United States v. Stewart, Timothy ( 2004 )


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  •                               In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    ____________
    No. 03-2377
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    TIMOTHY STEWART,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ____________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Indiana, Evansville Division.
    No. EV 01-32-CR-01-Y/H—Richard L. Young, Judge.
    ____________
    ARGUED SEPTEMBER 15, 2004—DECIDED NOVEMBER 9, 2004
    ____________
    Before EVANS, WILLIAMS, and SYKES, Circuit Judges.
    SYKES, Circuit Judge. Timothy Stewart was convicted by
    a jury of armed bank robbery and use of a firearm during a
    crime of violence. He confessed to these crimes, but argues
    that his confession should not have been admitted at trial
    because the police used a two-step interrogation process in
    which Miranda warnings were initially withheld, in
    violation of Miranda as applied in the Supreme Court’s
    recent decision in Missouri v. Seibert, ___ U.S. ___, 
    124 S.Ct. 2601
    , 
    159 L.Ed.2d 643
     (2004). He also claims the
    confession was involuntary in light of a promise of leniency
    made by the interrogating officer, and that his trial counsel
    2                                                  No. 03-2377
    was ineffective in not moving to suppress the confession as
    the fruit of an unlawful arrest. Finally, Stewart argues that
    his trial counsel was ineffective because she did not assert
    a Brady violation or seek a missing evidence instruction
    regarding the partial erasure of a surveillance videotape of
    the robbery.
    We reject Stewart’s various ineffective assistance of coun-
    sel claims and also affirm the district court’s conclusion that
    Stewart’s confession was not involuntary because of an
    improper police promise. On the present record, however,
    we cannot determine whether the admission of Stewart’s con-
    fession requires reversal under Seibert. We therefore remand
    for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    I. Background
    Ten days before Halloween 2001, the Old National Bank
    in Evansville, Indiana was robbed by a man dressed in
    black and wearing a skeleton mask. The robber entered the
    bank at about 9:30 a.m. carrying an SKS rifle and a duffel
    bag. He ordered everyone to the ground, leaped over the
    teller counter, pointed the rifle at one of the tellers, and told
    her to fill the duffel bag with money. As she did so, another
    teller activated the bank’s alarm. The robber escaped
    through the rear door of the bank, where he was seen by an
    emergency medical technician who had just parked her
    ambulance and was preparing to go into the bank. The
    technician saw the robber get into a white car and noticed
    a red mist billowing inside the car as it headed west away
    from the bank.
    The robber did not stay in the car very long. Evansville
    Police Officer Michael Sitzman, responding to a dispatch
    about the robbery, was in his squad car about a block from
    the bank when he observed a black man carrying a duffel
    bag and a rifle running from the bank. The man hid briefly
    behind a parked pickup truck before resuming his flight,
    No. 03-2377                                                  3
    scaling a fence, and disappearing from view. Sitzman did
    not get a look at the man’s face, but provided a general
    physical description to his dispatcher.
    About a half-hour after the robbery and roughly a mile
    south of the bank, Timothy Stewart unexpectedly appeared
    at a Subway sandwich shop where his sister-in-law Mary
    Kay Petitjean worked. Stewart asked Petitjean for a ride
    but did not tell her where he was going. Stewart told Petitjean
    to drive north in the direction of the bank. In the meantime,
    Evansville Police Corporal Timothy Nussmeier had estab-
    lished a perimeter a few blocks from the bank and was
    checking vehicles for a person matching Sitzman’s descrip-
    tion of the robbery suspect: a black male, about 5'7" tall, 145
    pounds, with short hair, and wearing blue coveralls. When
    Petitjean arrived at the perimeter checkpoint, Nussmeier
    directed her to pull over.
    Nussmeier observed that Stewart, seated in the front pas-
    senger seat, generally matched Sitzman’s description of the
    robbery suspect but was wearing a white shirt and blue
    pants. Nussmeier asked Stewart who he was, where he was
    coming from, and where he was headed. Stewart identified
    himself and told Nussmeier that he and Petitjean had driven
    from the Subway store and that he had walked to the Subway
    from 4000 Kathleen Avenue in order to get a ride from
    Petitjean. Nussmeier was familiar with both locations and
    knew that the Subway was some twenty-five to thirty
    blocks from 4000 Kathleen Avenue. Stewart could not give
    Nussmeier a specific destination, saying only that they were
    going “up here” or “up this road.”
    Nussmeier radioed for an eyewitness identification, and
    Officer Sitzman arrived at the perimeter checkpoint soon
    after. Because he had not seen the suspect’s face, Sitzman
    could not make a definite positive identification; but as to
    hairstyle and physical build, he said Stewart was “about a
    perfect match” with the suspect. Nussmeier radioed for the
    4                                                No. 03-2377
    assistance of Evansville detectives. He handcuffed Stewart
    and placed him in the back seat of his squad car where
    Stewart remained for five or ten minutes.
    At approximately 10:30 a.m, one hour after the robbery
    and some twenty minutes after Petitjean’s car had been
    stopped, Evansville Detectives Dan Winters and Larry Nelson
    arrived at the checkpoint. Winters removed Stewart from
    Nussmeier’s car and uncuffed him. Unprompted, Stewart
    said, “Let’s get in your car.” Stewart got into the back seat
    of Winters’ car and Winters got in the front seat. Stewart
    then told Winters to “drive” and to “take me downtown.”
    Winters asked him why; Stewart responded, “Well, you’re
    going to arrest me anyway.” Winters asked, “Why, are you
    the bank robber?” Stewart answered “no.”
    Meanwhile, back at the bank, the white getaway car was
    found in an alley just west of the bank, driver’s door open,
    keys in the ignition, and a red dye stain in the front pas-
    senger side. A cell phone was found on the ground about
    fifteen to twenty feet from the car. About five or ten minutes
    after Stewart entered Winters’ car, information was relayed
    to the officers at the perimeter checkpoint that the cell phone
    recovered near the scene of the crime belonged to one
    Timothy Stewart of 4000 Kathleen Avenue. Winters then
    removed Stewart from the car, handcuffed him, and re-
    turned him to the back seat. Stewart was not told he was
    under arrest and no Miranda warnings were given, although
    the parties now agree that at this point Stewart was under
    arrest.
    Detectives Nelson and Winters left the checkpoint with
    Stewart at about 10:40 a.m. During the five-minute drive to
    the police station, the detectives questioned Stewart about
    the robbery. Stewart denied any involvement. When they
    arrived at the station, Stewart was placed in an interview
    room and the handcuffs were removed. Nelson and Winters
    No. 03-2377                                                    5
    again asked Stewart if he was involved in the robbery.
    Stewart continued to deny involvement, but asked the de-
    tectives if he would be charged if he told them who had
    committed the robbery. Nelson told Stewart that he would
    be “all right” as long as he had no direct involvement in the
    robbery himself. Stewart then told the detectives that a
    man named Duel Felders committed the robbery and that
    he had provided Felders with the gun and the getaway car.
    The detectives advised Stewart that his cell phone had been
    recovered; Stewart said Felders had used his phone and
    must have left it in the car.
    About five or ten minutes into the station-house inter-
    view, Winters left the room and Nelson and Stewart were
    joined by FBI Special Agents Martin Williams and James
    Beck. Shortly thereafter, Stewart broke down in tears and
    admitted to committing the robbery alone. At that point
    Nelson advised Stewart of his rights under Miranda.1 At
    11:05 a.m. Stewart signed a waiver of rights form. The ques-
    tioning then continued for over an hour, and Stewart ulti-
    mately agreed to make a tape-recorded statement.
    Stewart’s tape-recorded statement began at 12:10 p.m.
    and ended at 12:38 p.m. During this statement, Stewart was
    occasionally asked about admissions made and information
    provided earlier in the interrogation. For example, early on
    in the recorded statement, Nelson asked Stewart, “You have
    admitted to committing that robbery, is that correct,” and
    Stewart answered “yes.” Also, referring to Stewart’s admis-
    sion that he stole the getaway car from a car dealership,
    Nelson asked Stewart, “You had told us that you had test
    drove that car,” and Stewart answered “yes.” It is not clear
    from the record whether these references to earlier admissions
    1
    Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
    , 
    86 S.Ct. 1602
    , 
    16 L.Ed.2d 694
    (1966).
    6                                                No. 03-2377
    pertain to Stewart’s pre-Miranda or post-Miranda state-
    ments to police.
    Stewart’s trial counsel moved to suppress Stewart’s con-
    fession, arguing that it was involuntary because he was
    intoxicated and because the police promised him leniency if
    he cooperated in the investigation. Although Stewart
    testified at the suppression hearing that “the FBI guy” told
    him that he “wouldn’t be charged with the gun [offense]” if
    he cooperated, Agent Williams testified that no such rep-
    resentations or promises of any sort were made. Stewart
    also testified that he had consumed twelve ounces of Crown
    Royal that morning, but the officers said he showed no signs
    of intoxication. The district court found that there was no
    credible evidence of intoxication or promises of leniency and
    concluded that Stewart’s statements to police following his
    Miranda waiver were voluntary and admissible.
    Stewart’s taped confession was admitted in evidence and
    played for the jury during trial. Near the close of the govern-
    ment’s case in chief, Stewart’s attorney advised the district
    court that a bank surveillance videotape of the robbery had
    been partially erased by the prosecutor. Although the vid-
    eotape was listed on the government’s exhibit list, the
    prosecutor announced his intention not to offer it in evidence,
    and rested his case. Stewart’s attorney said she wanted the
    videotape admitted, but would like an opportunity to confer
    with Stewart first. A recess was taken, and when court
    reconvened, Stewart’s attorney announced that the defense
    would rest without introducing any evidence. She did not
    request an evidentiary hearing to determine how the
    videotape was partially erased, nor did she request a mis-
    sing evidence jury instruction. The jury returned a guilty
    verdict on both counts, and Stewart was sentenced to 159
    months in prison.
    No. 03-2377                                                 7
    II. Discussion
    A. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
    Stewart argues that he was arrested without probable
    cause and that his trial attorney was ineffective in not
    moving to suppress his confession as the poisonous fruit of
    his unlawful seizure. He also argues that counsel was inef-
    fective in failing to move for a Brady hearing or request a
    missing evidence instruction regarding the partially erased
    videotape.
    Sixth Amendment ineffective assistance of counsel claims
    are often raised collaterally in a petition under 
    28 U.S.C. § 2255
     to allow for supplementation of the record with evi-
    dence pertinent to the asserted attorney error. Galbraith v.
    United States, 
    313 F.3d 1001
    , 1007-08 (7th Cir. 2002);
    McCleese v. United States, 
    75 F.3d 1174
    , 1178 (7th Cir. 1996).
    However, where a defendant confines his claim to the exist-
    ing record and is represented by different counsel on appeal,
    an ineffective assistance of counsel argument is proper on
    direct appeal. McCleese, 
    75 F.3d at 1178
    . That is the case
    here.
    A defendant claiming that his counsel was constitutionally
    ineffective is up against a strong presumption that counsel
    provided adequate assistance and exercised reasonable
    professional judgment. Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 690, 
    104 S.Ct. 2052
    , 2065-66, 
    80 L.Ed.2d 674
     (1984);
    United States v. Pergler, 
    233 F.3d 1005
    , 1009 (7th Cir. 2000).
    The familiar Strickland test requires Stewart to show that
    his attorney’s performance was deficient and that the de-
    ficient performance was prejudicial. Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 690-91
    ; Floyd v. Hanks, 
    364 F.3d 847
    , 850 (7th Cir. 2004).
    1. Fourth Amendment violation
    To satisfy the Strickland test where the asserted attorney
    error is a defaulted Fourth Amendment claim, a defendant
    must first prove that the Fourth Amendment claim is mer-
    8                                                No. 03-2377
    itorious. United States v. Jackson, 
    103 F.3d 561
    , 573 (7th Cir.
    1996). Stewart concedes that his initial stop was justified by
    reasonable suspicion under Terry v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
    , 21, 
    88 S.Ct. 1868
    , 
    20 L.Ed.2d 889
     (1968), and also does not chal-
    lenge his brief detention while Corporal Nussmeier waited
    for an eyewitness identification. He argues that once Officer
    Sitzman arrived and failed to positively identify him, the
    basis for his continued detention was eliminated.
    We disagree. The initial suspicion did not dissipate upon
    Sitzman’s arrival at the checkpoint. Stewart matched the
    suspect’s general description, was stopped within a few
    blocks of the crime scene, and had only a vague explanation
    for where he was going. It is true that Sitzman could not
    make a completely positive identification because he had not
    seen the suspect’s face. But Sitzman declared that Stewart
    was “about a perfect match” with the suspect’s hairstyle
    and physical build. This heightened rather than eliminated
    the initial suspicion, justifying Stewart’s continued brief de-
    tention while detectives were summoned.
    Stewart also argues that the level of suspicion did not jus-
    tify the amount of restraint used when Nussmeier hand-
    cuffed him and placed him in the back seat of his squad, an
    act which Stewart claims transformed the Terry stop into a
    formal arrest. By the time Detective Winters arrived and
    removed the handcuffs, Stewart had been detained in
    Nussmeier’s squad for about ten minutes.
    The fault line between an investigative detention and an
    arrest is flexible and highly fact-intensive: “Given the ‘end-
    less variations in the facts and circumstances,’ there is no
    ‘litmus-paper test for determining when a seizure exceeds
    the bounds of an investigative stop’ and becomes an arrest.”
    United States v. Tilmon, 
    19 F.3d 1221
    , 1224 (7th Cir. 1994)
    (quoting Florida v. Royer, 
    460 U.S. 491
    , 506, 
    103 S.Ct. 1319
    ,
    1329, 
    75 L.Ed.2d 229
     (1983)). “[T]he crux of our inquiry is
    whether the nature of the restraint imposed meets the Fourth
    No. 03-2377                                                9
    Amendment’s standard of objective reasonableness.” United
    States v. Vega, 
    72 F.3d 507
    , 515 (7th Cir. 1995). The permis-
    sible scope of a Terry stop has expanded in recent years to
    include the use of handcuffs and temporary detentions in
    squad cars. Id.; Tilmon, 
    19 F.3d at 1224-25
    .
    In Vega we held that a Terry stop did not become an arrest
    when officers drew their weapons and detained a suspect in
    a squad car for over an hour. Vega, 
    72 F.3d at 515
    . We
    noted that the officers believed the suspect was dangerous
    and that the circumstances of the case—which involved
    a “massive” cocaine conspiracy—made the duration and
    manner of the stop reasonable. 
    Id.
     Similarly, in Tilmon we
    affirmed the reasonableness of a stop of an armed bank
    robbery suspect in which officers completely surrounded the
    suspect’s car and drew their guns. Tilmon, 
    19 F.3d at 1226
    .
    Common to both Vega and Tilmon was our recognition of
    the officers’ reasonable belief that the suspect was poten-
    tially dangerous. “To require an officer to risk his life in
    order to make an investigatory stop would run contrary to
    the intent of Terry v. Ohio.” 
    Id. at 1226
     (quoting United
    States v. Maslanka, 
    501 F.2d 208
    , 213 n.10 (5th Cir. 1974)).
    Similar considerations are at work here. The bank robbery
    was less than an hour old, and Stewart matched the best
    description of the suspect that the officers possessed. The
    robbery suspect wielded a semiautomatic rifle and commit-
    ted a crime of violence. Stewart behaved suspiciously,
    giving a vague and implausible story about where he had
    come from and where he was going.
    Under these circumstances, it was not unreasonable for
    the officers to handcuff and detain Stewart in the squad car
    for ten minutes pending the arrival of detectives; their
    action in this regard did not transform Stewart’s temporary
    10                                                   No. 03-2377
    detention into an arrest.2 A motion to suppress Stewart’s
    confession as the fruit of an illegal arrest would have failed
    on the merits. Stewart’s counsel cannot have been ineffec-
    tive for failing to pursue what we have concluded would
    have been a meritless suppression motion. Jackson, 103 F.
    3d at 573.
    2. Brady claim and “missing evidence” instruction
    Stewart also argues that his attorney’s performance was
    deficient because she failed to assert a Brady violation or
    request a “missing evidence” jury instruction regarding the
    partial erasure of the surveillance videotape. A claim that
    the government failed to preserve evidence is not governed
    by Brady v. Maryland, 
    373 U.S. 83
    , 
    83 S.Ct. 1194
    , 
    10 L.Ed.2d 215
     (1963) but, rather, by the more rigorous standard es-
    tablished in Arizona v. Youngblood, 
    488 U.S. 51
    , 56-58, 
    109 S.Ct. 333
    , 102 L.Ed.2d (1988). This requires the defendant
    to demonstrate: “(1) bad faith on the part of the government;
    (2) that the exculpatory value of the evidence was apparent
    before the evidence was destroyed; and (3) that the evidence
    was of such a nature that the defendant would be unable to
    obtain comparable evidence by other reasonably available
    means.” United States v. Aldaco, 
    201 F.3d 979
    , 982-83 (7th
    2
    Stewart also briefly suggests that his detention became illegal
    once the detectives arrived because they had information from
    certain witnesses at the bank that the robber was six-feet tall.
    Stewart claims he should have been released because he is only
    5'7". But when the detectives arrived, they removed Stewart from
    the squad car and also removed the handcuffs; it was Stewart
    himself who then asked to get in Detective Winters’ car and be
    taken downtown. He was not handcuffed again until a few
    moments later when the detectives learned that his cell phone had
    been found at the scene. At this point (the parties agree), Stewart
    was under arrest based on adequate probable cause.
    No. 03-2377                                                 11
    Cir. 2000) (quoting United States v. Watts, 
    29 F.3d 287
    , 289-
    90 (7th Cir. 1994)).
    On this aspect of his ineffective assistance of counsel
    claim Stewart is boxed in by his election to assert the claim
    on direct review rather than in a § 2255 collateral proceeding.
    There is no evidence in the record about the circumstances
    surrounding the partial erasure of the videotape, the con-
    tent of what was erased, and the nature and quality of the
    images that remained on the tape. We have no record upon
    which to evaluate the defense attorney’s decision to abandon
    the issue of the partially erased videotape. The record re-
    flects only that she raised the subject of the videotape with
    the district court when the government rested its case, and
    then asked for a recess to confer with Stewart. When court
    resumed, Stewart’s attorney rested the defense case without
    introducing any evidence. Without a supplementary eviden-
    tiary record, Stewart cannot carry his burden of demon-
    strating that his attorney mishandled the issue of the
    videotape.
    B. Miranda Violation            and     Voluntariness       of
    Confession
    Stewart argues that his confession should have been
    suppressed for two additional reasons: (1) the police used a
    two-step interrogation process in which Miranda warnings
    were initially withheld, in violation of Miranda and the
    Supreme Court’s recent decision in Missouri v. Seibert; and
    (2) the confession was involuntary because it was induced
    by a promise of leniency. The latter argument is perfunctory
    and meritless. Stewart claims he was duped into initially
    confessing “indirect” and then “direct” involvement in the
    robbery by Detective Nelson’s representation that he would
    not be charged if he had no direct involvement in the crime.
    The detective’s offhand remark that Stewart would be “all
    right” if he had no direct involvement in the robbery cannot
    12                                              No. 03-2377
    reasonably be construed as a promise of leniency and was
    not otherwise coercive.
    Stewart’s challenge to the two-step interrogation is not so
    easily resolved. The parties agree that Stewart was in
    custody when he was handcuffed and returned to the back
    seat of Detective Winters’ car after the detectives learned
    that the cell phone recovered at the crime scene belonged to
    him. Miranda warnings were not given, but Stewart was
    questioned by police during the five-minute ride to the
    police station, and the questioning continued in an inter-
    view room at the station for another ten minutes or so.
    During this unwarned phase of the interrogation, Stewart
    initially denied involvement, then admitted to assisting the
    perpetrator (to the extent of providing the gun and the
    getaway car), and then confessed to robbing the bank alone.
    At this point the police provided Miranda warnings, obtained
    a waiver of rights, and elicited a detailed confession which
    was subsequently tape-recorded.
    Although he did not raise the issue in the district court,
    Stewart argued in his opening brief on appeal that the police
    violated Miranda when they elicited an unwarned confes-
    sion and then, mid-interrogation, interjected Miranda warn-
    ings and secured a postwarning repetition of his confession.
    His position on this issue was considerably strengthened
    when the Supreme Court decided Missouri v. Seibert while
    this appeal was being briefed. At issue in Seibert was the
    admissibility of a confession obtained by the use of a two-
    step interrogation strategy that called for the deliberate
    withholding of Miranda warnings until the suspect con-
    fessed, followed by a Miranda warning and a repetition of
    the confession already given.
    The interrogating officer in Seibert testified that he made
    a “conscious decision” to use “an interrogation technique he
    had been taught: question first, then give the warnings, and
    then repeat the question ‘until I get the answer that she’s
    No. 03-2377                                                 13
    already provided once.’ ” Seibert, 
    124 S.Ct. at 2606
    . Al-
    though five members of the Court held the postwarning
    confession inadmissible under these circumstances, the case
    did not produce a majority opinion. “When a fragmented
    Court decides a case and no single rationale explaining the
    result enjoys the assent of five Justices, ‘the holding of the
    Court may be viewed as that position taken by those Members
    who concurred in the judgments on the narrowest grounds.’ ”
    Marks v. United States, 
    430 U.S. 188
    , 193 (1977) (quoting
    Gregg v. Georgia, 
    428 U.S. 153
    , 169 n.15, 
    96 S.Ct. 2909
    , 
    49 L.Ed.2d 859
     (1976) (opinion of Stewart, Powell, and Stevens,
    JJ.)); see also Ben’s Bar, Inc. v. Village of Somerset, 
    316 F.3d 702
    , 715 n.20 (7th Cir. 2003). A close reading of the sepa-
    rate opinions in Seibert reveals at least some common legal
    ground.
    A plurality of the Court held that Miranda warnings given
    mid-interrogation, after a suspect has already confessed,
    are generally ineffective as to any subsequent, postwarning
    incriminating statements.3 Seibert, 
    124 S.Ct. at 2605
    . The
    plurality held that the police interrogation technique known
    as “question first” did not serve Miranda’s purpose of
    informing suspects about their constitutional rights: “[t]he
    object of question-first is to render Miranda warnings
    ineffective by waiting for a particularly opportune time to
    give them, after the suspect has already confessed.” Seibert,
    
    124 S.Ct. at 2610
    . When police question first and warn
    later, the threshold inquiry, according to the plurality, is
    “whether it would be reasonable to find that in these
    circumstances the warnings could function ‘effectively’ as
    Miranda requires.” 
    Id.
     The plurality was skeptical: “[I]t is
    likely that if the interrogators employ the technique of
    withholding warnings until after interrogation succeeds in
    eliciting a confession, the warnings will be ineffective in
    3
    Justice Souter wrote the plurality opinion and was joined by
    Justices Stevens, Ginsburg, and Breyer.
    14                                               No. 03-2377
    preparing the suspect for successive interrogation, close in
    time and similar in content.” 
    Id.
     This is because a suspect
    who had just admitted guilt “would hardly think he had a
    genuine right to remain silent.” 
    Id. at 2611
    .
    The plurality distinguished Oregon v. Elstad, 
    470 U.S. 298
    , 
    105 S.Ct. 1285
    , 
    84 L.Ed.2d 222
     (1985), essentially
    limiting it to its facts. Id. at 2611-12. Elstad addressed the
    admissibility of a Mirandized station-house confession that
    was preceded by an earlier, unwarned inculpatory remark
    by the defendant at the scene of his arrest. The defendant
    in Elstad was arrested at his home in connection with a
    recent neighborhood burglary. As police were executing the
    arrest warrant, and while still in the defendant’s living
    room, one of the officers explained to the defendant that he
    was suspected of being involved in burglarizing his neigh-
    bor’s home. Elstad, 
    470 U.S. at 301
    . The defendant told the
    officer, “Yes, I was there.” 
    Id.
     He had not yet received
    Miranda warnings. Later, at the sheriff’s headquarters, the
    defendant was fully Mirandized, waived his rights, and
    gave an incriminating statement. 
    Id.
    The Supreme Court held in Elstad that the failure to ad-
    minister Miranda warnings prior to the defendant’s initial
    inculpatory statement did not require suppression of his
    subsequent Mirandized confession. Elstad, 
    470 U.S. at 300
    .
    Because the Fourth Amendment exclusionary rule is differ-
    ent in purpose and effect from the Miranda suppression
    rule, the Court refused to extend the Fourth Amendment
    “fruits” doctrine to the Fifth Amendment Miranda context:
    It is an unwarranted extension of Miranda to hold that
    a simple failure to administer the warnings, unaccom-
    panied by any actual coercion or other circumstances
    calculated to undermine the suspect’s ability to exercise
    his free will, so taints the investigatory process that a
    subsequent voluntary and informed waiver is ineffective
    for some indeterminate period. Though Miranda
    No. 03-2377                                                     15
    requires that the unwarned admission must be sup-
    pressed, the admissibility of any subsequent statement
    should turn in these circumstances solely on whether it
    is knowingly and voluntarily made.
    
    Id. at 310
    .
    The Court also refused to attribute constitutional signifi-
    cance to the “psychological effects” of a voluntary unwarned
    admission, reiterating that “[t]he failure of police to admin-
    ister Miranda warnings does not mean that the statements
    received have actually been coerced, but only that courts
    will presume the privilege against compulsory self-incrimi-
    nation has not been intelligently exercised.” 
    Id. at 310-11
    .
    If a prior statement has actually been coerced, “the time
    that passes between confessions, the change in place of in-
    terrogations, and the change in identity of the interrogators
    all bear on whether that coercion has carried over to the
    second confession.” 
    Id. at 310
    . However, “absent deliberately
    coercive or improper tactics in obtaining the initial state-
    ment, the mere fact that a suspect has made an unwarned
    admission does not warrant a presumption of compulsion”
    as to the second statement. 
    Id. at 314
    . Where the initial
    unwarned statement was voluntary, the admissibility of the
    second statement depends only on whether it, too, was
    voluntary, and obtained in compliance with Miranda. 
    Id. at 318
    . Thus, “a suspect who has once responded to unwarned
    yet uncoercive questioning is not thereby disabled from
    waiving his rights and confessing after he has been given
    the requisite Miranda warnings.” 
    Id.
    The Seibert plurality followed Elstad to the extent that it
    rejected application of the Fourth Amendment “fruits”
    doctrine to the testimonial fruits of a Miranda violation.4
    4
    In United States v. Patane, ___ U.S. ___, 
    124 S.Ct. 2620
    , 
    159 L.Ed.2d 667
     (2004), released with Missouri v. Seibert, the Supreme
    (continued...)
    16                                                   No. 03-2377
    Seibert, 
    124 S.Ct. at
    2610 n.4. However, the plurality dis-
    tinguished the police conduct at issue in Elstad from the
    deliberate use of a question-first interrogation strategy: “Al-
    though the Elstad Court expressed no explicit conclusion
    about either officer’s state of mind, it is fair to read Elstad
    as treating the living room conversation as a good-faith
    Miranda mistake, not only open to correction by careful
    warnings before systematic questioning in that particular
    case, but posing no threat to warn-first practice generally.”
    
    Id. at 2612
    . The plurality characterized the facts in Seibert
    as presenting “the opposite extreme . . . which by any ob-
    jective measure reveal a police strategy adapted to under-
    mine the Miranda warnings.”5 
    Id.
     The plurality distilled
    from these extremes a list of factors that may inform a
    court’s judgment on whether mid-interrogation Miranda
    warnings are effective in individual cases:
    The contrast between Elstad and this case reveals a
    series of relevant facts that bear on whether Miranda
    warnings delivered midstream could be effective enough
    to accomplish their object: the completeness and detail
    of the questions and answers in the first round of inter-
    rogation, the overlapping content of the two statements,
    the timing and setting of the first and the second, the
    continuity of police personnel, and the degree to which
    the interrogator’s questions treated the second round as
    continuous with the first.
    4
    (...continued)
    Court held that the failure to give Miranda warnings does not
    require suppression of the physical fruits of the suspect’s
    unwarned but voluntary statements.
    5
    The plurality emphasized that its conclusion in this regard did
    not turn on the subjective intent of the officer: “[b]ecause the in-
    tent of the officer will rarely be as candidly admitted as it was
    here . . . the focus is on facts apart from intent that show the
    question-first tactic at work.” Seibert, 124 S.Ct. at 2612 n.6.
    No. 03-2377                                                  17
    Id. at 2612. Applying these factors to the case before the
    Court, the plurality concluded that the delayed Miranda
    warnings were ineffective and the statements made after
    they were delivered were inadmissible. Id. at 2613.
    Justice Breyer wrote separately to state his preference for
    a “fruits” rule and a good-faith exception to two-stage
    interrogations: “Courts should exclude the ‘fruits’ of the
    initial unwarned questioning unless the failure to warn was
    in good faith.” Seibert, 
    124 S.Ct. at 2613
     (Breyer, J., concur-
    ring). He joined the plurality in full, however, predicting
    that “the plurality’s approach in practice will function as a
    ‘fruits’ test,” in that the “truly ‘effective’ Miranda warnings
    on which the plurality insists . . . will occur only when
    certain circumstances—a lapse in time, a change in location
    or interrogating officer, or a shift in the focus of the
    questioning—intervene between the unwarned questioning
    and any postwarning statement.” 
    Id.
    Justice Kennedy also concurred, but took a different ap-
    proach to the analysis of Mirandized confessions that follow
    unwarned incriminating statements. Justice Kennedy viewed
    the plurality’s test for admissibility as too broad, calling for
    a multifactor objective inquiry into the “effectiveness” of
    midstream Miranda warnings in all cases involving two-
    stage interrogations. Seibert, 124 S.Ct. at 2614 (Kennedy,
    J., concurring). He rejected the general proposition that a
    Miranda violation in connection with one statement nec-
    essarily threatens the admissibility of other statements taken
    in full compliance with Miranda: “[I]t would be extravagant
    to treat the presence of one statement that cannot be
    admitted under Miranda as sufficient reason to prohibit
    subsequent statements preceded by a proper warning.” Id.
    at 2615.
    Justice Kennedy narrowed the focus to the deliberate cir-
    cumvention of Miranda. “The Miranda warning was with-
    held [from Seibert] to obscure both the practical and legal
    18                                              No. 03-2377
    significance of the admonition when finally given.” Id. He
    favored the following rule: “When an interrogator uses this
    deliberate, two-step strategy, predicated upon violating
    Miranda during an extended interview, postwarning state-
    ments that are related to the substance of prewarning state-
    ments must be excluded absent specific, curative steps.” Id.
    The sufficiency of the curative measures would depend upon
    their capacity to “ensure that a reasonable person in the
    suspect’s situation would understand the import and effect
    of the Miranda warning.” Id. at 2616. Justice Kennedy
    suggested that “a substantial break in time and circumstances
    between the prewarning statement and the Miranda warn-
    ing may suffice in most circumstances, as it allows the
    accused to distinguish the two contexts and appreciate that
    the interrogation has taken a new turn.” Id. He added that
    providing the suspect with an explanation of the likely
    inadmissibility of the unwarned statement “may be suffi-
    cient” as a curative measure. Id.
    Justice Kennedy made it clear, however, that he would
    apply this test “only in the infrequent case, such as we have
    here, in which the two-step interrogation technique was used
    in a calculated way to undermine the Miranda warning.”
    Id. That is, “[t]he admissibility of postwarning statements
    should continue to be governed by the principles of Elstad
    unless the deliberate two-step strategy was employed.” Id.
    On the facts before the Court, he concluded that the ques-
    tion-first tactic represented an “intentional misrepresenta-
    tion of the protection that Miranda offers and does not serve
    any legitimate objectives that might otherwise justify its
    use.” Id. at 2615. Because no curative steps were taken,
    Justice Kennedy joined the plurality in concluding that the
    defendant’s postwarning statement was inadmissible. Id. at
    2615-16.
    Justice O’Connor dissented in Seibert, joined by Chief
    Justice Rehnquist and Justices Scalia and Thomas. The
    dissenting justices would have evaluated the two-step inter-
    No. 03-2377                                                19
    rogation under the voluntariness standard established in
    Elstad. “Elstad commands that if Seibert’s first statement
    is shown to have been involuntary, the court must examine
    whether the taint dissipated through the passing of time or
    a change in circumstances.” Seibert, 124 S.Ct. at 2619
    (O’Connor, J., dissenting). Under Elstad, if the first state-
    ment was voluntary (or if involuntary, the change in time
    and circumstances removed the taint), then the second
    statement is admissible unless it was involuntary despite
    the Miranda warning. Id.
    What emerges from the split opinions in Seibert is this: at
    least as to deliberate two-step interrogations in which
    Miranda warnings are intentionally withheld until after the
    suspect confesses, the central voluntariness inquiry of
    Elstad has been replaced by a presumptive rule of exclu-
    sion, subject to a multifactor test for change in time, place,
    and circumstances from the first statement to the second.
    According to the plurality, the multifactor test—timing and
    location of interrogations, continuity of police personnel,
    overlapping content of statements, etc.—measures the “ef-
    fectiveness” of midstream Miranda warnings and applies in
    all cases involving sequential unwarned and warned admis-
    sions. In Justice Kennedy’s view, however, an inquiry into
    change in time and circumstances between the prewarning
    and postwarning statements—what he called “curative
    steps”—is necessary only in cases involving the deliberate
    use of a two-step interrogation strategy calculated to evade
    the requirements of Miranda. Justice Kennedy thus provided
    a fifth vote to depart from Elstad, but only where the police
    set out deliberately to withhold Miranda warnings until
    after a confession has been secured. Where the initial vio-
    lation of Miranda was not part of a deliberate strategy to
    undermine the warnings, Elstad appears to have survived
    Seibert.
    As we have noted, Stewart did not raise the two-step
    interrogation argument in the district court. This forfeiture
    means we review the district court’s admission of the
    20                                                  No. 03-2377
    postwarning confession for plain error. United States v.
    Olano, 
    507 U.S. 725
    , 731-32, 
    113 S.Ct. 1770
    , 
    123 L.Ed.2d 508
     (1993); United States v. Westmoreland, 
    240 F.3d 618
    ,
    635 (7th Cir. 2003). We will not correct a forfeited error un-
    less it is “plain” (that is, clear under current law) and affects
    substantial rights, which usually equates to a finding of
    prejudice. Olano, 
    507 U.S. at 732-34
    . Satisfaction of this
    standard permits but does not require reversal. We will ex-
    ercise remedial discretion to correct a plain forfeited error
    affecting substantial rights only when “the error ‘seriously
    affect[s] the fairness, integrity or public reputation of judicial
    proceedings.’ ” Olano, 
    507 U.S. at 736
    . An error may be “plain”
    for purposes of the Olano test if it is clear at the time of
    appellate review: “[W]here the law at the time of trial was
    settled and clearly contrary to the law at the time of ap-
    peal—it is enough that the error be ‘plain’ at the time of
    appellate consideration.” Johnson v. United States, 
    520 U.S. 461
    , 468, 
    117 S.Ct. 1544
    , 
    137 L.Ed.2d 718
     (1997).
    Seibert was decided while this appeal was being briefed.
    Both parties cited and analyzed the case—Stewart in his
    reply brief, the government by supplemental submission—
    and discussed it during oral argument. If Stewart’s post-
    warning confession was inadmissible under either Seibert
    or what remains of Elstad (more on this in a moment), then
    its use against him at trial was plain error under Johnson,
    
    520 U.S. at 468
     (“it is enough that the error be ‘plain’ at the
    time of appellate consideration”).
    We also conclude that the error—if there was one—af-
    fected Stewart’s substantial rights. A confession is powerful
    evidence in any case; in the circumstances of this case, the
    admission of the confession was clearly prejudicial. Stewart
    confessed in considerable detail, explaining how he stole the
    getaway car, acquired the rifle from an illegal gun seller in
    Kentucky, and bought the clothing and skeleton mask at
    local discount stores. He provided a thorough description of
    his actions before, during, and after the robbery. The tape-
    No. 03-2377                                                    21
    recorded confession was played for the jury and a transcript
    provided so jurors could better follow what Stewart is heard
    saying on the tape. The confession most certainly had a
    profound effect on the verdict. There was other evidence
    against Stewart, to be sure: the partial identification by
    Officer Sitzman; his cell phone at the crime scene; his
    strange story of having walked twenty-five blocks to get a
    ride to nowhere. Still, the admission of Stewart’s taped
    confession substantially affected the outcome of the trial; if
    it was admitted improperly, it seriously affected the
    fairness and integrity of the trial.6
    On the record before us, however, we cannot determine
    whether the admission of Stewart’s confession was improper
    under Seibert, or, if not improper under Seibert, whether
    the initial unwarned confession would flunk the voluntari-
    ness standard of Elstad such that the taint would carry over
    to the second warned confession. More specifically, the
    record does not speak to whether the two-step interrogation
    in this case was deliberately used in circumvention of
    Miranda. If it was, then the analysis of the Seibert plurality
    and Justice Kennedy’s concurrence merge, requiring an
    inquiry into the sufficiency of the break in time and circum-
    stances between the unwarned and warned confessions.
    Much of this evidence is already in the record, and it does
    not point to a separation of time and circumstances between
    the two confessions. We know, for example, that the
    6
    Stewart also suggests, quite summarily, that his counsel’s for-
    feiture of the two-step interrogation issue in the district court
    constituted ineffective assistance of counsel. But “[t]he Sixth
    Amendment does not require counsel to forecast changes or ad-
    vances in the law.” Valenquela v. United States, 
    261 F.3d 694
    , 700
    (7th Cir. 2001) (quoting Lilly v. Gilmore, 
    988 F.2d 783
    , 786 (7th
    Cir. 1993)). We cannot fault Stewart’s counsel for not predicting
    the Supreme Court’s split decision in Seibert.
    22                                                No. 03-2377
    unwarned questioning occurred in the squad car on the way
    to the police station, continued at the station, and was
    conducted primarily by Detective Nelson, initially with the
    assistance of Detective Winters and then two FBI agents.
    We know that it was Nelson who delivered the Miranda
    warnings and continued the interrogation after Stewart’s
    waiver. But the record does not include the content of the
    hour-long postwarning interrogation that preceded the tape-
    recorded confession or the actual content of Stewart’s un-
    warned confession. We therefore can only speculate about
    the extent to which the three statements overlap and the
    extent to which the questions treated the interrogation as
    continuous, although continuity and overlap seem likely. If
    the sequential interrogation process was used in deliberate
    circumvention of Miranda and there is insufficient separa-
    tion in time and circumstances between the unwarned and
    warned confessions, then the warned confession was improp-
    erly admitted and Stewart’s conviction cannot stand. Cf.
    United States v. Aguilar, 
    384 F.3d 520
    , 
    2004 WL 2026780
    (8th Cir. 2004) (treating the plurality in Seibert as the deci-
    sion of the Court but finding enough evidence in the record
    to determine violation of Miranda under both the plurality
    opinion and Justice Kennedy’s concurrence.)
    If, on the other hand, the interrogation process at work
    here was not a deliberate end run around Miranda, then
    Stewart’s first statement must be evaluated for voluntari-
    ness under Elstad. If involuntary, then the same sort of
    inquiry into change in time and circumstances between the
    first and subsequent statements will determine whether
    Stewart’s tape-recorded confession was properly admitted.
    III. Conclusion
    Accordingly, for the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the
    district court’s conclusion that Stewart’s postwarning con-
    fession was voluntary, and reject Stewart’s claims of inef-
    fective assistance of counsel. On the issue of the admissibility
    No. 03-2377                                               23
    of the confession under Missouri v. Seibert, we REMAND the
    case to the district court for further proceedings consistent
    with this opinion.
    A true Copy:
    Teste:
    ________________________________
    Clerk of the United States Court of
    Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
    USCA-02-C-0072—11-9-04