the completely different factual circumstances before the Court in Fields, the majority’s implication that that case must dictate the outcome here is unwarranted.
IV
Because what occurred here was nothing more than a single on-the-scene question about new suspicious conduct committed after the juvenile’s arrest and detention, and because the circumstances clearly demonstrate that the juvenile was not subjected to any additional restrictions beyond those inherent in her incarcerated status, I would find that the trial court erred in granting the motion to suppress. I, therefore, respectfully dissent.
Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1 (1968).
In Alford v. State, 358 S.W.3d 647 (Tex. Crim. App. 2012), the court observed the arguable tension between Muniz’s disallowance of booking questions that are “designed [by the police] to elicit incriminatory admissions,” Muniz, 496 U.S. at 602 n.14 (emphasis added), and the holding in Innis that interrogation for Miranda purposes includes “any words or actions on the part of the police (other than those normally attendant to arrest and custody) that the police should know are reasonably likely to elicit an incriminating response from the suspect.” Innis, 446 U.S. at 301 (emphasis added; footnotes omitted). After reviewing the divergent manner in which courts have interpreted the “booking questions” exception, see Alford, 358 S.W.3d at 656-59, the court held that the exception was to be applied based on an objective assessment of “whether, under the totality of the circumstances, a question is reasonably *352related to a legitimate administrative concern,” id. at 661, “regardless of whether police should know that such questions are reasonably likely to elicit incriminating information.” Id. at 660. The court did not reach the question of “whether there is any limitation to the booking exception when an officer’s actual intent was to elicit incriminating admissions through questions characterized by the officer as booking questions.” Id. at 660 n.27.
See Perkins, 496 U.S. at 304 (Marshall, J., dissenting) (reciting that Perkins had been in jail for two days prior to his interaction with the undercover agent).
The Fields Court also found that, unlike a person recently arrested, a sentenced prisoner: (1) would not feel “pressured to speak by the hope that, after doing so, he will be allowed to leave and go home” because “he knows that when the questioning ceases, he will remain under confinement”; and (2) “knows that the law enforcement officers who question him probably lack the authority to affect the duration of his sentence.” Fields, 132 S. Ct. at 1191. Although these may be valid distinctions between a prisoner serving a sentence and a person recently arrested, it is not at all clear that such distinctions exist between a person recently arrested and a person being held in jail awaiting trial. On the contrary, notwithstanding that a pretrial detainee may be held on charges different from those about which he is questioned by the police, he may well believe that cooperating with the police by answering them questions will assist him in securing pretrial release, reduced bail, and/or a more favorable disposition on the charges on which he is already being held. In short, the prospect that a detainee may be desirous of achieving a global settlement of all his difficulties with the law is hardly an unheal'd of phenomenon. See Ellison, 632 F.3d at 730. In fact, as the Court recognized in Minnick v. Mississippi, 498 U.S. 146 (1990), it is entirely possible that coercive pressures “may increase as custody is prolonged.” Minnick, 498 U.S. at 153. Nonetheless, the prospect that a pretrial detainee may experience such potentially coercive pressures has not led us to hold that such persons are per se in custody for Miranda purposes. See Ford, 144 N.H. at 59, 64; Pehowic, 147 N.H at 53, 55.
See Terry, 392 U.S. at 20 (“But we deal here with an entire rubric of police conduct — necessarily swift action predicated upon the on-the-spot observations of the officer on the beat — which historically has not been, and as a practical matter could not be, subjected to the warrant procedure.”).