United States v. Tymond Preston , 751 F.3d 1008 ( 2014 )


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  •                    FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,                No. 11-10511
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    D.C. No.
    v.                   3:10-cr-08026-GMS-1
    TYMOND J. PRESTON,
    Defendant-Appellant.              OPINION
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Arizona
    G. Murray Snow, District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted En Banc
    December 10, 2013—San Francisco, California
    Filed May 12, 2014
    Before: Alex Kozinski, Chief Judge, and Stephen
    Reinhardt, John T. Noonan, Sidney R. Thomas, Susan P.
    Graber, Kim McLane Wardlaw, Ronald M. Gould, Richard
    A. Paez, Marsha S. Berzon, Morgan Christen and Paul J.
    Watford, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion by Judge Berzon;
    Concurrence by Judge Graber;
    Concurrence by Judge Gould
    2                  UNITED STATES V. PRESTON
    SUMMARY*
    Criminal Law
    Reversing a conviction and remanding for a new trial,
    the en banc court held that under the totality of the
    circumstances, including the eighteen-year-old defendant’s
    intellectual disability, the confession that resulted from police
    questioning was involuntarily given and should not have been
    admitted at trial.
    The en banc court explained that it cannot resolve the case
    by labeling the questioning either inherently coercive or not,
    but must instead evaluate the law enforcement tactics used in
    conjunction with the defendant’s serious intellectual
    disability. The en banc court also explained that the
    voluntariness inquiry focuses not on the truth or falsity of the
    confession, but on the coercive nature of the interrogation,
    taking into account the particular circumstances of the
    suspect.
    The en banc court held that to the extent Derrick v.
    Peterson, 
    924 F.2d 813
    (9th Cir. 1991), held that the issue of
    police coercion during an interrogation must be considered
    without regard to the suspect’s individual characteristics, it
    cannot be reconciled with prior opinions of this court or with
    binding Supreme Court precedent. The en banc court held
    that Derrick is no longer good law, and overruled it as well as
    subsequent opinions that have relied on it.
    *
    This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
    been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
    UNITED STATES V. PRESTON                      3
    The en banc court concluded that the defendant’s will was
    overborne and his statement involuntary, considering various
    factors: the defendant’s severe intellectual impairment, the
    police’s repetitive questioning and the threats that it would
    continue without end, the pressure placed on the defendant to
    adopt certain responses, the use of alternative questions that
    assumed his culpability, the officers’ multiple deceptions
    about how the statement would be used, the suggestive
    questioning that provided details of the alleged crime, and the
    false promises of leniency and confidentiality.
    The en banc court wrote that even if it would reach a
    different conclusion regarding someone of normal
    intelligence, the officers’ use of the methods employed here
    to confuse and compel a confession from the intellectually
    disabled eighteen-year-old produced an involuntary
    confession.
    The en banc court held that sufficient evidence supported
    the defendant’s conviction, at the first trial, of abusive sexual
    contact, and that the Double Jeopardy Clause therefore does
    not forbid a new trial.
    Specially concurring, Judge Graber wrote that the
    officers’ false promises about the nature of the interview,
    coupled with the defendant’s intellectual disability, coerced
    the defendant into confessing, but most of the tactics
    employed by the officers were not coercive.
    Concurring in the judgment, Judge Gould wrote that the
    case does not need elaborate analysis. He wrote that the
    confession was involuntary primarily because of the
    confluence of the defendant’s intellectual disability, the
    strongly inculpatory nature of the officers’ either-or
    4               UNITED STATES V. PRESTON
    questioning, and the officers’ false promises that what the
    defendant said would be kept private.
    COUNSEL
    Professor Keith Swisher (argued), Phoenix, Arizona, for
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Mark S. Kokanovich (argued), Michael T. Morrissey and
    Bridget S. Bade, Assistant United States Attorneys for the
    District of Arizona; Ann Birmingham Scheel, Acting United
    States Attorney for the District of Arizona; and Karla Hotis
    Delord, Acting Deputy Appellate Chief for the District of
    Arizona, Phoenix, Arizona, for Plaintiff-Appellee.
    OPINION
    BERZON, Circuit Judge:
    Today we consider the voluntariness of a confession
    given by Tymond Preston, an intellectually disabled eighteen-
    year-old. To elicit this confession, the police, among other
    tactics, repeatedly presented Preston with the choice of
    confessing to a heinous crime or to a less heinous crime;
    rejected his denials of guilt; instructed him on the responses
    they would accept; and fed him the details of the crime to
    which they wanted him to confess. Under the totality of the
    circumstances, including Preston’s intellectual disability, we
    conclude that the confession that resulted from this
    questioning was involuntarily given and should not have been
    admitted at trial.
    UNITED STATES V. PRESTON                              5
    I
    Background
    A. The Accusation
    At the time of the underlying events, Tymond Preston was
    eighteen years old. Preston has an IQ of sixty-five, which the
    Supreme Court recognizes as within the range of intellectual
    disability.1 See Atkins v. Virginia, 
    536 U.S. 304
    , 309 n.5
    (2002) (describing an IQ below seventy-five as within the
    range of mental retardation).2 He attended special education
    classes beginning in elementary school, and did so until he
    dropped out of high school. Preston’s mother said that a
    doctor told her that Preston had a “small brain, like a five-
    year-old.” Psychological evaluations conducted during the
    course of this litigation show that Preston has “exceptionally
    limited linguistic ability,” and “significant problems with
    verbal communication and comprehension.”3 The district
    1
    Disability advocates now use the term “intellectual disability” rather
    than “mental retardation.” Congress has adopted the term “intellectual
    disability” for use in federal statutes. See Rosa’s Law, Pub. L. No. 111-
    256, 124 Stat. 2643 (Oct. 5, 2010). We therefore use the term “intellectual
    disability,” except where the earlier locution “mental retardation” is used
    in the cited authority.
    2
    The Supreme Court is currently reviewing the constitutionality of
    Florida’s scheme for identifying individuals with intellectual disabilities
    in capital cases, which mandates that a person must have an IQ below
    seventy to be classified as intellectually disabled. See Hall v. Florida,
    
    134 S. Ct. 471
    (2013).
    3
    Preston underwent two psychological evaluations. First, he was
    examined for his competency to stand trial by Dr. Daniel C. Cady, who
    provided a report, admitted as an exhibit at trial. The defense retained Dr.
    6                  UNITED STATES V. PRESTON
    court found that he had “deficits in general linguistic and
    academic skills and low IQ.” Before the offense addressed in
    this appeal, Preston had been arrested twice for minor
    juvenile offenses but had never been convicted of any offense
    or adjudicated delinquent.
    Preston lived with his mother and father on the Navajo
    Nation. An extended family of relatives, including his
    paternal aunt, resided next door. The neighboring households
    had a long-standing feud. As recounted by its participants,
    the feud took some unusual turns. For example, Preston told
    investigators that the neighbors had used “witchcraft” to
    paralyze his father for three months.
    Some time on Wednesday, September 23, 2009, Preston’s
    eight-year-old neighbor — a child in the household with
    whom Preston’s family was feuding, and the grandchild of
    Preston’s aunt — entered and later left Preston’s house. That
    evening, the child reportedly told his grandparents and uncle
    that Preston “‘put his pee-pee in [my] butt,’” and that “his
    butt was hurting.” The grandparents called the police.
    When asked about this assertion the next day by Carli
    Moncher, a forensic interviewer for the Safe Child Center at
    Flagstaff Medical Center, the child spun a lengthy,
    fantastical, largely incomprehensible narrative. The tale, in
    brief, was: Preston had come to his house the day before and
    threatened to kill him with a knife; the child locked Preston
    John DiBacco, who examined Preston and testified regarding his
    confession. Dr. DiBacco has a Ph.D. in psychology from Vanderbilt
    University, is an adjunct professor of clinical psychology at Arizona State
    University, and is the senior consultant to Maricopa County’s Child
    Protective Services department.
    UNITED STATES V. PRESTON                       7
    in his bedroom, and Preston escaped by going out the
    window; the child called 911, climbed on top of a shack,
    jumped off of it, and ran away; Preston followed the child’s
    tracks and found him hiding in the bushes; the child ran home
    and hid while watching a movie with his sister; he and his
    sister climbed out the window and then down a cliff on a
    ladder, while Preston jumped over the cliff in a “monster
    truck”; the child then got into a fight with Preston and kicked
    him “in the balls,” and Preston “fell out the window”; Preston
    came to his school in the monster truck, and the police
    followed, chasing Preston in cars and helicopters and shining
    a yellow light at Preston and his house; the child and his sister
    climbed onto the shack and jumped off; Preston jumped over
    and broke his leg; Preston then came to his house and was
    “trying to fuck [his sister’s] butt,” at which point the child
    tried to beat up Preston, hitting him in the head and face; the
    rape was eventually forestalled when the child’s kittens began
    scratching Preston; and the child then also “took a lot” of
    knives and threw them at some robbers, hitting one “right . . .
    in the heart,” and killing him. As the district court observed
    after hearing this story, “[m]any of these details are obviously
    not factual.”
    As to the alleged sexual contact, the boy stated that
    Preston pulled the child’s underwear down, “put his penis in
    my butt,” and touched the boy’s “balls” and “butt” with his
    mouth. He also stated that Preston told him to “suck his
    balls,” and when the child did, “white stuff got on my shirt”
    and “on my lips.” The boy described the shirt he was
    wearing as red, and said it was at his home in a bag. He
    further alleged Preston had tried to “cut . . . my balls” and that
    “next he cut his balls.” He also said that Preston had started
    the attack by dragging him by his shirt and choking him.
    8                 UNITED STATES V. PRESTON
    On the same day he gave this account to Moncher, the
    boy was interviewed by a nurse practitioner. The nurse asked
    him, “Did [Preston] put something on his dick?” and the child
    responded, “He just put on the dick wearing,” which the
    parties assume refers to a condom. When asked what
    happened to the “dick wearing,” the child said that “[i]t got
    white stuff on it,” and that Preston “threw it away.”
    Most of the child’s allegations of sexual abuse were not
    corroborated by physical evidence. Although swabs were
    taken from various parts of the child’s body, including his
    lips, anus, and genitals, the forensic examiner found no
    evidence of semen on the child. The child had a “normal
    genital and anal exam,” and no signs of injuries, bruises, or
    trauma of any kind, although he complained of pain during
    the anal exam. No red shirt was found. Skin cells were
    found on the child’s underwear4 with DNA from multiple
    contributors, including at least one male and potentially a
    female; Preston, the child’s grandmother and at least one
    more relative could not be excluded as the source of some of
    the DNA.5
    B. The Confession
    About a week after the boy reported that he had been
    assaulted, Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”) Special
    4
    One swab was used to collect a sample from various parts of the
    child’s underwear, including from the outside waistband. So the DNA
    found may have come from the outside waistband of the underwear.
    5
    The DNA of Preston’s brother, mother, and father, all of whom also
    live next door to the child and presumably have similar DNA profiles to
    Preston, was never compared to the DNA collected from the underwear.
    UNITED STATES V. PRESTON                          9
    Agent James Kraus and Navajo Nation Criminal Investigator
    Greg Secatero (“the officers”) went to Preston’s home to
    question him about the allegations. To aid the investigation,
    the FBI had obtained Preston’s Navajo Nation certificate of
    Indian Navajo blood, which revealed that he was eighteen
    years old. The officers noticed the notation, as they
    commented to Preston, “you’re a young guy, 18 years old.”
    Kraus and Secatero questioned Preston outside his house,
    next to Kraus’s vehicle. They began recording their
    interaction with Preston within “one or two minutes” of
    approaching him. The interrogation lasted about forty
    minutes.
    The officers quickly became aware of Preston’s mental
    disability. A short time into the questioning, Preston told
    them that “I’m not . . . all there,” and that “I have problems
    with my head, like a tumor.” Recognizing that Preston may
    be impaired, Secatero asked him, “Are you disabled right
    now?” Preston did not understand the question. “What’s
    that, disabled?,” he asked. When Secatero explained that
    “disabled mean[s] you’re not able to take care of yourself or
    you’re not able to . . . get a job,” Preston agreed that he was
    disabled. He also explained that he had not finished high
    school.
    The agents told Preston that they were investigating a
    “molestation” that took place “last Friday.”6 Preston said that
    he was not home the prior Friday. All parties now agree that
    6
    One of the forensic psychologists who examined Preston observed that
    he has difficulties with abstract terms. The examining psychologist
    observed, “I would suspect that he’d have a tough time defining
    molestation, forensics.” Both terms were used in the interrogation.
    10                 UNITED STATES V. PRESTON
    Preston was in fact not home on the Friday in question, as he
    routinely visits a cousin on Fridays. But the officers rejected
    as false — over and over again — Preston’s accurate
    responses to the “Friday” assertions, and repeated throughout
    most of the interrogation that the incident did take place on
    Friday. Secatero said, for example, “We just don’t buy it,”
    and “Friday, I know you remember you were here”; and
    insisted “you have to remember what happened Friday”;
    Kraus, too, informed Preston that it was “not disputable” that
    the child had been at Preston’s house on Friday, and stated,
    incorrectly, that “we have a bunch of people that said you
    were over here.” Eventually, Preston was told, “the fact is,
    we know you were here,” and “[t]here’s other witnesses
    putting you here, so there’s no denying” it. Preston
    eventually stopped disagreeing with the assertion that he was
    home on Friday.7
    Aside from the “Friday” colloquies with Preston, the
    officers spent much of the interrogation engaged in an
    extended dialogue about types of sexual offenders. Secatero
    told Preston that “there’s two type[s] of people,” and that he
    was “just trying to figure out which . . . one” Preston was.
    The first type, the officers explained, was “predators, sexual
    predators,” who “prey on little kids” and are “coldhearted.”
    This type of person is “the monster that . . . everybody’s
    scared of,” who is “molesting all these little kids,” and to
    whom “we don’t show any sympathy.” The second type, they
    went on, was not a monster but just did a “one-time thing,”
    maybe because he was “curious” or “drunk.” The officers
    repeatedly told Preston that they “want[ed] to know what
    7
    Toward the end of the encounter, the officers realized that the alleged
    incident had not occurred on Friday, and changed the day in the
    confession they wrote to Thursday — still incorrect.
    UNITED STATES V. PRESTON                            11
    kind of person” he was, the “kind of guy that does it all the
    time or the guy that just” had a “bad day.” Secatero and
    Kraus minimized the culpability of the second type of person,
    stating that these individuals could “move on” and be given
    help, because what transpired was “just a misunderstanding”
    — but only if these individuals were truthful. Kraus assured
    Preston that “if nothing happened, that’s cool,” but also “if
    something just a little bit happened, . . . that’s cool, too.”
    Kraus later acknowledged that the officers meant to convey
    that admitting guilt could minimize the consequences Preston
    faced, and that Preston could get some sympathy if he was a
    one-time offender rather than a serial predator.
    When Secatero asked Preston directly, “which person are
    you? Are you that type where you prey on little kids?,”
    Preston answered that he was not. Secatero then asked
    several times if Preston had done “a one-time thing.” Preston
    gave confused, equivocal responses, including “I don’t know,
    probably, but I don’t know. But I don’t fuckin’ do that shit,”
    and “Something probably like that, one time. But I’m not,
    like, whatever you . . . guys are trying to think, that what I’m
    trying to do, like with everything, but, but fuck, I — I ain’t
    like that.”
    During this time, the officers told Preston that he was “not
    arrested” and “not in custody,” but also informed him that
    “[a]fter the interview, you’re free to go,” (emphasis added),
    indicating that he was free to stop talking to them only when
    they terminated the interview.8 The two interrogators also
    8
    The officers testified that, before they began recording the
    conversation, Kraus told Preston that he was free to leave or stop talking
    at any time. But Kraus also testified that, when he told Preston, “After the
    12                UNITED STATES V. PRESTON
    conveyed, repeatedly, that Preston had to tell them something,
    or they would keep coming back until he did. For example,
    Kraus told Preston: “We don’t want to come back here later”;
    “we’re needing to figure out something because we don’t
    have to come back here again and again”; “we got to figure
    out exactly what happened and without you saying anything,
    that’s — that’s not helping anyone, you know, because then
    we’re going to have to keep coming back and — and — until
    we figure exactly what out”; “we don’t want to come back
    and say, hey, man, you lied to us.” Secatero later said, “you
    got to tell me what — what happened Friday” and “you have
    to remember what happened Friday.” (emphasis added). At
    the hearing on Preston’s motion to suppress, Kraus
    acknowledged that he meant Preston to understand that the
    officers would keep coming back until Preston admitted what
    happened with the child.
    Eventually, more than twenty minutes into the
    questioning, Preston acquiesced in the assertions that he was
    in fact at home on Friday — even though he was not. So,
    when the officers said, “Friday. . . . Six days ago. Do you
    remember [the child] being over here?” Preston at first
    responded, “No,” but then switched gears, stating, “[T]here’s
    a bunch of little kids over here, and plus that other guy, but
    . . . I don’t know what happened that day.” The officers
    continued, “so Friday, I know you remember you were here
    . . . you said that there were kids over here, and then what?
    Did you guys go inside or what?” Preston responded, “I was
    inside just by myself.”
    interview, you’re free to go,” he was merely restating what he had told
    Preston before the interview.
    UNITED STATES V. PRESTON                    13
    Having gotten Preston to stop protesting that he was not
    at his house on Friday, Secatero and Kraus proceeded to ask
    Preston a series of questions that required him to choose
    between two incriminating alternatives. For example:
    “[I]s it because you wanted to have sex? . . .
    Or is it he’s the one that came onto you?”
    “[I]s it something . . . where you forced the
    issue or is it something that he wanted?”
    “[D]id he pull away or did you pull out?”
    “Did you . . . put your penis in all the way or
    just a little bit?”
    “Did you do it a lot or just that one time?”
    In each case, presented with two incriminating choices,
    Preston chose the less incriminating one.
    The officers also asked a number of leading and
    suggestive questions that introduced facts Preston himself
    never mentioned until the officers brought them up. Preston
    agreed to some of these facts.
    Eventually, Preston nodded when asked if he put his penis
    inside of the child’s “butt,” stated he did this for “five, six
    seconds,” and that the child then “walked out,” “said, I’m
    going to tell on you,” and “started crying.” Kraus then wrote
    14                 UNITED STATES V. PRESTON
    out a statement summarizing the admissions the officers had
    elicited from Preston.9
    The officers twice misled Preston about the statement’s
    purpose. First, they promised Preston that they would not
    “tell this to anybody,” and the statement would never leave
    the U.S. Attorney’s file. Later, they told him that the
    statement they would write up was just an apology note to the
    child, a way to say “sorry” to the child: “Do you want to write
    any — usually what we do is we write a statement. If, like,
    you wanted to say sorry or something like that. You could
    definitely do that. And we can provide that to him.”
    Preston’s response to that suggestion was equivocal — that
    he would say “I’m sorry for what I did, but they’re just trying
    to accuse me of that shit. But fuck, I’m not . . . like that.”
    Ignoring Preston’s equivocation, Kraus told Preston he would
    “just summarize” their conversation in the apology note.
    According to Kraus, Preston was never informed that “he
    might be signing something that could be used later in a court
    of law.”
    The “summary” — Preston’s confession — was a brief
    gathering of details chosen by the officers, and written out in
    Kraus’s hand. Many of the details selected were those the
    officers had fed Preston. For example, Kraus was the first to
    bring up the possibility that Preston used a condom; Kraus
    testified that he did so because he understood the child had
    discussed a condom during the forensic interview. At first,
    when Kraus asked, “Did you use a condom?” Preston
    responded “I don’t know.” Only after the officer persisted,
    9
    At the suppression motion hearing, Secatero represented that Preston
    wrote out the statement, although Kraus “dictated it for the defendant.”
    At trial, Kraus acknowledged that he penned the statement.
    UNITED STATES V. PRESTON                          15
    saying, “Yeah, you did?,” did Preston finally acquiesce, by
    nodding. Kraus later reinforced the point, “[Y]ou had a
    condom on, correct?” While Kraus was writing the
    statement, he reiterated, “you pulled your penis out, and you
    put a condom on?,” to which Preston nodded assent. The
    detail that Preston wore a condom was then included in the
    written statement.10
    Similarly, the officers also fed Preston the detail that he
    “unzipped” his pants, which was included in the written
    statement. Initially, when Kraus asked Preston, “You just
    unzipped your zipper?,” Preston responded, “I don’t know.”
    The officers then affirmatively repeated several times, “you
    unzipped your pants”; Preston eventually indicated assent to
    this fact.
    As Kraus was writing the summary, he repeated back the
    information that he was including in question form and asked
    Preston periodically if it was correct. Preston never revised,
    corrected, or countered Kraus’s version.
    After Kraus finished writing the statement, Kraus
    informed Preston, “I’m going to have you sign this.” Preston
    signed.
    C. The Proceedings
    Preston was charged in federal district court with
    aggravated sexual abuse of a minor in violation of 18 U.S.C.
    § 2241(c), for which the mandatory minimum prison sentence
    is thirty years. He moved to suppress the use of his
    10
    No condom was introduced at trial; the investigators had not looked
    for one.
    16              UNITED STATES V. PRESTON
    confession. After a hearing, the district court denied the
    motion.
    Thereafter, Preston and the government agreed that
    Preston would waive his right to a jury trial if the government
    would reduce his charge to the lesser offense of abusive
    sexual contact, which carries no minimum prison sentence,
    and recommend that he receive no more than a fifteen-year
    sentence. After a three-day bench trial, the district court
    found Preston guilty of that charge. Preston was sentenced to
    fifty months’ imprisonment and a lifetime term of supervised
    release.
    Preston appealed the conviction on a number of grounds,
    including that the confession was involuntary. A panel of this
    court held the confession properly admitted; Judge Noonan
    dissented. United States v. Preston, 
    706 F.3d 1106
    (9th Cir.
    2013). Preston filed a petition for panel rehearing and
    rehearing en banc. A majority of the active judges on the
    court voted to rehear the case en banc. United States v.
    Preston, 
    727 F.3d 894
    (9th Cir. 2013).
    II
    Legal Principles Regarding Voluntariness of Confessions
    The right against compulsory self-incrimination is “the
    mainstay of our adversary system of criminal justice, and . . .
    one of the great landmarks in man’s struggle to make himself
    civilized.” Michigan v. Tucker, 
    417 U.S. 433
    , 439 (1974)
    (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). “This
    principle, branded into the consciousness of our civilization
    by the memory of the secret inquisitions, sometimes practiced
    with torture, which were borrowed briefly from the continent
    UNITED STATES V. PRESTON                             17
    during the era of the Star Chamber, was well known to those
    who established the American governments.” Culombe v.
    Connecticut, 
    367 U.S. 568
    , 581 (1961). “Its essence is the
    requirement that the State which proposes to convict and
    punish an individual produce the evidence against him by the
    independent labor of its officers, not by the simple, cruel
    expedient of forcing it from his own lips.” 
    Id. at 581–82.11
    A
    In implementing this bedrock constitutional value, our
    focus is on “whether [the] defendant’s will was overborne by
    the circumstances surrounding the giving of [the]
    confession,” an inquiry that “takes into consideration the
    totality of all the surrounding circumstances — both the
    characteristics of the accused and the details of the
    interrogation.” Dickerson v. United States, 
    530 U.S. 428
    , 434
    (2000) (quoting Schneckloth v. Bustamonte, 
    412 U.S. 218
    ,
    226 (1973)) (internal quotation marks omitted) (emphasis
    added).
    11
    In Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
    (1966), the Supreme Court,
    recognizing “that the coercion inherent in custodial interrogation blurs the
    line between voluntary and involuntary statements,” and presents too great
    a risk that any resulting statement is compelled, required that suspects be
    given certain advisements of their rights prior to custodial interrogation as
    a condition precedent to the admissibility of any statement into evidence.
    Dickerson v. United States, 
    530 U.S. 428
    , 435 (2000). But “[t]he
    requirement that Miranda warnings be given does not, of course, dispense
    with the voluntariness inquiry” for suspects in custody. 
    Id. at 444.
    Concomitantly, the voluntariness standard applies to suspects not in
    custody. See, e.g., Beckwith v. United States, 
    425 U.S. 341
    , 348 (1976).
    Preston does not argue that he was in custody during the
    interrogation. We proceed on the premise that he was not.
    18              UNITED STATES V. PRESTON
    “Each of these factors, in company with all of the
    surrounding circumstances — the duration and conditions of
    detention (if the confessor has been detained), the manifest
    attitude of the police toward him, his physical and mental
    state, the diverse pressures which sap or sustain his powers of
    resistance and self-control — is relevant.” 
    Culombe, 367 U.S. at 602
    ; see also Withrow v. Williams, 
    507 U.S. 680
    ,
    693–94 (1993). Thus, the voluntariness inquiry “is not
    limited to instances in which the claim is that the police
    conduct was ‘inherently coercive,’” Miller v. Fenton,
    
    474 U.S. 104
    , 110 (1985) (quoting Ashcraft v. Tennessee, 
    322 U.S. 143
    , 154 (1944)), but “applies equally when the
    interrogation techniques were improper only because, in the
    particular circumstances of the case, the confession is
    unlikely to have been the product of a free and rational will,”
    
    id. (citing Mincey
    v. Arizona, 
    437 U.S. 385
    , 401 (1978)).
    Ultimately, the voluntariness “determination ‘depend[s] upon
    a weighing of the circumstances of pressure against the power
    of resistance of the person confessing.’” 
    Dickerson, 530 U.S. at 434
    (quoting Stein v. New York, 
    346 U.S. 156
    , 185 (1953),
    overruled in part on other grounds by Jackson v. Denno,
    
    378 U.S. 368
    (1964)) (alteration in original).
    B
    These principles have particular application where, as
    here, the individual interrogated is of unusually low
    intelligence. “What would be overpowering to the weak of
    will or mind might be utterly ineffective against an
    experienced criminal.” 
    Stein, 346 U.S. at 185
    . So, although
    low intelligence does not categorically make a confession
    involuntary, it is “relevant . . . in establishing a setting” in
    which police coercion may overcome the will of a suspect.
    Procunier v. Atchley, 
    400 U.S. 446
    , 453–54 (1971). The
    UNITED STATES V. PRESTON                          19
    American Bar Association’s Criminal Justice Mental Health
    Standards summarize this point well: “Official conduct that
    does not constitute impermissible coercion when employed
    with nondisabled persons may impair the voluntariness of the
    statements of persons who are mentally ill or mentally
    retarded.” ABA Criminal Justice Mental Health Standards,
    Standard 7-5.8(b), available at http://www.americanbar.org/
    publications/criminal_justice_section_archive/crimjust_
    standards_mentalhealth_toc.html. Similarly, the Seventh
    Circuit observed that “a finding of involuntariness cannot be
    predicated solely upon” the defendant’s mental state, but “his
    mental state is relevant to the extent it made him more
    susceptible to mentally coercive police tactics.” Smith v.
    Duckworth, 
    910 F.2d 1492
    , 1497 (7th Cir. 1990) (internal
    quotation marks omitted).12
    Accordingly, we cannot resolve this case by labeling the
    questioning either inherently coercive or not. Instead, we
    must evaluate the law enforcement tactics used in conjunction
    with Preston’s serious intellectual disability.
    C
    Also consistent with the directive that we must consider
    “all the surrounding circumstances,” 
    Dickerson, 530 U.S. at 434
    , in determining the voluntariness of a confession is that
    there is “no talismanic definition of ‘voluntariness,’
    mechanically applicable to the host of situations where the
    question has arisen,” 
    Schneckloth, 412 U.S. at 224
    . Because
    12
    The Supreme Court has made similar observations when considering
    the interrogation of children, recognizing, “[t]hat which would leave a
    man cold and unimpressed can overawe and overwhelm a lad in his early
    teens.” Haley v. Ohio, 
    332 U.S. 596
    , 599 (1948).
    20              UNITED STATES V. PRESTON
    there is no “single controlling criterion,” no single factor,
    such as length of interrogation, can be dispositive. 
    Id. at 226.
    Doody v. Ryan, 
    649 F.3d 986
    (9th Cir. 2011), an en banc
    opinion of this court, provides guidance for carrying out the
    multivariate inquiry essential to the voluntariness inquiry: We
    may not “tick[] off the list of circumstances rather than
    actually considering them in their totality.” 
    Id. at 1011.
    So
    it is not enough for courts to “list[] the circumstances of [an]
    interrogation separately on a piece-meal basis.” 
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks omitted). Courts must “weigh, rather than
    simply list,” the relevant circumstances, and weigh them not
    in the abstract but “against the power of resistance of the
    person confessing.” 
    Id. at 1015–16
    (internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    D
    One final point as to the nature of the voluntariness
    inquiry, and one that is easy to elide: In evaluating the
    voluntariness of a confession under the totality of the
    circumstances, we are not trying to determine whether the
    suspect told the truth when he confessed. “[C]onvictions
    following the admission into evidence of confessions which
    are involuntary, i.e., the product of coercion, either physical
    or psychological,” are tenuous not simply “because such
    confessions are unlikely to be true.” Rogers v. Richmond,
    
    365 U.S. 534
    , 540–41 (1961). “As important as it is that
    persons who have committed crimes be convicted, there are
    considerations which transcend the question of guilt or
    innocence.” Blackburn v. Alabama, 
    361 U.S. 199
    , 206
    (1960). We exclude coerced confessions “because the
    methods used to extract them offend an underlying principle
    in the enforcement of our criminal law.” Rogers, 365 U.S. at
    UNITED STATES V. PRESTON                     21
    540–41. That basic principle is that “[o]urs is the accusatorial
    as opposed to the inquisitorial system.” Watts v. Indiana,
    
    338 U.S. 49
    , 54 (1949). “To maintain a fair state-individual
    balance, to require the government to shoulder the entire load,
    to respect the inviolability of the human personality, our
    accusatory system of criminal justice demands that the
    government seeking to punish an individual produce the
    evidence against him by its own independent labors.”
    Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
    , 460 (1966) (internal
    quotation marks and citations omitted). We recognize that
    “important human values are sacrificed where an agency of
    the government . . . wrings a confession out of an accused
    against his will.” 
    Blackburn, 361 U.S. at 206
    –07. The
    prohibition on the coercion of confessions “also turns on the
    deep-rooted feeling that the police must obey the law while
    enforcing the law; that in the end life and liberty can be as
    much endangered from illegal methods used to convict those
    thought to be criminals as from the actual criminals
    themselves.” Spano v. New York, 
    360 U.S. 315
    , 320–21
    (1959).
    Because of these considerations, the question whether a
    confession was voluntary is “to be answered with complete
    disregard of whether or not [the confessor] in fact spoke the
    truth.” 
    Rogers, 365 U.S. at 544
    . A “coerced confession is
    inadmissible under the Due Process Clause even though
    statements in it may be independently established as true.”
    
    Watts, 338 U.S. at 50
    n.2. Thus, although “coerced
    confessions are forbidden in part because of their ‘probable
    unreliability,’” Lego v. Twomey, 
    404 U.S. 477
    , 484 n.12
    (1972), the voluntariness inquiry focuses not on the truth or
    falsity of the confession, but on the coercive nature of the
    22                  UNITED STATES V. PRESTON
    interrogation — again, taking into account the particular
    circumstances of the suspect.13
    E
    The government would have us depart to a considerable
    degree from the well-established set of principles just
    outlined, by determining first whether the police’s conduct
    here was inherently coercive, and, if not, holding the
    13
    Although probable truth does not demonstrate that a confession was
    voluntary, we note that there is abundant research that the intellectually
    disabled “are more likely to confess falsely for a variety of reasons.” Jon
    B. Gould & Richard A. Leo, One Hundred Years Later: Wrongful
    Convictions After a Century of Research, 100 J. Crim. L. & Criminology
    825, 847 (2010). “[O]f the first 200 DNA exonerations in the U.S., 35%
    of the false confessors were 18 years or younger and/or had a
    developmental disability.” Saul M. Kassin et al., Police-Induced
    Confessions: Risk Factors and Recommendations, 34 Law & Hum. Behav.
    3, 19 (2010). Another recent study found “69% of exonerated persons
    with mental disabilities were wrongly convicted because of false
    confessions.” 
    Id. In holding
    that mentally retarded offenders may not be
    executed constitutionally, Atkins noted the “possibility of false
    confessions” by such individuals, and that “at least one mentally retarded
    person who unwittingly confessed to a crime that he did not commit” had
    been given a death sentence. 
    Atkins, 536 U.S. at 320
    & n.25.
    Recognizing the heightened likelihood of false confessions by
    intellectually disabled suspects does not contravene Rogers’ directive that
    truth or falsity is not part of the voluntariness inquiry. Rather, just as
    J.D.B. v. North Carolina, 
    131 S. Ct. 2394
    , 2401 (2011), cited the
    “heightened risk of false confessions from youth” as a reason to consider
    a child’s age — not the truth or falsity of the child’s confession — as part
    of the Miranda in-custody requirement, our observation regarding false
    confessions by the intellectually disabled similarly informs the importance
    of carefully taking into account the intellectual disability of the suspect —
    not the truth or falsity of the confession — as part of the totality-of-the-
    circumstances voluntariness inquiry.
    UNITED STATES V. PRESTON                          23
    confession voluntary without regard to the likely impact on
    an individual with Preston’s mental characteristics.
    The government is correct that in Derrick v. Peterson,
    
    924 F.2d 813
    (9th Cir. 1991), a panel of our court stated that
    the defendant’s individual characteristics “are relevant to our
    due process inquiry only if we first conclude that the police’s
    conduct was coercive.” 
    Id. at 818
    (emphasis added). To the
    extent Derrick held that the issue of police coercion during an
    interrogation must be considered without regard to the
    suspect’s individual characteristics, it simply cannot be
    reconciled with the Supreme Court’s totality-of-the-
    circumstances analysis applicable to the voluntariness
    inquiry; with the Court’s specific directives, already
    surveyed, concerning the role of individual characteristics —
    including mental characteristics — in the voluntariness
    inquiry; or with our fairly recent en banc decision, Doody.
    Moreover, Derrick, and the government’s argument relying
    on Derrick, rest on an evident misreading of Colorado v.
    Connelly, 
    479 U.S. 157
    (1986).
    For its holding that individual characteristics may be
    considered only if the court first finds impermissible police
    coercion, Derrick relied principally upon Connelly. See
    
    Derrick, 924 F.2d at 818
    (discussing 
    Connelly, 479 U.S. at 163
    & n.1, 167). But Connelly concerned a confession by an
    individual who spontaneously approached an officer, and
    “without any prompting,” admitted “that he had murdered
    
    someone.” 479 U.S. at 160
    .14 Connelly’s holding was simply
    14
    In later psychological evaluations, the defendant was found to have
    chronic schizophrenia and revealed that he had confessed after hearing
    “God’s voice” tell him “either to confess to the killing or to commit
    suicide.” 
    Connelly, 479 U.S. at 161
    .
    24               UNITED STATES V. PRESTON
    that “[a]bsent police conduct causally related to the
    confession, there is simply no basis for concluding that any
    state actor has deprived a criminal defendant of due process
    of law.” 
    Id. at 164.
    It was on that premise that Connelly held
    the confession voluntary, explaining “that while mental
    condition is surely relevant to an individual’s susceptibility to
    police coercion, mere examination of the confessant’s state of
    mind can never conclude the due process inquiry.” 
    Id. at 165
    (emphasis added). Ultimately, the Court held that “coercive
    police activity is a necessary predicate to the finding that a
    confession is not ‘voluntary,’” 
    id. at 167,
    thereby reiterating
    its earlier rejection of the proposition that “a defendant’s
    mental condition, by itself and apart from its relation to
    official coercion, should ever dispose of the inquiry into
    constitutional ‘voluntariness,’” 
    id. at 164
    (emphasis added).
    In so ruling, Connelly reaffirmed, rather than departed from,
    the established law — that “[w]hile the state of the accused’s
    mind” was “certainly [a] factor[] to be evaluated in assessing
    the ‘voluntariness’ of an accused’s responses, [it was] not in
    and of [itself] determinative.” 
    Schneckloth, 412 U.S. at 227
    .
    For these reasons, to the extent that Derrick held that the
    issue of police coercion during interrogations must be
    evaluated without regard to the individual circumstances of
    the suspect, it cannot be reconciled with prior opinions of this
    Court or with binding Supreme Court precedent. As
    previously noted, Derrick is irreconcilable with our post-
    Derrick en banc opinion in Doody, and so already is not
    binding authority in our court. Because the three judge panel
    in this case relied upon Derrick despite our holding in Doody,
    we now explicitly hold that Derrick no longer is good law
    and overrule it, as well as subsequent opinions that have
    relied upon it. See Amaya-Ruiz v. Stewart, 
    121 F.3d 486
    , 495
    UNITED STATES V. PRESTON                    25
    (9th Cir. 1997) (citing Derrick); United States v. Chischilly,
    
    30 F.3d 1144
    , 1151 (9th Cir. 1994) (citing Derrick).
    III
    Voluntariness of Preston’s Confession
    We now turn to whether, under all of the circumstances
    — including Preston’s age, intellectual disability, and lack of
    sophistication, and the interrogation techniques used — there
    was coercive police action which overbore Preston’s will and
    rendered his confession involuntary. In doing so, we consider
    the district court’s factual account of what happened during
    the interrogation under the clearly erroneous test. United
    States v. Wolf, 
    813 F.2d 970
    , 974 (9th Cir. 1987) (citing
    United States v. McConney, 
    728 F.2d 1195
    , 1200 (9th Cir.
    1984) (en banc)). We note that there can be no dispute as to
    what happened during the interrogation itself. We have the
    audiotapes and transcript of the interrogation, and so “are not
    consigned to an evaluation of a cold record, or limited to
    reliance on the detectives’ testimony.” 
    Doody, 649 F.3d at 1009
    .
    We review de novo the district court’s conclusion that the
    confession was voluntary. 
    Wolf, 813 F.2d at 974
    . “Although
    sometimes framed as an issue of ‘psychological fact,’ the
    dispositive question of the voluntariness of a confession has
    always had a uniquely legal dimension.” 
    Miller, 474 U.S. at 115
    –16 (internal citation omitted).         “The notion of
    ‘voluntariness’ is itself an amphibian” and “purports at once
    to describe an internal psychic state and to characterize that
    state for legal purposes.” 
    Culombe, 367 U.S. at 604
    –05.
    Ultimately, “the admissibility of a confession turns as much
    on whether the techniques for extracting the statements, as
    26               UNITED STATES V. PRESTON
    applied to this suspect, are compatible with a system that
    presumes innocence and assures that a conviction will not be
    secured by inquisitorial means as on whether the defendant’s
    will was in fact overborne.” 
    Miller, 474 U.S. at 116
    . Thus,
    the voluntariness determination “reflects deep, even if
    inarticulate, feelings of our society” about the acceptability of
    the imposition of certain interrogation methods on a
    particular person. 
    Haley, 332 U.S. at 603
    (Frankfurter, J.,
    concurring). This “focus on the constitutional acceptability
    of the government conduct rather than merely on the
    defendant’s state of mind at the time of the confession
    requires us to consider legal concepts in the mix of fact and
    law and to exercise judgment about the values that animate
    legal principles.” 
    Wolf, 813 F.2d at 974
    (citation and internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    In short, because of the interweaving of factual, legal, and
    judgmental considerations, our voluntariness review is de
    novo.
    Applying de novo review, we conclude that, in light of the
    totality of the circumstances, including Preston’s individual
    characteristics, his confession was involuntary.
    A
    (1) We begin with “[c]onsideration of [Preston’s]
    reduced mental capacity,” a factor that is “critical because it
    [may] render[] him more susceptible to subtle forms of
    coercion.” N. Mariana Islands v. Mendiola, 
    976 F.2d 475
    ,
    485 (9th Cir. 1993), overruled on other grounds by George v.
    Camacho, 
    119 F.3d 1393
    (9th Cir. 1997) (en banc).
    UNITED STATES V. PRESTON                              27
    Preston was eighteen, with an IQ of sixty-five. The two
    officers realized early in the interrogation that Preston
    suffered some sort of intellectual disability, as his initial
    responses gave them cause to believe that he had an
    impairment. They therefore inquired directly if he was
    “disabled.” Preston did not understand the word “disabled,”
    and so asked its meaning. That he had to ask for an
    explanation of a common word itself suggests the extent of
    his cognitive impairment. After the officers explained the
    word’s meaning, Preston agreed that he was disabled,
    elaborating that he was not able to complete his schooling as
    a result.
    The psychological evidence introduced at the suppression
    hearing and trial confirmed, in spades, that Preston has many
    significant deficits in mental functioning. The psychologists’
    evaluations demonstrated that Preston has a “very impaired”
    ability to understand “everyday interpersonal exchanges as
    well as . . . formal legal” exchanges. “[A]ny English verbal
    material must be repeated, reinforced, and then revisited.”
    Without such repetition, “he may easily confuse the content
    of a conversation and give . . . spurious responses” or be
    misled. Thus, “[h]is relatively poor verbal linguistic fluency
    is likely to result in misunderstanding of directions or
    translate into delayed, unconventional, or inappropriate
    responses in verbal settings.” Preston also finds “complexity
    . . . confusing” and has trouble understanding abstract terms.15
    15
    Preston’s difficulty understanding language and abstract concepts was
    evident at the hearing on his jury trial waiver. After Preston told the
    district court that he believed that to be convicted, “[m]aybe five, six” of
    the jurors would have to decide that he was guilty, the district court
    explained that that was incorrect and that “[i]n order for you to be found
    guilty, all twelve of the jurors must agree that you are guilty of the charges
    brought against you by the government beyond a reasonable doubt.” The
    28                  UNITED STATES V. PRESTON
    He has difficulty following “simultaneous communication,”
    such as from two individuals speaking at once. Where there
    are two messages, Preston has trouble “sorting . . . out” what
    they are saying “and deciding how to respond.” “[T]o set up
    the potential for him to understand something, you have to
    use rather simple, concrete terms.”16
    During psychological testing, Preston expressed “distress
    of not knowing the answers to some questions or possibly
    consequent to difficulty understanding some of the questions
    he was asked.”17 Dr. DiBacco opined that Preston’s
    district court then asked Preston if he could be found guilty of the charges
    if “eleven jurors thought you were guilty and one juror still thought you
    were not guilty.” Preston replied, “Yes.”
    16
    The district court’s finding that Preston’s “responses and verbal
    demeanor demonstrate that he understood the questions” was clearly
    erroneous. The district court reached that conclusion by listening to the
    audio recording and reading the transcript of the interrogation, which we
    have done as well. The audiotape and transcript demonstrate that Preston’s
    answers were often nonresponsive or muddled, evidencing clear
    confusion. Preston’s most common responses were “I don’t know,” “I
    don’t remember,” and “Huh?” For example, when Kraus asked Preston
    if he remembered the child being over at his house on Friday, Preston
    responded, “No. All I know is it’s like — there’s a bunch of little kids
    over here, and plus that other guy, but — I don’t know, but — I don’t
    know what happened that day, but I wasn’t on drugs, under the influence
    or nothing.” Also, the officers sometimes themselves posed garbled
    questions, such as “Well, he — okay, but he said — you know, and I —
    yeah, he probably wants — so did it happen that day?” Preston did not
    ask for them to repeat the question, but instead, much as he often did,
    responded, “I don’t know. Probably.”
    17
    People with cognitive deficits generally have “tendencies to mask or
    disguise their cognitive deficits and to look to others — particularly
    authority figures — for the appropriate cues to behavior.” Richard A.
    Leo, Police Interrogation and American Justice 232 (2008). Thus, a
    UNITED STATES V. PRESTON                        29
    intellectual impairment made him more susceptible to the
    interrogative pressure. He testified that such distress at “not
    understand[ing] everything that is being said to him” creates
    situations in which “he may want to acquiesce to what he
    thinks people want him to say.” Even if a questioner asks
    him about “something that was impossible,” Preston may
    agree because he “thought that that’s what they wanted to
    hear.”
    (2) These traits — being “easily confused,” “highly
    suggestible and easy to manipulate” — are consistent with
    characteristics of the intellectually disabled in general. See
    Richard A. Leo, Police Interrogation and American Justice
    232 (2008). Studies show that “subjects with IQs well below
    average, such as those who are borderline or mentally
    handicapped, tend to be markedly more suggestible.” Gisli
    H. Gudjonsson, The Psychology of Interrogations and
    Confessions: A Handbook 382 (2003). “Lack of intelligence
    may render” the intellectually disabled “unable to understand
    what is being said” in an interrogation. President’s Panel on
    Mental Retardation, Report of the Task Force on Law 33
    (1963). They “are highly susceptible to leading, misleading,
    and erroneous information,” and it is very “easy to get them
    to agree with and repeat back false or misleading statements,
    even incriminating ones.” 
    Leo, supra, at 232
    . “Research
    shows that witnesses with mental deficiencies are highly
    influenced by questions that contain leading and misleading
    information.” Saul M. Kassin & Gisli H. Gudjonsson, The
    “disabled person may feel compelled to answer a question, even if the
    question exceeds his ability to answer.” Morgan Cloud et al., Words
    Without Meaning: The Constitution, Confessions, and Mentally Retarded
    Suspects, 69 U. Chi. L. Rev. 495, 513 (2002).
    30               UNITED STATES V. PRESTON
    Psychology of Confessions: A Review of the Literature and
    Issues, 5 Psychol. Sci. Pub. Int. 33, 53 (2004).
    Summarizing the evidence regarding how the
    intellectually impaired respond to contemporary police
    interrogation methods, several scholars have listed “seven
    common characteristics” of such people, including
    (1) “unusual[] susceptib[ility] to the perceived wishes of
    authority figures”; (2) “a generalized desire to please”;
    (3) difficulty “discern[ing] when they are in an adversarial
    situation, especially with police officers,” who they generally
    are taught exist to provide help; (4) “incomplete or immature
    concepts of blameworthiness and culpability”; (5) “[d]eficits
    in attention or impulse control”; (6) “inaccurate views of their
    own capacities”; and (7) “a tendency not to identify
    themselves as disabled” and to “mask[] their limitations.”
    Morgan Cloud et al., Words Without Meaning: The
    Constitution, Confessions, and Mentally Retarded Suspects,
    69 U. Chi. L. Rev. 495, 511–13 (2002). These scholars
    pronounced it “now . . . beyond reasonable dispute” that the
    ABA was correct in stating “that the increased vulnerability
    of a mentally disabled suspect, and his or her naiveté,
    ignorance, confusion, suggestibility, delusional beliefs,
    extraordinary susceptibility to pressure, and similar
    considerations may make it possible for law enforcement
    officers to induce an involuntary statement by using
    techniques that would be acceptable in cases involving
    mentally typical suspects.” 
    Id. at 509
    (internal quotation
    marks and citation omitted). As a result of these traits,
    “[m]entally disabled individuals . . . are . . . long known to be
    vulnerable to coercion.” Brandon L. Garrett, The Substance
    of False Confessions, 62 Stan. L. Rev. 1051, 1064 (2010).
    The Supreme Court has so recognized, noting that “mental
    UNITED STATES V. PRESTON                            31
    condition is surely relevant to an individual’s susceptibility to
    police coercion.” 
    Connelly, 479 U.S. at 165
    .
    B
    We turn now to another consideration in our voluntariness
    analysis, the techniques the officers used when interrogating
    Preston.
    As the Supreme Court pointed out in Miranda, most
    police officers have been trained in psychological techniques
    designed to induce confessions from reluctant 
    suspects. 384 U.S. at 448
    –59. Outside of the custodial setting, these
    techniques have never been held inherently coercive in the
    sense that the resulting confessions are necessarily
    involuntary, and we are certainly not so holding today. And
    the officers’ interrogation of Preston was not lengthy and did
    not take place hidden from public view in the confines of a
    police station, as was true in many cases in which courts have
    deemed the resulting confession involuntary. See, e.g., Reck
    v. Pate, 
    367 U.S. 433
    , 441 (1961); 
    Doody, 649 F.3d at 1009
    .
    But, as we have recognized, there is “no single litmus-paper
    test for constitutionally impermissible interrogation,” and no
    individual feature of the interrogation is determinative of
    whether a confession is voluntary. 
    Culombe, 367 U.S. at 601
    .
    “[A]s interrogators have turned to more subtle forms of
    psychological persuasion,” and away from physical coercion,
    “courts have found the mental condition of the defendant a
    more significant factor in the ‘voluntariness’ calculus.”
    
    Connelly, 479 U.S. at 164
    .18 It simply “takes less” in terms
    18
    Culombe v. Connecticut, 
    367 U.S. 568
    , 624–25, 634 (1961), for
    example, considered the defendant’s “mental age of nine or nine and a
    half,” and that he was “suggestible and subject to intimidation,” in finding
    32                  UNITED STATES V. PRESTON
    of sophisticated police interrogation techniques “to interfere
    with the deliberative processes of one whose capacity for
    rational choice is limited than it takes to affect the
    deliberative processes of one whose capacity is not so
    limited.” 
    Smith, 910 F.2d at 1497
    .
    Among the police tactics used here were several
    recommended by a manual on police interrogation, see Fred
    E. Inbau, John E. Reid, Joseph P. Buckley & Brian C. Jayne,
    Criminal Interrogation and Confessions (5th ed. 2013) (“Reid
    manual”),19 from which both the officers who interrogated
    Preston were trained. The officers, however, sometimes
    disregarded the manual’s cautions about the tactics they used.
    that his “will was broken.” Reck v. Pate, 
    367 U.S. 433
    , 442 (1961), held
    a confession involuntary after observing that the nineteen-year-old
    “Reck’s youth, his subnormal intelligence, and his lack of previous
    experience with the police make it impossible to equate his powers of
    resistance to overbearing police tactics with those of” other individuals.
    Payne v. Arkansas, 
    356 U.S. 560
    , 567 (1958), concluded that the
    confession of a “mentally dull 19-year-old youth” was coerced. Fikes v.
    Alabama, 
    352 U.S. 191
    , 196–97 (1957), determined that a confession was
    involuntary in part because the suspect was “uneducated” and “of low
    mentality, if not mentally ill,” and so “was a weaker and more susceptible
    subject than” in other cases.
    19
    The “Reid method,” named for the manual of which Reid was a co-
    author, is widely used by law enforcement agencies. See 
    Miranda, 384 U.S. at 449
    n.9; Douglas Starr, The Interview: Do Police
    Interrogation Techniques Produce False Confessions?, The New Yorker,
    Dec. 9, 2013, at 42.
    Unless specified, the cited portions of the fifth edition of the manual,
    released in 2013, are unchanged substantively from the fourth edition,
    which was the most recent version when the events at issue took place.
    UNITED STATES V. PRESTON                  33
    For example, using one of the recommended approaches,
    the two officers asked Preston a number of questions that
    presented him with two alternatives as to how the crime was
    committed. See 
    id. at 293–303.
    “Both alternatives are highly
    incriminating, but they are worded in such a way that one
    alternative acts as a face-saving device whilst the other
    implies some repulsive motivation.” 
    Gudjonsson, supra, at 19
    . In this instance, Preston was asked to choose, for
    example, whether he was a monster — a sexual predator who
    repeatedly preys on children — or if the abuse of the child
    was a one-time occurrence.
    These questions were derived from similar exemplars in
    the Reid manual. Reid 
    manual, supra, at 296
    –97, 298. The
    manual, however, suggests that the inculpatory alternatives
    technique recommended may be unduly coercive when used
    for suspects of seriously impaired mental ability: it trains
    agents in the alternative questioning method with the
    understanding that “no innocent suspect, with normal
    intelligence and mental capacity, would acknowledge
    committing a crime merely because the investigation
    contrasted a less desirable circumstance to a more desirable
    one and encouraged the suspect to accept it.” Reid 
    manual, supra, at 303
    (emphasis added). The psychological evidence
    regarding Preston’s intellectual disabilities confirms this
    assessment by indicating that he is confused by complexity,
    abstraction, and multiplicity, and likely to acquiesce in
    suggestions made by the questioner. As a result, recognizing
    that where one is asked “a or b,” one can answer “neither
    one,” rather than acquiescing in one or the other, could well
    have exceeded his intellectual abilities.
    A second questioning technique the officers used with
    Preston was repeated pressure to change answers inconsistent
    34                  UNITED STATES V. PRESTON
    with guilt and adopt answers evidencing guilt instead.
    Repeatedly rejecting Preston’s denials or equivocations,
    Kraus and Secatero asked him the same questions over and
    over until he finally assented and adopted the details that the
    officers posited.20 Such acquiescence and willingness to
    “shift” answers in response to interrogative pressure is
    common for the intellectually disabled, who, when presented
    with leading or suggestive questions, “frequently seek to
    conform to the perceived desires of the interrogator.” Stanley
    L. Brodsky & Allyson D. Bennett, Psychological Assessments
    of Confessions and Suggestibility in Mentally Retarded
    Suspects, 33 J. Psychiatry & L. 359, 363 (2005).21
    20
    Psychologists have found that an interrogator’s explicit and implicit
    negative feedback, such as “repeating the same questions several times
    because the answers given are not acceptable to the interrogator,” can
    cause a suspect to “shift” or “adapt” his answers to responses acceptable
    to the questioner. 
    Gudjonsson, supra, at 347
    –48 (internal quotation marks
    and citation omitted).
    21
    Research shows that in general, “the mentally retarded are eager to
    please.” 
    Leo, supra, at 232
    . “They tend to have a high need for
    approval,” and thus are “prone to being acquiescent,” particularly with
    “authority figures.” 
    Id. This desire
    for approval “is manifested in an
    acquiescence response bias, a tendency to say ‘yes.’” Kassin &
    
    Gudjonsson, supra, at 53
    . A “common phenomenon” among the
    intellectually disabled “is the mental process of ‘cheating to lose,’ that is,
    accepting blame so that others will not be angry.” Cloud et 
    al., supra, at 511
    –12. “If an authority figure such as a police officer makes it clear to
    the individual that he wants a confession, even an innocent disabled
    person may confess so a law enforcement officer will not become angry
    with him.” 
    Id. at 512.
    As a result, studies show that “people with mental retardation [are]
    more likely to yield to leading questions and change their answers in
    response to mild negative feedback.” Kassin et 
    al., supra, at 21
    .
    UNITED STATES V. PRESTON                              35
    Identifying a third technique that the officers used, Dr.
    DiBacco testified that “[t]here were a number of times”
    during the officers’ interrogation of Preston “that the desired
    response was embedded in the question.” The agents carried
    out this technique by asking Preston questions that contained
    details about the allegations already made. For example,
    when Kraus first asked if Preston used a condom — which
    Kraus knew had been alleged during the child’s forensic
    interview — Preston responded that he did not know. Only
    after Kraus told Preston the correct answer — “Yeah, you
    did?” — did Preston adopt that detail. The same pattern was
    repeated to pressure Preston to adopt the suggested fact that
    he had unzipped his pants.
    Particularly strong evidence of Preston’s suggestibility is
    that he adopted answers that were demonstrably false.22 Most
    tellingly, the officers rejected Preston’s repeated denials of
    being home on Friday, saying “you telling us . . . you’re not
    being here . . . We just don’t buy it,” “the fact is, we know
    you were here,” “ there’s no denying” it, and so “you have to
    remember what happened Friday.” Eventually, Preston
    stopped denying that he was home on Friday, instead
    acquiescing that “there’s a bunch of little kids over here, and
    22
    Although the introduction of the incorrect facts here was not
    intentional, the Reid manual suggests that officers may introduce such
    falsities to verify the accuracy of a confession: “[o]ne method for checking
    the authenticity of a voluntary confession, or one that seems to be the
    result of mental illness, is to introduce some fictitious aspects of the crime
    and test whether the suspect will accept them as actual facts relating to the
    occurrence.” Reid 
    manual, supra, at 349
    .
    36                  UNITED STATES V. PRESTON
    plus that other guy,” and that he “was inside just by myself”23
    — even though it is undisputed that Preston in fact was not at
    home on that day.24
    23
    The district court’s finding that Preston’s admissions were not
    necessarily tied to the previous Friday is clearly erroneous. As explained
    above, Preston admitted that there were “a bunch of little kids over here”
    in response to questions about whether the victim was at his home six days
    before, on Friday. Preston eventually admitted that the child had come in
    when asked again, “So what happened Friday? . . . So you were inside in
    there. Did the kids come inside then?”
    The district court’s suggestion that the officers’ occasional references
    to the correct day of the month dissipated any confusion created by the
    numerous, repeated references to the wrong day of the week is also clearly
    erroneous. Twice, the officers referred to the “the 23rd,” but they always
    coupled this date with the incorrect day of the week, which they
    emphasized more than the date. In the first instance, Kraus said, “Did he
    come over here on? Was it the 23rd, Friday? Yeah? Yeah, the 23rd,
    which would have been, what, a week ago?” Secatero responded, “Yeah.”
    Kraus continued, “Yeah, a week ago Friday.” Secatero affirmed, “Last
    Friday.”
    Later, when Kraus was writing the confession, he said to Preston,
    “basically, what you’re saying is, on the 24th, which was last Friday, you
    were inside and —“ Secatero interjected that the “23rd is the Friday.”
    After Kraus agreed, Secatero corrected himself, saying “Or — well,
    Thursday. . . . Thursday evening, and the interview [of the child] took
    place on the 24th, Friday. It was last Thursday . . . Yeah, last Thursday.”
    Kraus then continued to Preston, “So on Thursday, you were hanging out
    inside, and who else was — who else was there?” Preston responded,
    “Huh?” The references to the correct day of the month embedded within
    these exchanges could hardly have cleared up the confusion.
    24
    Researchers have observed that this type of persistence can be
    particularly hard to resist for suspects who are naturally compliant and
    eager to please, such as the intellectually disabled. Welsh S. White, False
    Confessions and the Constitution: Safeguards Against Untrustworthy
    Confessions, 32 Harv. C.R.-C.L. L. Rev. 105, 124–25 (1997) (internal
    UNITED STATES V. PRESTON                             37
    That Preston attempted to tell the officers what they
    wanted to hear is also clear from some of his other shifting
    responses. At first, when the officers asked if any of the
    children came inside his house on Friday, Preston denied it.
    As the officers repeatedly asked this question, communicating
    that his initial responses were not what they wanted, his
    answer shifted from “nobody came inside” to “[i]t’s just like
    what you guys said, that guy came in.”
    The agents coupled the techniques of alternative
    questioning, providing suggestive details, and repetitious and
    insistent questions with other techniques that the Reid manual
    specifically cautions against. The Reid manual specifically
    warns that the questioning “should not be, in any way, based
    on leniency if the more understanding alternative question is
    accepted.” Reid 
    manual, supra, at 300
    (emphasis added). It
    also cautions that when questioning people of low
    intelligence, investigators should avoid offering promises of
    leniency or using deceptive interrogation techniques due to
    the vulnerability of this group. 
    Id. at 332–33,
    352, 429.
    Kraus and Secatero ignored these admonitions. They told
    Preston that if he were not the “kind of guy that [abuses
    children] all the time,” but instead was the type of “guy that
    just” had “a bad day” and did it once, then he could simply
    “move on.” The message conveyed was that Preston would
    not be punished if he admitted to being a one-time child rapist
    — which was, of course, not true.
    citations omitted). “When an interrogator repeatedly tells a suspect that
    there is not the slightest doubt of his guilt and brushes aside the suspect’s
    attempt to give a different version of the facts, the suspect is even more
    likely to acquiesce.” 
    Id. at 125.
    38                  UNITED STATES V. PRESTON
    The officers misled Preston in other ways as well, telling
    him that his written confession was just an apology note to
    the child, that they would not tell anyone else what he said,
    and that the confession would never leave the “folder” or the
    United States Attorney’s Office. At the same time, they told
    Preston that he was free to leave only after he finished
    answering their questions, and threatened that they would
    keep returning until Preston did so. In this way, the police
    paired the prospect of relentless questioning with false
    promises of leniency.25 Such tactics, in combination, would
    be hard for a person of Preston’s impaired intelligence to
    withstand or rationally evaluate.26
    Assuredly, interrogating officers can make false
    representations concerning the crime or the investigation
    during questioning without always rendering an ensuing
    confession coerced. See, e.g., Frazier v. Cupp, 
    394 U.S. 731
    ,
    739 (1969). But false promises stand on a different footing.
    In particular, the Supreme Court has observed that “the test
    of voluntariness” is “whether the confession was extracted by
    25
    We point out the officers’ statements that Preston was free to leave
    only after the questioning was finished and that the officers would return
    until he answered their questions not to suggest that Preston was in
    custody for Miranda purposes, but to show some of the pressures the
    officers put upon Preston to overbear his will.
    26
    Studies show that “people with significant intellectual impairment do
    not fully appreciate the legal consequences for suspects of making self-
    incriminating admissions during questioning.” 
    Gudjonsson, supra, at 326
    ;
    see 
    id. (describing a
    “mean IQ score of 68” as a “significant intellectual
    impairment”). So a person such as Preston would not be able to see past
    the officers’ lies about the use of his apology letter or the punishment that
    he could face to understand “the implications or consequences of his
    statements in the way a person of normal intelligence” would. President’s
    Panel on Mental 
    Retardation, supra, at 33
    .
    UNITED STATES V. PRESTON                     39
    any sort of threats or violence, or obtained by any direct or
    implied promises, however slight, or by the exertion of any
    improper influence.” Hutto v. Ross, 
    429 U.S. 28
    , 30 (1976)
    (per curiam) (quoting Bram v. United States, 
    168 U.S. 532
    ,
    542–43 (1897)) (internal quotation marks and formatting
    omitted). In Henry v. Kernan, 
    197 F.3d 1021
    , 1027–28 (9th
    Cir. 1999), for example, we concluded that detectives’
    deceptive tactics overcame the defendant’s will and rendered
    his statement involuntary when the detectives made
    deliberately misleading comments “intended to convey the
    impression that anything said by the defendant would not be
    used against him for any purposes.”
    The types of deception used here, which primarily related
    to considerations extrinsic to the suspect’s guilt or innocence,
    are particularly problematic when used on a person with an
    intellectual disability. Intrinsic falsehoods, which relate to
    the facts of the crime itself or of the investigation — such as
    falsely informing a suspect that the victim had survived and
    identified the suspect — do “not lead [the suspect] to consider
    anything beyond his own beliefs regarding his actual guilt or
    innocence, his moral sense of right and wrong, and his
    judgment regarding the likelihood that the police had
    garnered enough valid evidence linking him to the crime.”
    Holland v. McGinnis, 
    963 F.2d 1044
    , 1051–52 (7th Cir.
    1992). But here, the police did not simply inflate the amount
    of incriminating evidence against Preston. Instead, they
    suggested falsely that if he confessed, his admissions would
    not be used against him — he could “move on” after
    apologizing to the child, rather than being punished. This
    approach “interject[ed] the type of extrinsic considerations”
    more likely to “distort[] an otherwise rational choice of
    40                  UNITED STATES V. PRESTON
    whether to confess or remain silent.” 
    Id. at 1051.27
    The
    intellectually disabled are more susceptible to such extrinsic
    deception tactics.
    “Because of their cognitive deficits and limited social
    skills, the mentally retarded . . . often lack the ability to
    appreciate the seriousness of a situation.” Steven A. Drizin
    & Richard A. Leo, The Problem of False Confessions in the
    Post-DNA World, 
    82 N.C. L
    . Rev. 891, 919–20 (2004).
    “Under interrogation, they are not likely to understand that
    the police detective who appears to be friendly is really their
    adversary or to comprehend the long-term consequences of
    making an incriminating statement.” Jon B. Gould & Richard
    A. Leo, One Hundred Years Later: Wrongful Convictions
    After a Century of Research, 100 J. Crim. L. & Criminology
    825, 847 n.119 (2010). They fail “to understand the context
    in which interrogation occurs, the legal consequences
    embedded in the rules or the significance of confessing.”
    Cloud et 
    al., supra, at 501
    . In particular, research shows that
    27
    This danger is illustrated by Lynumn v. Illinois, 
    372 U.S. 528
    (1963),
    in which the Supreme Court deemed police trickery of this sort, taken to
    an extreme, to render a confession involuntary. In Lynumn, the police told
    a young mother, who had no prior experience with the police and no
    reason to believe the police were not capable of carrying out their threats,
    that if she were charged with a crime, she would probably lose her welfare
    benefits and custody of her children, but that if she cooperated, they
    “would go light with her.” 
    Id. at 533–34.
    The Court deemed it “clear that
    a confession made under such circumstances must be deemed not
    voluntary, but coerced.” 
    Id. at 534;
    see also 
    Holland, 963 F.2d at 1052
    (describing Lynumn and explaining that this sort of pressure “distorted the
    suspect’s rational choice (i.e., is it wise or morally right to confess given
    [her own understandings of her guilt or innocence and moral sense of right
    and wrong]?) by introducing a completely extrinsic consideration: an
    empty but plausible threat to take away something to which she and her
    children would otherwise be entitled”).
    UNITED STATES V. PRESTON                     41
    the intellectually disabled are “significantly more likely . . .
    to believe the suspect will be allowed to go home after
    making a confession” to a serious crime. 
    Gudjonsson, supra, at 326
    . So being told falsely that, after a confession, one
    could simply “move on,” or that the confession would be kept
    confidential, is likely to have a considerably greater impact
    on a person with serious intellectual impairments, such as
    Preston, than on an individual of normal intelligence.
    IV
    Analysis and Conclusion Regarding Voluntariness
    Considered all together, the various factors here —
    Preston’s severe intellectual impairment; the police’s
    repetitive questioning and the threats that it would continue
    without end; the pressure placed on Preston to adopt certain
    responses; the use of alternative questions that assumed his
    culpability; the officers’ multiple deceptions about how the
    statement would be used; the suggestive questioning that
    provided details of the alleged crime; and the false promises
    of leniency and confidentiality — leave us convinced that
    Preston’s will was overborne and his statement involuntary.
    “The line between proper and permissible police conduct and
    techniques and methods offensive to due process is, at best,
    a difficult one to draw, particularly in cases such as this
    where it is necessary to make fine judgments as to the effect
    of psychologically coercive pressures and inducements on the
    mind and will of an accused.” Haynes v. Washington,
    
    373 U.S. 503
    , 515 (1963). But we have long been aware that
    even “subtle coercion . . . can have an extraordinary effect on
    one of low mental capabilities.” N. Mariana 
    Islands, 976 F.2d at 485
    . We must be mindful to protect the
    constitutional rights of all members of our society, not just
    42                UNITED STATES V. PRESTON
    those of normal intelligence and cognitive functioning. Even
    if we would reach a different conclusion regarding someone
    of normal intelligence, we hold that the officers’ use of the
    methods employed here to confuse and compel a confession
    from the intellectually disabled eighteen-year-old before us
    produced an involuntary confession.
    Accordingly, we conclude that the district court erred in
    admitting Preston’s confession.28
    V
    Sufficiency of the Evidence
    As a final matter, Preston argues on appeal that the
    evidence was constitutionally insufficient to establish
    essential elements of the crime charged. Specifically, Preston
    contends that the government failed to introduce sufficient
    evidence to prove that he “engaged in sexual contact with the
    victim’s buttocks or anus with [his] penis,” (alteration in
    original), or that he acted with “an intent to abuse, humiliate,
    harass, degrade, or arouse or gratify the sexual desire of any
    person,” 18 U.S.C. § 2246(3).
    The Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment
    provides that no person shall “be subject for the same offence
    to be twice put in jeopardy.” “It has long been settled,
    however, that the Double Jeopardy Clause’s general
    prohibition against successive prosecutions does not prevent
    28
    The government has not argued that the admission of Preston’s
    confession constituted harmless error. See Arizona v. Fulminante,
    
    499 U.S. 279
    , 295–96, 306–12 (1991). We therefore do not consider
    whether the admission of the confession contributed to his conviction.
    UNITED STATES V. PRESTON                     43
    the government from retrying a defendant who succeeds in
    getting his first conviction set aside, through direct appeal or
    collateral attack, because of some error in the proceedings
    leading to conviction.” Lockhart v. Nelson, 
    488 U.S. 33
    , 38
    (1988). But the Supreme Court has recognized an exception
    to the government’s right to retry a defendant without
    offending the Double Jeopardy Clause where the conviction
    is overturned for insufficient evidence. Burks v. United
    States, 
    437 U.S. 1
    , 11 (1978). This exception recognizes that
    the “Double Jeopardy Clause forbids a second trial for the
    purpose of affording the prosecution another opportunity to
    supply evidence which it failed to muster in the first
    proceeding.” 
    Id. As Preston
    did not “‘waive[]’ his right to a
    judgment of acquittal by moving for a new trial,” 
    id. at 17,
    we
    must address the sufficiency of the evidence question even
    though we are remanding for a new trial.
    Viewing all the evidence introduced at trial, including the
    erroneously admitted confession, 
    Lockhart, 488 U.S. at 40
    –41, in the light most favorable to the prosecution, a
    “‘rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements
    of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt,’” United States v.
    Rios, 
    449 F.3d 1009
    , 1011 (9th Cir. 2006) (quoting Jackson
    v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 319 (1979)). There was sufficient
    evidence to support that the sexual act took place, including
    Preston’s confession, the child’s statements to his
    grandparents and uncle, and the child’s repeated complaints
    of pain. Further, contrary to Preston’s contention that his
    denial of being motivated by a sexual “urge” undermines
    entirely a finding of the requisite intent, we have long
    recognized that a jury may draw inferences from
    circumstantial evidence to find the requisite intent. See, e.g.,
    Ngo v. Giurbino, 
    651 F.3d 1112
    , 1114–15 (9th Cir. 2011).
    There is little doubt that the jury had ample circumstantial
    44                  UNITED STATES V. PRESTON
    evidence, including the evidence of the act itself, to find that
    Preston intended to gratify his sexual desire.
    Finally, Preston’s confession itself was sufficiently
    corroborated by independent evidence. See United States v.
    Norris, 
    428 F.3d 907
    , 914–15 (9th Cir. 2005) (citing United
    States v. Lopez-Alvarez, 
    970 F.2d 583
    , 592 (9th Cir. 1992)).
    Corroborating evidence need “not independently establish
    any element beyond a reasonable doubt.” United States v.
    Delgado, 
    545 F.3d 1195
    , 1206 (9th Cir. 2008) (internal
    quotation marks and citation omitted). Here, the child’s
    statements to his relatives and the forensic interviewer, his
    complaints of pain, and the DNA evidence together “support
    the essential facts admitted” by Preston “sufficiently to
    justify” an “inference of their truth” by the factfinder. United
    States v. Corona-Garcia, 
    210 F.3d 973
    , 978 (9th Cir. 2000).
    Thus, we conclude that sufficient evidence supported
    Preston’s conviction at the first trial, and we remand for a
    new trial.29
    REVERSED AND REMANDED.
    29
    We need not reach Preston’s other grounds for appeal, including that
    his jury trial waiver — which he entered with the understanding that his
    confession would be admitted at trial — was not voluntary, knowing, and
    intelligent. Even if the prior jury trial waiver was voluntary, because we
    have found error entitling Preston to a retrial, Preston’s earlier consent to
    a bench trial, made prior to this appeal, does not carry over to any later
    retrial. See United States v. Mortensen, 
    860 F.2d 948
    , 950 (9th Cir. 1988);
    see also United States v. Groth, 
    682 F.2d 578
    , 579–80 (6th Cir. 1982);
    F.M. Davies & Co. v. Porter, 
    248 F. 397
    , 398 (8th Cir. 1918).
    UNITED STATES V. PRESTON                            45
    GRABER, Circuit Judge, specially concurring:
    Because I agree with the majority that we should reverse
    and remand this case for a new trial, I concur in the
    judgment.1 I also agree with the majority that, to decide the
    voluntariness of a confession resulting from a non-custodial
    police interview, we consider the totality of the circumstances
    in which the suspect makes the confession, including the
    relevant characteristics of the suspect. Doody v. Ryan,
    
    649 F.3d 986
    , 1008 (9th Cir. 2011) (en banc). But I view the
    totality of the circumstances differently than the majority. In
    particular, I think that the officers’ false promises about the
    nature of the interview, coupled with Preston’s intellectual
    disability, coerced Preston into confessing, but most of the
    tactics employed by the officers were not coercive.
    I.
    Many aspects of the interview were not coercive.
    First, Preston was not in custody at the time of the
    interview. Two law enforcement officers, wearing plain
    clothes and arriving in unmarked cars, approached Preston
    outside his home. One was not armed, and the other did not
    display a weapon at any time. The entire conversation took
    place outside Preston’s home; when asked whether he would
    prefer to talk privately in one of the officers’ cars, Preston
    said “no” and the interview continued at the same outdoor
    location. The officers told Preston that he was not under
    arrest, that he was free to stop answering their questions at
    1
    I also concur fully in Part V of the majority opinion and with the
    majority’s holding in Part II.E. that we must overrule Derrick v. Peterson,
    
    924 F.2d 813
    , 818 (9th Cir. 1991).
    46                  UNITED STATES V. PRESTON
    any time, and that he was free to leave at any time. (Because
    the discussion took place outdoors, Preston had only to walk
    through his own front door to terminate the interview.) The
    officers were not outsiders to the Navajo community; one was
    a tribal officer. Their tones of voice were soft, and they asked
    questions in a slow and low-key manner, with many pauses
    and silences in order to give Preston time to think and
    respond. The entire interview lasted only about 38 minutes.2
    Second, apart from the false promises of leniency
    discussed below, the tactics used by the officers (and the
    instances of their mistakes) in this case are benign: Over the
    course of a casual 38-minute interview, the officers asked
    almost entirely open-ended questions and discussed highly
    charged topics in broad terms. The officers also, clearly by
    mistake, referred to the wrong day of the previous week
    during portions of the interview. In my view, the method of
    asking questions and the mistake were not coercive.
    The officers asked Preston only a few either-or questions,
    and many were follow-up questions to clarify steps in the
    narrative that were necessarily binary—for example, an
    2
    The majority makes much of an officer’s comment to Preston that,
    “[a]fter the interview, you’re free to go.” Maj. op. at 11, 38. Not only
    does the majority’s broad interpretation of that phrase disregard the
    officers’ two earlier statements articulating clearly that Preston was not
    under arrest and was free to leave and free to stop talking at any time, but
    the majority also reads the phrase out of context. Immediately following
    the quoted comment, the officers reaffirmed their meaning: “We’re not
    here to put the handcuffs on you today . . . .” Rather than communicating
    to Preston that he was currently not free to leave, as the majority suggests,
    the statements that Preston was not going to be arrested after the interview
    and that he would be free to leave after the interview merely served to
    affirm that he would continue to be free to leave.
    UNITED STATES V. PRESTON                             47
    officer asked, “Did [the child] put the condom on or did
    [Preston]?” and “[W]as [the child] standing up or was [the
    child] sitting down?”3 Although either-or questions could be
    overly leading in certain contexts, they are not necessarily
    leading and can, at times, serve to clarify a narrative.
    3
    A close analysis of the interview transcript reveals that the officers
    asked Preston approximately 17 either-or questions over the course of a
    38-minute interview that included dozens of non-either-or questions.
    Moreover, those 17 questions, contrary to the majority’s summary
    treatment of them as homogenous, fall into two distinct categories:
    (1) two either-or questions regarding repeat offender status; and (2) a
    series of either-or questions to clarify steps in Preston’s narrative of the
    incident.
    The officers asked only two of the 17 questions before Preston began
    volunteering information regarding the incident. Those two either-or
    questions involved inquiring into whether Preston was a routine assaulter
    or whether the alleged event was a one-time occurrence. Contrary to the
    majority, I did not interpret Preston’s response to those questions as
    confused acquiescence. Preston responded repeatedly in the negative or
    with “I don’t know,” and at no point did he acquiesce in response to those
    questions. Rather, what I find troublesome about those questions is not
    that they trapped Preston into a binary answer—an answer that he notably
    did not provide—but that the officers coupled their description of a one-
    time offender with an implication that such a person would not be
    prosecuted. I will discuss this issue below.
    Second, the 15 either-or questions that the officers asked after Preston
    began to volunteer information regarding the incident were either open-
    ended or were necessarily binary. The majority speculates that answering
    “neither one” to such questions “could well have exceeded [Preston’s]
    intellectual abilities.” Maj. op. at 33. The record does not support the
    majority’s speculations. For example, in response to at least three of those
    either-or questions, and arguably more, Preston responded in the negative
    to both options offered him, or answered that he did not know.
    48              UNITED STATES V. PRESTON
    Contrary to the majority, maj. op. at 35–36, I do not think
    that the district court erred—clearly or otherwise—in finding
    that Preston’s admissions were not tied to a particular day of
    the week. Over the course of the interview, the discussion
    moved from questions about a particular weekday to
    questions about an event unmoored from any particular day.
    I would not find Preston’s confession involuntary, even in
    part, by reason of such a slight misstep.
    As the Supreme Court has recognized, there is “no
    talismanic definition of ‘voluntariness,’ mechanically
    applicable to the host of situations where the question has
    arisen.” Schneckloth v. Bustamonte, 
    412 U.S. 218
    , 224
    (1973). Rather, voluntariness is viewed as a spectrum: At
    one end is “the acknowledged need for police questioning as
    a tool for the effective enforcement of criminal laws,” while
    at the other is “the set of values reflecting society’s deeply
    felt belief that the criminal law cannot be used as an
    instrument of unfairness.” 
    Id. at 225.
    But such a rule is also
    inherently ambiguous and, as the Court acknowledged in
    crafting the bright-line Miranda rule, the totality-of-the-
    circumstances test is challenging for law enforcement
    officers. Dickerson v. United States, 
    530 U.S. 428
    , 444
    (2000).
    In order to respect the “acknowledged need for police
    questioning as a tool for the effective enforcement of criminal
    laws,” we must craft clear rules that do not place officers in
    constant fear of condemnation for deploying the mildest of
    tactics. In the course of investigating reported crimes,
    officers necessarily have to approach most suspects without
    any information regarding their intellectual capabilities and
    necessarily have to employ tactics similar to those that the
    officers used here.         Those tactics may, in certain
    UNITED STATES V. PRESTON                     49
    circumstances, coerce a highly sensitive suspect, but that
    determination must be made on a case-by-case basis by
    looking at the totality of the circumstances at hand. See
    
    Doody, 649 F.3d at 1008
    (“The Supreme Court has observed
    that, ‘[t]he application of these principles involves close
    scrutiny of the facts of individual cases.” (alteration in
    original) (emphasis omitted) (quoting Gallegos v. Colorado,
    
    370 U.S. 49
    , 52 (1962))).
    II.
    Our disagreements aside, the majority and I reach the
    same conclusion: that Preston confessed involuntarily. But
    contrary to the majority, I do not think that we must condemn
    every interview tactic that the officers used or embark on an
    exploration of empirical literature on intellectual disabilities.
    Rather, I think that this case is resolved squarely by our
    earlier precedent that prohibits false promises of confidence
    in exchange for confessions.
    The Supreme Court has held that the test for voluntariness
    of a confession “is whether the confession was extracted by
    any sort of threats or violence, or obtained by any direct or
    implied promises, however slight, or by the exertion of any
    improper influence.” Hutto v. Ross, 
    429 U.S. 28
    , 30 (1976)
    (per curiam) (internal quotation marks and brackets omitted).
    Although we have held that general allusions to leniency are
    insufficient to render a confession involuntary, United States
    v. Coleman, 
    208 F.3d 786
    , 791 (9th Cir. 2000); United States
    v. Leon Guerrero, 
    847 F.2d 1363
    , 1366 (9th Cir. 1988), we
    also have held that statements by officers conveying that the
    interview is in complete confidence render any resulting
    confession coerced, Henry v. Kernan, 
    197 F.3d 1021
    , 1027
    (9th Cir. 1999).
    50              UNITED STATES V. PRESTON
    The officers’ suggestions that any incriminating statement
    would be kept in the United States Attorney’s file and that the
    purpose of the interview was to extract an apology are
    troubling. Indeed, those suggestions and that appeal to
    culturally appropriate closure, in my view, overbore Preston’s
    will. As the record reveals, Preston remained incredibly
    reserved and circumscribed in the facts that he chose to share
    with the officers until after their promise of confidence.
    Immediately following the promise of confidence, Preston
    agreed with the officers’ version of the incident:
    [Officer Greg]:     I mean we’re not going to
    make a judgment; are you
    — on you or — you know.
    We’re just here. We do
    this day in and day out.
    We talk to people left and
    right, and we don’t say
    anything about it.
    We don’t tell this to
    anybody. It stays with the
    folder, and it stays with the
    U.S. Attorney’s Office and
    that’s it.        So what
    happened Friday?
    [Officer James]: So you were inside in
    there. Did the kids come
    inside then?
    [Preston]:          No, nobody came inside.
    It’s just like what you guys
    UNITED STATES V. PRESTON                   51
    said, that guy came in, but
    I didn’t do nothing.
    (Emphasis added.)
    Also problematic is the fact that the officers perpetuated
    the misimpression that the interview was confidential by
    describing the form as a mere apology note to the child (who
    is Preston’s second cousin and a member of a neighboring
    family that was feuding with his own) and by securing
    Preston’s signature under that misimpression:
    [Officer Greg]:     Uh-huh.      Do you feel
    sorry?
    [Preston]:          I guess.
    [Officer Greg]:     No. I mean, it’s either yes
    or no, one — I mean,
    there’s nothing in between.
    [Preston]:          Yeah.
    [Officer Greg]:     You’re sorry? And, you
    know, if — do you have
    — you want to say
    anything to the kid?
    [Preston]:          Who?
    [Officer Greg]:     To [the child]?
    [Preston]:          No.
    52                 UNITED STATES V. PRESTON
    [Officer Greg]:       No?
    [Officer James]: Do you want to write any
    — usually what we do is
    we write a statement and
    like if you wanted to say
    you’re sorry or something
    like that, you could — you
    could definitely do that,
    and we can provide that to
    him.
    “Such misleading comments were intended to convey the
    impression that anything said by [Preston] would not be used
    against him for any purposes.” 
    Henry, 197 F.3d at 1027
    –28.
    Those comments, coupled with Preston’s intellectual
    disability, his youth, and the particular cultural and
    jurisdictional4 context in which the officers made the
    statements, overcame Preston’s will and tricked him into
    confessing. “Because the police tactics and trickery produced
    a confession which was neither rational nor the product of an
    essentially free and unconstrained choice,” 
    Henry, 197 F.3d at 1028
    , the confession was rendered involuntary.
    For these reasons, I conclude that the district court erred
    in admitting Preston’s confession at trial. I therefore concur
    4
    See, e.g., United States Government Accountability Office, U.S.
    Department of Justice Declinations of Indian Country Criminal Matters,
    at 3 (Dec. 13, 2010) (finding that United States Attorney offices had
    declined to prosecute “67 percent of sexual abuse and related matters” in
    Indian Country for fiscal years 2005 through 2009). Because of those
    very low rates of prosecution, which are widely known, Preston may have
    been more inclined to believe the officers’ promises of confidentiality.
    UNITED STATES V. PRESTON                    53
    in the judgment reversing the conviction and remanding for
    a new trial.
    GOULD, Circuit Judge, concurring in the judgment:
    I concur in the judgment reached by the majority that the
    confession given by Preston was involuntary under the
    totality of the circumstances. For me, the case does not need
    elaborate analysis: The United States Supreme Court has said
    that involuntary confessions are not admissible, and that we
    consider the totality of the circumstances in assessing
    voluntariness. See Dickerson v. United States, 
    530 U.S. 428
    ,
    434 (2000). Preston’s confession was involuntary primarily
    because of the confluence of three factors: Preston’s
    intellectual disability, the strongly inculpatory nature of the
    officers’ either-or questioning, and the officers’ false
    promises that what Preston said would be kept private.
    Together, these factors were sufficient to overbear the will of
    Preston and make his confession involuntary.
    First and foremost, Preston had extremely limited mental
    capacity. He was led to agree with strong, affirmative
    statements made by authority figures, with less consideration
    and without the independent will that could be exercised by
    a person of average or superior intelligence. I do not think
    every person of below average intelligence necessarily gets
    a pass from being subjected to such interrogation tactics, but
    there are limits and here the IQ of Preston is at a level where
    his intellectual disability is part of the total circumstances
    pertinent to voluntariness. Second, we should recognize a
    grave danger that a person with such limited mental capacity
    would view critical either-or questions as defining the
    54              UNITED STATES V. PRESTON
    universe of what was possible. Such either-or and leading
    questions suggesting culpability normally are permissible in
    police interrogations, but here we can see how they affected
    the voluntariness of Preston’s confession. Third, the officers
    told Preston that they would not tell anyone what Preston
    said, and described Preston’s confession as an apology letter
    to the alleged victim. These severely misleading statements,
    at least where addressed to a person of such limited
    intelligence, could be expected to overbear the will of the
    suspect. Weighed together, these factors lead to an
    involuntary confession when considered in total
    circumstances.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 11-10511

Citation Numbers: 751 F.3d 1008, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 8825, 2014 WL 1876269

Judges: Kozinski, Reinhardt, Noonan, Thomas, Graber, Wardlaw, Gould, Paez, Berzon, Christen, Watford

Filed Date: 5/12/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/5/2024

Authorities (44)

Bram v. United States , 168 U.S. 532 ( 1897 )

Stein v. New York , 73 S. Ct. 1077 ( 1953 )

Spano v. New York , 79 S. Ct. 1202 ( 1959 )

Culombe v. Connecticut , 81 S. Ct. 1860 ( 1961 )

Hutto v. Ross , 97 S. Ct. 202 ( 1976 )

Procunier v. Atchley , 91 S. Ct. 485 ( 1971 )

Jose Jacobo AMAYA-RUIZ, Petitioner-Appellant, v. Terry ... , 121 F.3d 486 ( 1997 )

Arizona v. Fulminante , 111 S. Ct. 1246 ( 1991 )

Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands v. Mariano ... , 976 F.2d 475 ( 1993 )

United States v. Lance H. Mortensen , 860 F.2d 948 ( 1988 )

Miller v. Fenton , 106 S. Ct. 445 ( 1985 )

Jackson v. Virginia , 99 S. Ct. 2781 ( 1979 )

Jackson v. Denno , 84 S. Ct. 1774 ( 1964 )

Frazier v. Cupp , 89 S. Ct. 1420 ( 1969 )

United States v. John Cornelio Norris , 428 F.3d 907 ( 2005 )

Daniel Holland v. Kenneth McGinnis Warden, and Michael P. ... , 963 F.2d 1044 ( 1992 )

United States v. Raul Lopez-Alvarez , 970 F.2d 583 ( 1992 )

Ashcraft v. Tennessee , 64 S. Ct. 921 ( 1944 )

United States v. Danny Leon Guerrero , 847 F.2d 1363 ( 1988 )

Haley v. Ohio , 68 S. Ct. 302 ( 1948 )

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