State v. Purcell , 174 Conn. App. 401 ( 2017 )


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  •           STATE OF CONNECTICUT v. ROBERT
    JOHN PURCELL
    (AC 38206)
    Alvord, Keller and Dennis, Js.
    Syllabus
    The defendant, who had been convicted of three counts risk of injury to a
    child in connection with four separate incidents, appealed to this court,
    claiming, inter alia, that the trial court abused its discretion when it
    denied his motion for a mistrial after the mother of the minor victim
    testified that the victim had been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress
    disorder. The defendant also claimed that the court improperly denied
    his motion to suppress certain statements that he had made to two
    police officers during a custodial interrogation. After the officers advised
    the defendant of his constitutional rights, he told them that he had
    consulted with an attorney, who advised him not to talk to them about
    anything that could be misconstrued as inappropriate or about other
    matters pertaining to the victim’s allegations. The defendant expressed
    to the officers misgivings about his attorney’s advice, but continued
    talking with them and thereafter stated, inter alia, ‘‘See, if my lawyer
    was here, I’d . . . we could talk. That’s, you know, that’s it,’’ and, ‘‘I’m
    supposed to have my lawyer here. You know that.’’ On appeal, the
    defendant claimed that the officers violated his federal and state consti-
    tutional rights when they failed to cease questioning him because the
    statements at issue constituted clear and unequivocal invocations of his
    right to counsel. The defendant further claimed that even if the state-
    ments were ambiguous or equivocal, the officers were required under
    the article first, § 8, of the state constitution to cease questioning him
    and to clarify his statements. The defendant also asserted that the harm-
    fulness of the mother’s testimony about the victim’s diagnosis could not
    be cured by the instruction that the court gave to the jury immediately
    after the testimony because the diagnosis related to the victim’s credibil-
    ity, which was crucial to the state’s case in light of the lack of physical
    evidence that the defendant sexually assaulted the victim. Held:
    1. This court found unavailing the defendant’s claim that the trial court
    abused its discretion in denying his motion for a mistrial, which was
    based on his assertion that the jury’s verdict was substantially swayed
    by testimony from the victim’s mother that the victim had been diagnosed
    with post-traumatic stress disorder and that the testimony about the
    diagnosis constituted harmful error that could not be cured by the trial
    court’s instruction to the jury immediately thereafter: the diagnosis of
    post-traumatic stress disorder was mentioned only during the mother’s
    testimony, the court instructed the jury that the diagnosis had nothing
    to do with the evidence, and that the jury should ignore and not make
    any decision on the basis of that testimony, and the defendant offered
    no reason why that instruction was insufficient to break the link between
    the diagnosis and the charges against the defendant, and to prevent the
    jury from considering the isolated statement of the victim’s mother
    during its deliberations; moreover, notwithstanding the defendant’s
    assertion that the testimony constituted an improper endorsement of
    both his guilt and the victim’s credibility, the jury’s requests during
    deliberations to hear certain statements and to rehear portions of the
    victim’s testimony suggested that although the question of the victim’s
    credibility was a difficult one, the jury’s finding that the defendant was
    not guilty of sexual assault with respect to any of the alleged incidents
    and was not guilty of an additional count of risk of injury to a child as
    charged indicated that the jury did not find all of the victim’s testimony
    to be credible.
    2. The trial court properly denied the defendant’s motion to suppress the
    statements that he made to the police officers during their custodial
    interrogation of him, as he did not clearly and unequivocally invoke
    his right to counsel and, thus, the officers were not required to cease
    questioning him:
    a. Invocation of one’s right to counsel requires, at a minimum, some state-
    ment that reasonably can be construed as an expression of a desire for
    the assistance of counsel, and this court concluded that a reasonable
    police officer under the circumstances here would not have understood
    as a clear and unequivocal request for counsel the defendant’s state-
    ments, ‘‘See, if my lawyer was here, I’d . . . we could talk. That’s, you
    know, that’s it,’’ and, ‘‘I’m supposed to have my lawyer here. You know
    that’’; although the defendant expressed to the officers misgivings about
    his attorney’s advice, he continued talking with them, and the defendant’s
    references to counsel might have been an attempt to persuade the
    officers to limit the interview’s scope, a reiteration of his attorney’s
    advice not to speak about the incidents at issue without counsel present,
    a request for an attorney or an expression that it was prudent to have
    an attorney present, rather than a request by the defendant that he
    actually wanted to speak to an attorney before proceeding with the
    interview.
    b. Contrary to the defendant’s unpreserved claim that article first, § 8, of
    the state constitution provided greater protection than does the federal
    constitution by requiring that the police officers cease questioning him
    to clarify any ambiguous or equivocal references to counsel that he made
    during the custodial interrogation, a review of this state’s constitutional
    language, precedents and history did not disclose any meaningful differ-
    ence between the state and federal constitutional protections against
    compulsory self-incrimination, courts in the majority of other states
    have concluded that their state constitutions do not afford greater pro-
    tections in this context than does the federal constitution, the reasoning
    of other states’ courts that have found greater protections in their state
    constitutions was unpersuasive, and the defendant’s policy arguments
    were insufficient to justify any divergence from this state’s Supreme
    Court precedent that the self-incrimination and due process clauses of
    article first, § 8, are coextensive with their federal counterparts and,
    therefore, this court declined to adopt a new state constitutional stan-
    dard with respect to ambiguous or equivocal references to counsel.
    Argued April 5—officially released July 4, 2017
    (Appeal from Superior Court, judicial district of New
    Haven, O’Keefe, J.)
    Procedural History
    Substitute information charging the defendant with
    four counts of the crime of risk of injury to a child,
    two counts of the crime of sexual assault in the second
    degree and with the crime of sexual assault in the first
    degree, brought to the Superior Court in the judicial
    district of New Haven, where the court, O’Keefe, J.,
    denied the defendant’s motion to suppress certain evi-
    dence; thereafter, the matter was tried to the jury; sub-
    sequently, the court denied the defendant’s motion for
    a mistrial; verdict and judgment of guilty of three counts
    of risk of injury to a child, from which the defendant
    appealed to this court. Affirmed.
    Richard Emanuel, for the appellant (defendant).
    Timothy J. Sugrue, assistant state’s attorney, with
    whom, on the brief, were Patrick J. Griffin, state’s
    attorney, and Seth R. Garbarsky, senior assistant state’s
    attorney, for the appellee (state).
    Opinion
    ALVORD, J. The defendant, Robert John Purcell,
    appeals from the judgment of the trial court, rendered
    after a jury trial, of conviction of one count of risk of
    injury to a child in violation of General Statutes § 53-
    21 (a) (1) and of two counts of risk of injury to a child
    in violation of General Statutes § 53-21 (a) (2).1 The jury
    found the defendant not guilty of one count of sexual
    assault in the first degree in violation of General Stat-
    utes § 53a-70 (a) (1), two counts of sexual assault in
    the second degree in violation of General Statutes § 53a-
    71 (a) (1), and one count of risk of injury to a child in
    violation of § 53-21 (a) (2). On appeal, the defendant
    raises various claims pertaining to testimony by the
    victim’s mother2 that the victim had been diagnosed
    with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD testimony)
    and the trial court’s denial of his motion to suppress
    statements that he made to the police during a custodial
    interrogation. With respect to the PTSD testimony, the
    defendant claims that allowing the victim’s mother to
    testimony about his medical conditions constituted a
    harmful evidentiary error, which was based on the
    PTSD testimony. With respect to his motion to suppress,
    the defendant claims that the interrogating detectives
    violated Edwards v. Arizona, 
    451 U.S. 477
    , 
    101 S. Ct. 1880
    , 
    68 L. Ed. 2d 378
    (1981), by continuing to question
    him after he clearly and unambiguously invoked his
    right to counsel. Alternatively, the defendant argues
    that, even if his invocations were ambiguous or equivo-
    cal, and therefore ineffective under Edwards, article
    first, § 8, of the Connecticut constitution required the
    interrogating detectives to clarify his statements before
    questioning him further. We reject the defendant’s
    claims and, accordingly, affirm the judgment of the
    trial court.
    On the basis of the evidence presented at trial, the
    jury reasonably could have found the following facts.
    In 2002, the victim’s parents adopted the victim, who
    had several medical conditions, including autism.3 The
    defendant is the victim’s uncle by marriage. The victim
    and his family had only a casual relationship with the
    defendant, whom they saw on average three to five
    times a year for holidays and family events. The victim
    initially viewed the defendant as ‘‘just an ordinary
    uncle,’’ but, in 2010, when the victim was twelve and the
    defendant was seventy, the defendant began engaging in
    sexually inappropriate behavior with the victim.
    Three incidents in particular served as the basis for
    the defendant’s conviction. In August, 2010, the victim,
    the defendant, and other family members went to lunch
    at a restaurant. After lunch, the defendant and the victim
    went to use the bathroom. While in the bathroom, the
    defendant began rubbing his penis and asked the victim
    to rub it. The victim refused, left the bathroom, and
    returned to the table where his family was sitting. In
    December, 2011, the victim and his father went to the
    defendant’s house to visit his grandparents, who lived
    with the defendant and his wife. While the defendant
    and the victim’s father spoke to the victim’s grandfather
    in the basement apartment, the victim went upstairs to
    find the defendant’s cats. The victim found one of the
    cats in the defendant’s bedroom and began playing with
    it on the defendant’s bed. Sometime thereafter, the
    defendant came into the bedroom and had contact with
    the victim’s penis in a sexual and indecent manner.
    Finally, in August, 2013, the defendant and other mem-
    bers of the victim’s family went to the victim’s middle
    school to watch him perform in a school play. After
    the play, the defendant went to use the school bath-
    room, and the victim followed him inside so that he
    could remove his makeup. While in the bathroom, the
    defendant had contact with the victim’s penis in a sexual
    and indecent manner.
    In September, 2013, the victim’s mother found pic-
    tures on the victim’s Nintendo DS game console that
    concerned her, including pictures of the clothed stom-
    achs of the defendant and the victim’s father and two
    pictures of circumcised penises.4 The victim’s mother
    deleted the penis pictures. Later, she told the victim’s
    father about the pictures she found and asked him to
    talk to the victim about them. Two weeks later, on
    Saturday, September 28, 2013, the victim’s father
    engaged in a discussion with the victim about his sexual-
    ity.5 The victim’s father asked if the victim liked girls
    or boys, to which the victim replied that he liked girls.
    The victim’s father explained that, in the eyes of the
    Catholic Church, it is bad and a sin to like boys and
    that sex should occur between a man and a woman.
    The victim then acknowledged that he had started to
    like and think about boys but maintained, ‘‘[i]t’s not my
    fault.’’ The victim told his father that the defendant ‘‘has
    been having sex with me.’’
    The following Monday, September 30, 2013, after the
    victim left for school, the victim’s parents went to the
    police station to report his allegation. While at the police
    station, the victim’s parents received a phone call from
    the victim’s school social worker informing them that
    the victim told him that his ‘‘Uncle Robert’’ was having
    sex with him.
    The defendant was subsequently arrested on the basis
    of the victim’s allegations. The operative long form
    information charged the defendant with seven offenses
    in connection with four separate incidents. Relative to
    the August, 2010 incident, the defendant was charged
    with risk of injury to a child in violation of § 53-21
    (a) (1). Relative to the December, 2011 incident, the
    defendant was charged with sexual assault in the first
    degree in violation of § 53a-70 (a) (1) and risk of injury
    to a child in violation of § 53-21 (a) (2). Relative to
    an incident that allegedly occurred in April, 2012, the
    defendant was charged with sexual assault in the sec-
    ond degree in violation of § 53a-71 (a) (1) and risk of
    injury to a child in violation of § 53-21 (a) (2). Finally,
    relative to the August, 2013 incident, the defendant was
    charged with sexual assault in the second degree in
    violation of § 53a-71 (a) (1) and risk of injury to a child
    in violation of § 53-21 (a) (2).
    After a trial, a jury found the defendant guilty of the
    risk of injury counts with respect to the August, 2011,
    the December, 2011, and the August, 2013 incidents.
    The jury found the defendant not guilty of all counts
    of sexual assault and not guilty of the risk of injury
    count relative to the alleged incident in April, 2012. The
    defendant was sentenced to a total effective term of
    sixteen years of imprisonment, execution suspended
    after nine years, and ten years of probation. This appeal
    followed. Additional facts will be set forth as necessary.
    I
    We begin with the defendant’s claims pertaining to
    the PTSD testimony. The defendant claims that the
    PTSD testimony was hearsay and constituted a harmful
    nonconstitutional evidentiary error, and, therefore, the
    court abused its discretion by denying his motion for
    a mistrial. In particular, the defendant argues that the
    PTSD testimony ‘‘constituted an [improper] endorse-
    ment or confirmation of [the victim’s] credibility—and
    the defendant’s guilt,’’ and improperly embraced an ulti-
    mate issue in the case, i.e., whether some or all of the
    events the victim described actually happened, thereby
    causing his PTSD. The defendant argues that the preju-
    dicial nature of this evidence was beyond the curative
    powers of the court because the PTSD diagnosis related
    to the victim’s credibility, which was crucial to a suc-
    cessful prosecution because the state’s case lacked
    physical evidence of sexual assault and portions of the
    victim’s testimony ‘‘were highly implausible.’’ The state
    responds that the court’s ‘‘clear and forceful curative
    instructions . . . expressly broke any link between the
    PTSD diagnosis and the charges for which the defen-
    dant was on trial . . . and expressly removed [the
    PTSD] testimony . . . from evidence entirely.’’ As a
    result, the state argues, the PTSD testimony did not
    constitute a harmful evidentiary error and the court
    did not abuse its discretion by denying the defendant’s
    motion for a mistrial. We agree with the state.
    The following additional facts are relevant to these
    claims. The victim’s mother was the first witness as the
    trial commenced. She began her testimony by providing
    background on the victim and his medical conditions,
    including his autism. During a colloquy with the prose-
    cutor about other medical conditions that the victim
    had been diagnosed with, defense counsel objected on
    the ground of hearsay. The court overruled the objec-
    tion but admonished the victim’s mother to limit her
    testimony to her understanding of her son’s medical
    conditions and not to testify about what someone else
    told her. After further discussion about the victim’s
    medical conditions, the following colloquy occurred:
    ‘‘[The Prosecutor]: I think we’re missing one or two
    other conditions, if the—if the court pleases.
    ‘‘The Court: Okay. That’s the question then. What
    other conditions?
    ‘‘[The Prosecutor]: Fair enough.
    ‘‘The Court: Yeah. Go ahead.
    ‘‘[The Victim’s Mother]: Okay. He also suffers from
    post-traumatic stress disorder, which was a later diag-
    nosis after why we’re here. I’m trying to think what
    else was on there. I think that’s—
    ‘‘[The Prosecutor]: Well, let me ask you this.
    ‘‘[The Victim’s Mother]: Yeah. Okay.
    ‘‘[The Prosecutor]: Does he take any meds currently?
    ‘‘[The Victim’s Mother]: Yes, he does.
    ‘‘[The Prosecutor]: Okay. And what type of meds does
    he take?
    ‘‘[The Victim’s Mother]: I’m sorry. He takes Concerta
    for [attention deficit hyperactivity disorder]. He—
    ‘‘[The Prosecutor]: Is that one of the—
    ‘‘The Court: The jury can be excused for a minute.’’
    (Emphasis added.)
    Thereafter, the jury exited the courtroom, and the
    court excused the victim’s mother from the witness
    stand. The court then engaged in a lengthy discussion
    with counsel about how to address the PTSD testimony.
    The court observed: ‘‘PTSD is somebody else’s opinion
    that—that a person has suffered a stressful event and
    is reacting to it. So, it’s almost a comment on circum-
    stantial evidence of the credibility of the [victim].’’
    Defense counsel explained that he had never seen any
    evidence that the victim had been diagnosed with PTSD
    and opined: ‘‘I don’t know how we cure that at this
    point.’’ Although the prosecutor acknowledged that he
    was aware of the PTSD diagnosis prior to the PTSD
    testimony, he maintained that he did not know that the
    mother would testify about it.6 The prosecutor further
    disputed the court’s suggestion that the PTSD testimony
    constituted circumstantial evidence of the credibility
    of the victim because it was his understanding that the
    victim was prescribed medication for PTSD based on
    his symptoms, not based on a discussion with someone
    about a traumatic event. The court explained: ‘‘As soon
    as I heard that, I interpreted it—that, as someone
    treated the [victim]. She said it was related to this event.
    They determined that it was a valid event and diagnosed
    him with a reaction to this event. That’s my—my inter-
    pretation of when a person says, he’s treated for PTSD
    as a result of this event.’’
    After discussing the import of the statement by the
    victim’s mother with the prosecutor further, the court
    asked defense counsel for his opinion. Defense counsel
    stated: ‘‘Your Honor, again, I was not prepared for that.
    I don’t think it can be cured. I move for a mistrial at
    this point, Your Honor. I think it’s an—she says that
    an expert has diagnosed him with this condition and it
    relates to the reason that we’re here.’’ The court and
    the parties continued to discuss how best to address
    the PTSD testimony. After a brief recess, the court
    issued the following ruling: ‘‘Well, I don’t think that
    there’s enough for a mistrial at this point. I’ll give
    defense counsel the option. I’ll give the strongest
    instruction possible on this issue of PTSD, and point
    out to [the jury], as the prosecutor has said, that there’s
    really nothing in the record which would indicate that
    the—whatever that’s about is related to this event. Now,
    PTSD may—may come up later in the trial, but every-
    thing is context. At this point, it’s—you know, link it—
    I would think that the jury would link that to this event,
    and it’s somebody else’s opinion about— really, about
    the credibility of the complainant, or I’ll ignore it, if
    that’s what you want.’’ Defense counsel stated, ‘‘I feel
    like I’m in a catch-22,’’ because he did not want to
    highlight the testimony, but he decided that it would be
    ‘‘prudent that a curative instruction be administered.’’
    When the jury returned to the courtroom, the court
    gave the following instruction: ‘‘The witness will be
    back in a minute, but before she comes back, let me
    talk about—she said that there was—the PTSD—there
    was a PTSD diagnosis. That has nothing to do with the
    evidence in this—in this case. There’s nothing in the
    record that links the PTSD to this case. Ignore it. Don’t
    make any decision in this case, none, based on what
    she said about PTSD. Just completely and totally
    ignore it, like it isn’t even part of the record, like it
    isn’t even part of the evidence. Okay. All right. She can
    come back.’’ (Emphasis added.)
    We begin our analysis by setting forth the legal princi-
    ples that govern the defendant’s claims. ‘‘When an
    improper evidentiary ruling is not constitutional in
    nature, the defendant bears the burden of demonstra-
    ting that the error was harmful. . . . [A] nonconstitu-
    tional error is harmless when an appellate court has a
    fair assurance that the error did not substantially affect
    the verdict. . . . [O]ur determination [of whether] the
    defendant was harmed by the trial court’s . . . [eviden-
    tiary ruling] is guided by the various factors that we have
    articulated as relevant [to] the inquiry of evidentiary
    harmlessness . . . such as [1] the importance of the
    . . . testimony in the [state’s] case, [2] whether the
    testimony was cumulative, [3] the presence or absence
    of evidence corroborating or contradicting the testi-
    mony . . . on material points, [4] the extent of cross-
    examination otherwise permitted, and, of course, [5]
    the overall strength of the [state’s] case. . . . Most
    importantly, we must examine the impact of the evi-
    dence on the trier of fact and the result of the trial.’’
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Rodriguez,
    
    311 Conn. 80
    , 89, 
    83 A.3d 595
    (2014); see also State v.
    Bouknight, 
    323 Conn. 620
    , 626, 
    149 A.3d 975
    (2016)
    (‘‘[t]he proper standard for determining whether an
    erroneous evidentiary ruling is harmless should be
    whether the jury’s verdict was substantially swayed by
    the error’’ [internal quotation marks omitted]).
    ‘‘In our review of the denial of a motion for mistrial,
    we have recognized the broad discretion that is vested
    in the trial court to decide whether an occurrence at
    trial has so prejudiced a party that he or she can no
    longer receive a fair trial. The decision of the trial court
    is therefore reversible on appeal only if there has been
    an abuse of discretion.’’ (Internal quotation marks omit-
    ted.) State v. Berrios, 
    320 Conn. 265
    , 274, 
    129 A.3d 696
    (2016). On appeal, we are cognizant of the fact that
    ‘‘[t]he trial court is better positioned than we are to
    evaluate in the first instance whether a certain occur-
    rence is prejudicial to the defendant and, if so, what
    remedy is necessary to cure that prejudice. . . . In gen-
    eral, abuse of discretion exists when a court could have
    chosen different alternatives but has decided the matter
    so arbitrarily as to vitiate logic, or has decided it based
    on improper or irrelevant factors. . . . Therefore, [i]n
    those cases in which an abuse of discretion is manifest
    or where injustice appears to have been done, reversal
    is required.’’ (Citation omitted; internal quotation marks
    omitted.) State v. O’Brien-Veader, 
    318 Conn. 514
    , 555,
    
    122 A.3d 555
    (2015).
    ‘‘While the remedy of a mistrial is permitted under
    the rules of practice, it is not favored. . . . If curative
    action can obviate the prejudice, the drastic remedy of
    a mistrial should be avoided.’’ (Internal quotation marks
    omitted.) 
    Id., 554–55. ‘‘[I]n
    the absence of evidence that
    the jury disregarded any of the court’s instructions, we
    presume that the jury followed the instructions.’’ State
    v. A. M., 
    324 Conn. 190
    , 215, 
    152 A.3d 49
    (2016). Mere
    conjecture by the defendant is insufficient to rebut this
    presumption. State v. Gaffney, 
    209 Conn. 416
    , 422, 
    551 A.2d 414
    (1988); State v. Reddick, 
    33 Conn. App. 311
    ,
    336 n.13, 
    635 A.2d 848
    (1993), cert. denied, 
    228 Conn. 924
    , 
    638 A.2d 38
    (1994). ‘‘The burden is on the defendant
    to establish that, in the context of the proceedings as
    a whole, the challenged testimony was so prejudicial,
    notwithstanding the court’s curative instructions, that
    the jury reasonably cannot be presumed to have disre-
    garded it.’’ State v. Nash, 
    278 Conn. 620
    , 659–60, 
    899 A.2d 1
    (2006).
    Having scrupulously reviewed the record in this case,
    we are not persuaded that the jury’s verdict was sub-
    stantially swayed by the PTSD testimony or that the
    court abused its discretion by denying the defendant’s
    motion for a mistrial. The only time the victim’s PTSD
    diagnosis was mentioned was during the testimony of
    the victim’s mother. After that testimony, the court
    instructed the jury that the victim’s PTSD diagnosis
    ‘‘has nothing to do with the evidence . . . in this case’’
    and that ‘‘[t]here’s nothing in the record that links the
    PTSD to this case.’’ In addition, the court admonished
    the jury that it was not to ‘‘make any decision in this
    case, none, based on what [the victim’s mother] said
    about PTSD’’ and that they were to ‘‘completely and
    totally ignore it, like it isn’t even part of the record, like
    it isn’t even part of the evidence.’’ The defendant has
    offered no persuasive reason why this prompt, clear,
    and forceful instruction by the court was insufficient
    to break the link between the PTSD diagnosis and the
    charges for which the defendant was on trial and to
    prevent the jurors from considering this isolated state-
    ment by the victim’s mother during their deliberations.
    We recognize that the state’s case was not particularly
    strong, given the lack of physical or eyewitness evi-
    dence, and that, as a result, the victim’s testimony was
    crucial to a successful prosecution. See State v. Magu-
    ire, 
    310 Conn. 535
    , 561, 
    78 A.3d 828
    (2013) (sexual
    assault case not strong where ‘‘there was no physical
    evidence of abuse, and there was no eyewitness testi-
    mony other than that of the victim, whose testimony
    at times was both equivocal and vague’’); State v. Ritro-
    vato, 
    280 Conn. 36
    , 57, 
    905 A.2d 1079
    (2006) (‘‘[a]lthough
    the absence of conclusive physical evidence of sexual
    abuse does not automatically render the state’s case
    weak where the case involves a credibility contest
    between the victim and the defendant . . . a sexual
    assault case lacking physical evidence is not particu-
    larly strong, especially when the victim is a minor’’
    [citation omitted]). During its deliberations, the jury
    sent notes to the court requesting to hear the victim’s
    police interview, which was not in evidence, and to
    rehear portions of the victim’s testimony, which sug-
    gested that the question of the victim’s credibility was
    a difficult one. See State v. Devalda, 
    306 Conn. 494
    ,
    510, 
    50 A.3d 882
    (2012) (‘‘[w]e have recognized that a
    request by a jury may be a significant indicator of their
    concern about evidence and issues important to their
    resolution of the case’’ [internal quotation marks omit-
    ted]). In addition, the jury’s finding that the defendant
    was not guilty of sexual assault with respect to any of
    the alleged incidents and not guilty of one of the counts
    of risk of injury indicates that the jury did not in fact
    find all aspects of the victim’s testimony to be credible.
    See State v. Samuel M., 
    159 Conn. App. 242
    , 255, 
    123 A.3d 44
    (2015) (jury’s finding of guilty of three counts
    of sexual assault in the first degree and one count of
    risk of injury and finding of not guilty of nine other
    counts of sexual assault in the first degree ‘‘demon-
    strates that [the jury] did reject a vast portion of [the
    victim’s] testimony’’), aff’d, 
    323 Conn. 785
    , 
    151 A.3d 815
    (2016).
    Nevertheless, a jury may properly decide ‘‘what—all,
    none, or some—of a witness’ testimony to accept or
    reject.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Vic-
    tor C., 
    145 Conn. App. 54
    , 61, 
    75 A.3d 48
    , cert. denied,
    
    310 Conn. 933
    , 
    78 A.3d 859
    (2013). The defendant has
    not persuaded us that the jury failed to heed the court’s
    curative instruction and that its deliberations, therefore,
    were improperly influenced by the PTSD testimony.
    II
    We next address the defendant’s claim that his rights
    under the fifth and fourteenth amendments to the
    United States constitution and article first, § 8, of the
    Connecticut constitution were violated when the court
    denied his motion to suppress statements that he made
    to the police during a custodial interrogation. The defen-
    dant argues that his statements (1) ‘‘See, if my lawyer
    was here, I’d, then I’d, we could talk. That’s, you know,
    that’s it,’’ and, (2) ‘‘I’m supposed to have my lawyer
    here. You know that,’’ constituted clear and unequivocal
    invocations of his right to counsel, requiring the detec-
    tives to cease all questioning until counsel was present.
    Alternatively, the defendant argues that even if the dis-
    puted statements were ambiguous or equivocal, article
    first, § 8, required the detectives to cease questioning
    immediately and to clarify his statements.7 We disagree
    with both contentions.
    The following additional facts are relevant to this
    claim. On October 17, 2013, Detective Michael Zerella
    and Sergeant John Ventura interviewed the defendant
    concerning the victim’s allegations (first interview). The
    defendant agreed to come to the police station to dis-
    cuss a complaint made against him, but he was not
    made aware of the nature of the allegations prior to
    arriving. When it became apparent that he was being
    accused of engaging in sexually inappropriate conduct
    with the victim, the defendant explained two instances
    that he could think of that served as the basis for the
    victim’s complaint, but he maintained that nothing inap-
    propriate happened. Approximately twenty minutes
    into the interview, Zerella wondered aloud whether,
    based on what he knew happened, ‘‘(a) you’re a sick,
    perverted person or, or stuff, stuff accidentally hap-
    pened.’’ The following exchange occurred:
    ‘‘[The Defendant]: Let’s, let’s, let’s stop this here.
    ‘‘[Zerella]: Or stuff, stuff happened.
    ‘‘[The Defendant]: It sounds, sounds, sounds, like I
    need a lawyer, right?
    ‘‘[Ventura]: It’s up to you.
    ‘‘[The Defendant]: I know it.
    ‘‘[Ventura]: Why would you say that, though? That
    you need a lawyer?
    ‘‘[The Defendant]: Well, it sound, sounds like, well,
    you, uh. . .
    ‘‘[Ventura]: You could get up and leave any time
    you want.
    ‘‘[The Defendant]: That I could be, possibly be, a sick,
    perverted person.
    ‘‘[Zerella]: You didn’t, you didn’t let me, you didn’t
    let me finish what I was gonna say.
    ‘‘[The Defendant]: But it sounds, sounds like you said
    it, I’m a, sounds like I might, might be a sick, per-
    verted person.
    ‘‘[Zerella]: Or something innocently happened that,
    that, that didn’t, that didn’t mean to happen. That’s all.
    I, we need to know that. That’s why I need to know
    from you the truth. That’s, that’s what I’m trying to get
    at here.’’
    The interview continued. Approximately thirty
    minutes into the interview, however, when Zerella and
    Ventura began to press the defendant about why the
    victim would make up these allegations and give ‘‘spe-
    cific incidents that Uncle Bobby and me had sex
    together,’’ the defendant ended the interview because
    ‘‘[t]hings are getting strange now. . . . It’s a little bit
    too strange.’’ The defendant was permitted to leave the
    police station.
    On November 26, 2013, the defendant was arrested
    and charged with sexual assault in the first degree and
    risk of injury to a child. That same day, Zerella and
    Detective Sean Fairbrother interviewed the defendant
    (second interview). Zerella began the interview by read-
    ing the defendant his Miranda8 rights and asking him
    to complete a Miranda waiver form. The defendant
    asked: ‘‘I can still, after, after, after I initial that, I can
    still stop answering then?’’ Zerella replied: ‘‘Oh, anytime
    you want. No problem.’’
    After the defendant completed the Miranda waiver
    form, Zerella asked the defendant whether he knew
    why he had been arrested. The defendant explained
    that he had received a letter from the Department of
    Children and Families (department) informing him that
    he was being investigated for allegations of child abuse
    with respect to the victim. When Zerella asked what he
    discussed with the department, the defendant stated
    that he had never talked to anyone from the department.
    Zerella asked why, and the defendant explained: ‘‘Well,
    I asked my lawyer, and he said, well, just not to, I, I
    think that’s, I think that’s all together wrong, but that’s
    what he said.’’ He went on to elaborate that ‘‘my lawyer
    knows what’s going on, you know? But, he says don’t
    talk, I don’t talk.’’ When Zerella asked him how he felt
    about that, the defendant stated: ‘‘Well, it’s like I said,
    I probably wouldn’t be here now if I talked to them.’’
    Zerella suggested that if he had elaborated more and
    been more forthcoming during the first interview, they
    might not be here. After some discussion about whether
    and why Zerella called him a pervert during the first
    interview, Zerella stated: ‘‘Okay, well, we could, we
    could go on about the last interview if you want to,
    but—’’ The defendant interjected: ‘‘—I know, I know
    . . . let’s . . . let’s go on right, what, what more do
    you want to know?’’
    After remarking that the defendant knew he was
    under arrest and that a judge and prosecutor had found
    probable cause to arrest him, the defendant observed
    that it was because ‘‘I didn’t talk, that’s why.’’ Zerella
    remarked: ‘‘Well, you did, you did talk to me. You did
    tell me a few things.’’ The defendant agreed but
    acknowledged, ‘‘not enough, I know.’’ The defendant
    then expressed his belief that the victim’s parents were
    acting wrongly by pressing charges against him and
    his concern that nobody would believe him over the
    victim’s parents because they are both retired members
    of the police department. Zerella explained that it was
    the victim, not his parents, who was pressing charges
    and that he had already corroborated many of the vic-
    tim’s allegations. When Zerella asked the defendant to
    tell him some of the stories of his encounters with the
    victim, the defendant opined: ‘‘I don’t know the stories
    that he made up.’’
    Fairbrother asked the defendant whether he knew
    the crime with which he was charged, and the defendant
    replied child abuse. Fairbrother explained that he was
    charged with sexual assault and risk of injury to a child.
    The defendant asked whether that means that the alle-
    gation is that he did something sexual with the victim,
    and Fairbrother said that it did. The defendant ada-
    mantly denied having sexual relations with the victim.
    When the detectives pressed him about whether there
    were any moments that could be misconstrued as inap-
    propriate, the defendant responded: ‘‘Well, yes, there’s
    what, well, I, I, my lawyer said not to talk about it but,
    no, it’s.’’ The detectives both stated that it was up to
    the defendant whether to talk with them.
    The defendant observed that Zerella had told him
    that there was a picture of him naked on the victim’s
    Nintendo DS during the first interview, and he asked
    repeatedly whether the picture actually existed.9 When
    Zerella suggested that the defendant had personal
    knowledge that the picture existed, the defendant
    insisted that he did not and that he knew about the
    picture only because Zerella told him about it during the
    first interview. Zerella maintained that ‘‘there’s other,
    other things, there’s other instances beside that,’’ and,
    after the defendant asked what, Zerella observed that
    ‘‘you just said, there [is] stuff but my lawyer told me
    not to talk about it.’’ The defendant stated that he was
    referring to the picture. He further asked, ‘‘what else
    is there,’’ and opined that he wanted to know ‘‘what
    they are pressing against me.’’ Thereafter, the following
    exchange occurred:
    ‘‘[Zerella]: Alls I got to say is, tomorrow, when you
    go in to court, you’re gonna look at a judge and a
    prosecutor. . . . And they’re gonna look at all this
    stuff, all these allegations that were made against you.
    . . . That it’s a, it’s a very, very strong case against you.
    Very, very strong. They’re gonna look at it and say,
    listen, this, this man, because they don’t know you from
    Adam, but they’re just gonna see you.
    ‘‘[The Defendant]: Right. Well, they’re gonna know
    my name.
    ‘‘[Zerella]: As, as a, as a, as a mean, as a mean indi-
    vidual.
    ‘‘[The Defendant]: Right.
    ‘‘[Zerella]: In, in reality—
    ‘‘[Fairbrother]: As a predator.
    ‘‘[Zerella]: As a predator, who, who’s technically not
    cooperating and not saying, yeah, this is, this is what
    happened, this is probably why he thinks, thinks the
    way he does or—
    ‘‘[The Defendant]: —See, if my lawyer was here, I’d,
    then I’d, we could talk. That’s, you know, that’s it.
    ‘‘[Zerella]: It’s up to you. You could—
    ‘‘[The Defendant]: —I know it. I know, I know, I
    know it.
    ‘‘[Zerella]: You could (a), you could (a) talk to me or
    you could (b) not talk to me.
    ‘‘[The Defendant]: I know it but, I’m trying, you know
    I, I’m supposed to have my lawyer here. You know that.
    ‘‘[Zerella]: You don’t, you don’t have to, it’s, it’s—
    ‘‘[Fairbrother]: It’s up to you.
    ‘‘[Zerella]: It’s up to you, man. Some people talk to
    me without one, some people want one it . . . it’s all
    up to you, man. . . I’m just affording you that opportu-
    nity, that’s all.
    ‘‘[Fairbrother]: The problem is that, at your age, you
    don’t want to go to prison.
    ‘‘[The Defendant]: [indiscernible]
    ‘‘[Fairbrother]: Okay? You don’t want to go to prison.
    If there was some inappropriate things with this child,
    something that can be explained, maybe you helped
    him go to the bathroom, maybe, you know, he makes
    some sort of crazy allegation or does some sort of
    craziness, he’s not—
    ‘‘[Zerella]: —Maybe he—
    ‘‘[Fairbrother]: He doesn’t have a hundred percent
    capacity. If you’re in a, now, now is the time to talk
    about it, now is to get your half out there.
    ‘‘[Zerella]: Yeah, maybe he came at you.
    ‘‘[Fairbrother]: —You know if—
    ‘‘[Zerella]: Maybe he came at you.
    ‘‘[Fairbrother]: You know, that, that’s all we’re offer-
    ing you, the opportunity to, because it’s the last time
    we’re gonna be able to talk.
    ‘‘[Zerella]: That’s all.
    ‘‘[Fairbrother]: You know, that’s all, and, and, you
    know, if—
    ‘‘[The Defendant]: —Oh, geez, I don’t know—
    ‘‘[Fairbrother]: —If you want to have an attorney—
    ‘‘[The Defendant]: —I, I don’t think it’s—
    ‘‘[Fairbrother]: —That’s fine. You can, but—
    ‘‘[The Defendant]: —that’s right, right or wrong, but,
    uh, real, really.
    ‘‘[Zerella]: Just, just affording you the opportunity,
    sir, because after, after today, you’re never gonna be
    able to, to give me or any other cop your story. You’re
    gonna let, a judge is gonna look at ya and say, some
    serious charges against you. You could go to jail for
    the rest of your life.
    ‘‘[The Defendant]: All right, now what’s, what, what,
    what, uh, all right, I’ll, I’ll, I’ll talk. Uh, what do you,
    what do you, what do you want to know? Tell, tell me,
    what do you want to know.’’ (Emphasis added.)
    Thereafter, the interview continued without further
    mention of counsel.
    On June 4, 2014, the defendant filed a generic motion
    to suppress any oral or written statements that he gave
    to the police pursuant to the fifth, sixth, and fourteenth
    amendments to the United States constitution and arti-
    cle first, § 8, of the Connecticut constitution. On April
    28, 2015, the defendant filed a second motion to sup-
    press the statements that he made during the second
    interview, pursuant to the fifth and fourteenth amend-
    ments and article first, § 8, on the grounds that his
    statement ‘‘was taken against his rights to counsel, to
    remain silent, and self-incrimination.’’10 The court was
    provided with a video recording and transcript of the
    second interview. A suppression hearing was held dur-
    ing trial on April 29, 2015, during which the court heard
    the brief testimony of Zerella and argument from coun-
    sel. At the end of the hearing, the court issued an oral
    ruling denying the defendant’s motion to suppress.11
    A
    We begin by setting forth the legal principles that
    guide our analysis of the defendant’s claim that the
    detectives violated Edwards by continuing to question
    him after he clearly and unequivocally invoked his right
    to counsel during the second interview.12 In Miranda
    v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
    , 469–73, 
    86 S. Ct. 1602
    , 16 L.
    Ed. 2d 694 (1966), the United States Supreme Court
    held that ‘‘a suspect subject to custodial interrogation
    has the right to consult with an attorney and to have
    counsel present during questioning, and that the police
    must explain this right to him before questioning begins.
    . . . If the suspect effectively waives his right to coun-
    sel after receiving the Miranda warnings, law enforce-
    ment officers are free to question him.’’ (Citations
    omitted.) Davis v. United States, 
    512 U.S. 452
    , 457–58,
    
    114 S. Ct. 2350
    , 
    129 L. Ed. 2d 362
    (1994).
    In Edwards v. 
    Arizona, supra
    , 
    451 U.S. 484
    –85, how-
    ever, the United States Supreme Court determined that
    the ‘‘traditional standard for waiver was not sufficient
    to protect a suspect’s right to have counsel present at a
    subsequent interrogation if he had previously requested
    counsel . . . .’’ Maryland v. Shatzer, 
    559 U.S. 98
    , 104,
    
    130 S. Ct. 1213
    , 
    175 L. Ed. 2d 1045
    (2010). The court
    therefore superimposed a ‘‘ ‘second layer of prophy-
    laxis’ ’’ to prevent the police from badgering a defendant
    into waiving his previously asserted Miranda rights.
    Id.; Davis v. United 
    States, supra
    , 
    512 U.S. 458
    . Under
    the Edwards rule, if a suspect requests counsel at any
    time during the interview, he cannot be subjected to
    further questioning until an attorney has been made
    available, unless the suspect himself reinitiates conver-
    sation or a fourteen day break in custody has occurred.
    See Maryland v. 
    Shatzer, supra
    , 110; Edwards v. Ari-
    
    zona, supra
    , 484–85.
    ‘‘The applicability of the rigid prophylactic rule of
    Edwards requires courts to determine whether the
    accused actually invoked his right to counsel. . . . To
    avoid difficulties of proof and to provide guidance to
    officers conducting interrogations, this is an objective
    inquiry. . . . Invocation of the Miranda right to coun-
    sel requires, at a minimum, some statement that can
    reasonably be construed to be an expression of a desire
    for the assistance of an attorney. . . . But if a suspect
    makes a reference to an attorney that is ambiguous or
    equivocal in that a reasonable officer in light of the
    circumstances would have understood only that the
    suspect might be invoking the right to counsel, our
    precedents do not require the cessation of ques-
    tioning. . . .
    ‘‘Rather, the suspect must unambiguously request
    counsel. As we have observed, a statement either is
    such an assertion of the right to counsel or it is not.
    . . . Although a suspect need not speak with the dis-
    crimination of an Oxford don . . . he must articulate
    his desire to have counsel present sufficiently clearly
    that a reasonable police officer in the circumstances
    would understand the statement to be a request for an
    attorney. If the statement fails to meet the requisite
    level of clarity, Edwards does not require that the offi-
    cers stop questioning the suspect.’’ (Citations omitted;
    emphasis in original; internal quotation marks omitted.)
    Davis v. United 
    States, supra
    , 
    512 U.S. 458
    –59.
    In the present case, we conclude that a reasonable
    police officer in this circumstance would not have
    understood the disputed statements—’’See, if my law-
    yer was here, I’d, then I’d, we could talk. That’s, you
    know, that’s it,’’ and, ‘‘I’m supposed to have my lawyer
    here. You know that’’—to be requests for an attorney.
    At the outset of the interview, the defendant was
    informed of his Miranda rights and waived them in
    writing. Shortly thereafter, the defendant told the detec-
    tives that he had consulted an attorney after he received
    a notice from the department concerning its investiga-
    tion into the victim’s allegations and that the attorney
    advised him ‘‘not to talk about it.’’ The defendant repeat-
    edly expressed his misgivings with that advice and his
    belief that he would not have been arrested had he
    spoken with the department concerning the victim’s
    allegations. Moreover, after referencing his attorney’s
    advice ‘‘not to talk about it,’’ the defendant continued
    to talk to the detectives about the victim’s allegations.
    Indeed, on one occasion, he opined that his attorney
    did not want him to talk about any moments that could
    be misconstrued as inappropriate, e.g., the picture pur-
    portedly on the victim’s Nintendo DS, and then he pro-
    ceeded to ask about the picture Zerella mentioned
    during the first interview. Finally, in the moments lead-
    ing up to the disputed statements, it was evident that
    the defendant wanted both to avoid discussing his side
    of the story and to obtain more information about the
    victim’s allegations and the evidence against him.
    In light of these preceding circumstances, the defen-
    dant’s first reference to counsel—’’See, if my lawyer
    was here, I’d, then I’d, we could talk. That’s, you know,
    that’s it’’—’’lacked the clear implication of a present
    desire to consult with counsel . . . .’’ Lord v. Duck-
    worth, 
    29 F.3d 1216
    , 1221 (7th Cir. 1994). This statement
    might well have been an attempt to persuade the detec-
    tives to limit the scope of the interview to the victim’s
    allegations and the detectives’ evidence, a reiteration
    of his attorney’s advice that he should not discuss his
    side of the story without counsel present, a request for
    an attorney, or something else entirely. Because of this
    ambiguity in the statement, it cannot be considered
    an effective invocation of the right to counsel under
    Edwards. The defendant argues that his next reference
    to counsel—’’I’m supposed to have my lawyer here. You
    know that’’—clarified any ambiguity. We disagree. This
    statement could also mean that the defendant simply
    believed that it was prudent for him to have an attorney
    present when speaking to authorities, not that he actu-
    ally wanted to speak to an attorney before proceeding
    further with the interview.
    Accordingly, we conclude that the court properly
    denied the defendant’s motion to suppress because he
    did not clearly and unequivocally invoke his right to
    counsel and, therefore, the detectives were not required
    to cease questioning him.
    B
    Alternatively, the defendant argues that even if his
    invocation of the right to counsel was ambiguous or
    equivocal, the self-incrimination and due process
    clauses of article first, § 8, of our state constitution
    required the detectives to cease questioning immedi-
    ately and to clarify his ambiguous references to counsel.
    The defendant seeks review of this unpreserved state
    constitutional claim pursuant to State v. Golding, 
    213 Conn. 233
    , 239–40, 
    567 A.2d 823
    (1989), as modified by
    In re Yasiel R., 
    317 Conn. 773
    , 781, 
    120 A.3d 1188
    (2015).13 Although we conclude that the defendant’s
    claim is reviewable pursuant to the first and second
    prongs of Golding, the defendant is not entitled to rever-
    sal under the third prong of Golding because our state
    constitution does not provide greater protection than
    the federal constitution in this context. As a matter of
    state constitutional law, interrogating officers are not
    required to clarify ambiguous or equivocal references
    to an attorney. This conclusion does not diminish, how-
    ever, our admonition to law enforcement that it is the
    better practice to clarify such issues at the time of
    interrogation rather than in after-the-fact arguments
    before the courts.
    ‘‘It is well established that federal constitutional and
    statutory law establishes a minimum national standard
    for the exercise of individual rights and does not inhibit
    state governments from affording higher levels of pro-
    tection for such rights.’’ (Internal quotation marks omit-
    ted.) State v. Saturno, 
    322 Conn. 80
    , 102, 
    139 A.3d 629
    (2016). In determining the contours of the protections
    provided by our state constitution, we employ a
    multifactor approach that our Supreme Court first
    adopted in State v. Geisler, 
    222 Conn. 672
    , 684–86, 
    610 A.2d 1225
    (1992). The factors that we consider are (1)
    the text of the relevant constitutional provisions; (2)
    persuasive federal precedents; (3) related Connecticut
    precedents; (4) persuasive precedents of other state
    courts; (5) historical insights into the intent of the con-
    stitutional framers; and (6) relevant public policies.
    State v. Santiago, 
    318 Conn. 1
    , 17–18, 
    122 A.3d 1
    (2015).
    We address each factor in turn.
    1
    The first factor, the text of the relevant constitutional
    provisions, favors the state. Although the wording of
    the state and federal self-incrimination clauses is differ-
    ent,14 our Supreme Court has repeatedly ‘‘declined to
    construe this provision more broadly than the right
    provided in the fifth amendment to the United States
    constitution.’’ State v. 
    Lockhart, supra
    , 
    298 Conn. 552
    ;
    State v. Castonguay, 
    218 Conn. 486
    , 495–96, 
    590 A.2d 901
    (1991); State v. Asherman, 
    193 Conn. 695
    , 711–15,
    
    478 A.2d 227
    (1984), cert. denied, 
    470 U.S. 1050
    , 105 S.
    Ct. 1749, 
    84 L. Ed. 2d 814
    (1985). ‘‘The due process
    clauses of the state and federal constitutions are virtu-
    ally identical.’’15 State v. Ledbetter, 
    275 Conn. 534
    , 562,
    
    881 A.2d 290
    (2005), cert. denied, 
    547 U.S. 1082
    , 126 S.
    Ct. 1798, 
    164 L. Ed. 2d 537
    (2006). As a result, our
    Supreme Court has previously recognized that the simi-
    larity between the two provisions ‘‘support[s] a com-
    mon source and, thus, a common interpretation of the
    provisions.’’ (Footnote omitted.) Id.; see also State v.
    Wade, 
    297 Conn. 262
    , 288, 
    998 A.2d 1114
    (2010).
    2
    The second Geisler factor, persuasive federal prece-
    dents, favors the state as well. In Davis v. United 
    States, supra
    , 
    512 U.S. 459
    , the United States Supreme Court
    ‘‘decline[d] [the] petitioner’s invitation to extend
    Edwards and require law enforcement officers to cease
    questioning immediately upon the making of an ambigu-
    ous or equivocal reference to an attorney.’’ Instead,
    the Davis court adopted a bright-line approach: ‘‘If the
    suspect’s statement is not an unambiguous or unequivo-
    cal request for counsel, the officers have no obligation
    to stop questioning him.’’ 
    Id., 461–62. Moreover,
    the United States Supreme Court has ‘‘fre-
    quently emphasized that the Edwards rule is not a con-
    stitutional mandate, but judicially prescribed
    prophylaxis. . . . Because Edwards is our rule, not a
    constitutional command, it is our obligation to justify
    its expansion. . . . A judicially crafted rule is justified
    only by reference to its prophylactic purpose . . . and
    applies only where its benefits outweigh its costs
    . . . .’’ (Citations omitted; internal quotation marks
    omitted.) Maryland v. 
    Shatzer, supra
    , 
    559 U.S. 105
    –106;
    
    id., 108–109 (declining
    to extend Edwards to prevent
    officers from approaching suspects who have invoked
    their right to counsel after there has been break in
    custody because of diminished benefits and increased
    costs, namely, ‘‘voluntary confessions it excludes from
    trial, and the voluntary confessions it deters law
    enforcement officers from even trying to obtain’’).
    3
    The third Geisler factor, related Connecticut prece-
    dents, favors the state. The defendant is correct that
    this state has a long history of commitment to the princi-
    ples of Miranda, as evidenced by the fact that our
    Supreme Court recognized the constitutional signifi-
    cance of Miranda long before the United States
    Supreme Court. Compare State v. Ferrell, 
    191 Conn. 37
    ,
    40–41, 
    463 A.2d 573
    (1983) (‘‘[a]lthough the Miranda
    warnings were originally effective in state prosecutions
    only because they were a component of due process
    of law under the fourteenth amendment . . . they have
    also come to have independent significance under our
    state constitution’’ [citations omitted]), with Dickerson
    v. United States, 
    530 U.S. 428
    , 432, 444, 
    120 S. Ct. 2326
    ,
    
    147 L. Ed. 2d 405
    (2000) (holding Miranda is a constitu-
    tional rule). Nevertheless, our Supreme Court has con-
    sistently held that our self-incrimination and due
    process clauses do not afford greater protection than
    the federal due process and self-incrimination clauses.
    See part III B 1 of this opinion. As a result, our courts
    have previously declined to utilize our state constitution
    to afford suspects greater protections during custodial
    interrogations than the federal constitution affords.
    E.g., State v. 
    Lockhart, supra
    , 
    298 Conn. 543
    –44 (declin-
    ing to require all custodial interrogations to be
    recorded); State v. Lawrence, 
    282 Conn. 141
    , 158–59,
    
    920 A.2d 236
    (2007) (declining to require higher stan-
    dard of proof to establish voluntariness of confession);
    State v. Piorkowski, 
    243 Conn. 205
    , 221, 
    700 A.2d 1146
    (1997) (declining to require presence of counsel for
    valid waiver of right to counsel when defendant initiates
    contact with police and has been properly advised of
    his Miranda rights); State v. Doyle, 
    104 Conn. App. 4
    ,
    15–16 n.4, 
    931 A.2d 393
    (declining to extend warnings
    required by Miranda to noncustodial police inter-
    views), cert. denied, 
    284 Conn. 935
    , 
    935 A.2d 152
    (2007).
    Indeed, our Supreme Court has declined to deviate from
    federal precedent specifically in the context of a defen-
    dant’s invocation of the right to counsel under Miranda.
    E.g., State v. Barrett, 
    205 Conn. 437
    , 447, 448, 
    534 A.2d 219
    (1987) (state constitution, like federal constitution,
    permits a distinction between suspect’s willingness to
    make uncounseled oral statements and his disinclina-
    tion to make uncounseled written statements); State v.
    Hafford, 
    252 Conn. 274
    , 293–94, 
    746 A.2d 150
    (declining
    to hold that, as a matter of state constitutional law,
    when officers have honored an equivocal request for
    counsel by not asking suspect any further questions
    and suspect subsequently initiates contact with police,
    they cannot resume interrogation without first clarify-
    ing earlier equivocal request for counsel), cert. denied,
    
    531 U.S. 855
    , 
    121 S. Ct. 136
    , 
    148 L. Ed. 2d 89
    (2000).
    Nonetheless, the defendant argues that the rule he
    proposes finds support in other aspects of our Supreme
    Court’s jurisprudence. The precedent relied on by the
    defendant, however, is unpersuasive. First, the defen-
    dant relies on State v. 
    Ferrell, supra
    , 
    191 Conn. 37
    , to
    support his contention that article first, § 8, affords
    greater protection than the federal constitution in the
    context of the right to counsel under Miranda. In Fer-
    rell, our Supreme Court held that police officers may
    not testify regarding statements they overheard while
    the defendant, who was in custody, was speaking with
    his attorney; 
    id., 41–42; reasoning
    that ‘‘the right to
    consult a lawyer before being interrogated is meaning-
    less if the accused cannot privately and freely discuss
    the case with that attorney.’’ 
    Id., 45. The
    court’s holding,
    however, was based on the due process clauses of both
    the state and federal constitutions, which it treated as
    being coextensive with one another. 
    Id., 41, 45;
    see also
    State v. 
    Lockhart, supra
    , 
    298 Conn. 554
    (Ferrell does not
    ‘‘[indicate] that our state constitution imposes greater
    protections with regard to the advisement of Miranda
    rights or requires additional corroboration for admis-
    sion of testimony describing such an advisement’’).
    The defendant also relies on State v. Stoddard, 
    206 Conn. 157
    , 161, 
    537 A.2d 446
    (1988). In that case, our
    Supreme Court concluded that our state constitution,
    unlike the federal constitution, imposes a duty on offi-
    cers who are holding a suspect for custodial interroga-
    tion to act reasonably, diligently, and promptly to
    apprise the suspect of efforts by counsel to provide
    pertinent and timely legal assistance. 
    Id., 163; cf.
    Moran
    v. Burbine, 
    475 U.S. 412
    , 422–23, 
    106 S. Ct. 1135
    , 89 L.
    Ed. 2d 410 (1986) (declining to impose such a duty).
    The court further held that a waiver of Miranda rights
    may, depending upon the totality of the circumstances,
    be vitiated by the failure of the police to fulfill this duty.
    State v. 
    Stoddard, supra
    , 163. The court reasoned that
    the fact that ‘‘a suspect validly waives the presence
    of counsel only means for the moment the suspect is
    foregoing the exercise of that conceptual privilege. . . .
    Faced with a concrete offer of assistance, however, a
    suspect may well decide to reclaim his or her continuing
    right to legal assistance. To pass up an abstract offer
    to call some unknown lawyer is very different from
    refusing to talk with an identified attorney actually
    available to provide at least initial assistance and
    advice, whatever might be arranged in the long run. A
    suspect indifferent to the first offer may well react quite
    differently to the second. . . . We cannot therefore
    conclude that a decision to forego the abstract offer
    contained in Miranda embodies an implied rejection of
    a specific opportunity to confer with a known lawyer.’’
    (Citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.)
    
    Id., 168. Importantly,
    the conclusion in Stoddard was influ-
    enced by Connecticut’s ‘‘long history of recognizing the
    significance of the right to counsel . . . .’’ 
    Id., 164; see
    also 
    id., 164–66. The
    court acknowledged that ‘‘this his-
    tory specifically illuminates the right to counsel that
    attaches after the initiation of adversary judicial pro-
    ceedings,’’ but it concluded that this history also
    informed the due process concerns raised by police
    interference with counsel’s access to a custodial sus-
    pect. 
    Id., 166. In
    particular, the court reasoned that
    because the police are responsible for the suspect’s
    isolation during a custodial interrogation, they ‘‘may
    not preclude the suspect from exercising the choice to
    which he is constitutionally entitled by responding in
    less than forthright fashion to the efforts by counsel to
    contact the suspect.’’ 
    Id., 167. Our
    Supreme Court clarified the narrow confines of
    Stoddard in State v. Whitaker, 
    215 Conn. 739
    , 751–52,
    
    578 A.2d 1031
    (1990). In that case, the defendant, who
    was a minor at the time of the custodial interrogation
    in question, argued that Stoddard required officers to
    inform him that his mother had called the police station
    and told them that she wanted him to speak with an
    attorney. 
    Id., 751. The
    court rejected the defendant’s
    claim, stating that ‘‘Stoddard prohibited only police
    interference in the attorney-client relationship.’’ (Inter-
    nal quotation marks omitted.) 
    Id., 752. The
    court consid-
    ered the advice of the defendant’s mother to be ‘‘more
    akin to an abstract offer to call some unknown lawyer
    than the concrete offer of [legal] assistance that Stod-
    dard protects.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) 
    Id. Like Whitaker,
    the present case does not directly
    implicate the attorney-client relationship or to involve
    a concrete offer of legal assistance. Instead, the defen-
    dant is asking this court to adopt a rule that would
    require interrogating officers to clarify equivocal or
    ambiguous references to an attorney in order to deter-
    mine whether the defendant wants to invoke his right
    to counsel. Stoddard does not support the proposition
    that interrogating officers have a duty to help suspects
    calibrate their self-interest in deciding whether to speak
    or to invoke their Miranda rights. See State v. 
    Stoddard, supra
    , 
    206 Conn. 168
    (‘‘the police have no general duty
    to ‘supply a suspect with a flow of information to help
    him calibrate his self-interest in deciding whether to
    speak or stand by his rights’ ’’); see also State v. Lock-
    
    hart, supra
    , 
    298 Conn. 554
    (Stoddard does not ‘‘[indi-
    cate] that our state constitution imposes greater
    protections with regard to the advisement of Miranda
    rights or requires additional corroboration for admis-
    sion of testimony describing such an advisement’’).
    Finally, the defendant relies on pre-Davis precedent,
    in which our Supreme Court held that the federal consti-
    tution requires police officers upon the defendant’s
    making of an ambiguous or equivocal reference to an
    attorney to cease questioning immediately and to clarify
    the statement. State v. Anderson, 
    209 Conn. 622
    , 627,
    
    553 A.2d 589
    (1989); State v. Acquin, 
    187 Conn. 647
    ,
    673–75, 
    448 A.2d 163
    (1982), cert. denied, 
    463 U.S. 1229
    ,
    
    103 S. Ct. 3570
    , 
    77 L. Ed. 2d 1411
    (1983), overruled in
    part by Davis v. United States, 
    512 U.S. 452
    , 459, 
    114 S. Ct. 2350
    , 
    129 L. Ed. 2d 362
    (1994); see also State v.
    Anonymous, 
    240 Conn. 708
    , 723 n.16, 
    694 A.2d 766
    (1997). The defendant argues that because of this prece-
    dent, he ‘‘is not asking this court to ‘go out on a limb’
    to make ‘new law,’ but is rather asking the court to
    embrace the ‘old law’—and to refuse to follow Davis’
    step backward with respect to the Miranda right to
    counsel.’’ (Emphasis in original.) The problem with the
    defendant’s argument is that neither Anderson nor
    Acquin illuminate the issue presently before this
    court—whether (and why) our state constitution
    affords greater protection than the federal constitution
    in this context—because neither case adopted the clari-
    fication approach because of state specific factors.
    Instead, our Supreme Court adopted the clarification
    approach because, at the time, the United States
    Supreme Court had not provided guidance on how to
    address ambiguous or equivocal references to counsel
    and the trend among federal courts was to require clari-
    fication. State v. 
    Anderson, supra
    , 627–28; State v.
    Acquin, supra, 673–75.
    4
    The fourth Geisler factor, persuasive precedents of
    other state courts, favors the state. The majority of
    states to address the specific issue of whether their state
    constitutions require interrogating officers to clarify
    ambiguous invocations of the right to counsel have
    followed Davis and declined to require clarification.16
    E.g., People v. Crittenden, 
    9 Cal. 4th 83
    , 129, 
    885 P.2d 887
    , 
    36 Cal. Rptr. 2d 474
    (1994), cert. denied, 
    516 U.S. 849
    , 
    116 S. Ct. 144
    , 
    133 L. Ed. 2d 90
    (1995); State v.
    Owen, 
    696 So. 2d 715
    , 719 (Fla.), cert. denied, 
    522 U.S. 1002
    , 
    118 S. Ct. 574
    , 
    139 L. Ed. 2d 413
    (1997); Taylor
    v. State, 
    689 N.E.2d 699
    , 704 (Ind. 1997); State v. Morgan,
    
    559 N.W.2d 603
    , 609 (Iowa 1997); State v. Morris, 
    255 Kan. 964
    , 981, 
    880 P.2d 1244
    (1994); Franklin v. State,
    
    170 So. 3d 481
    , 491 (Miss. 2015); State v. Nixon, 
    369 Mont. 359
    , 368–69, 
    298 P.3d 408
    (2013); State v. Perry,
    
    146 N.M. 208
    , 217, 
    207 P.3d 1185
    (App. 2009); State v.
    Saylor, 
    117 S.W.3d 239
    , 245–46 (Tenn. 2003), cert.
    denied, 
    540 U.S. 1208
    , 
    124 S. Ct. 1483
    , 
    158 L. Ed. 2d 133
    (2004); State v. Panetti, 
    891 S.W.2d 281
    , 283–84 (Tex.
    1994); State v. Horton, 
    195 Wash. App. 202
    , 216–17, 
    380 P.3d 608
    (2016), review denied, 
    187 Wash. 2d 1003
    , 
    386 P.3d 1083
    (2017); State v. Farley, 
    192 W. Va. 247
    , 256,
    
    452 S.E.2d 50
    (1994); State v. Jennings, 
    252 Wis. 2d 228
    , 249, 
    647 N.W.2d 142
    (2002); see Commonwealth v.
    Sicari, 
    434 Mass. 732
    , 746 n.10, 
    752 N.E.2d 684
    (2001)
    (Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts ‘‘content to
    interpret’’ applicable provision in state constitution as
    fifth amendment has been interpreted by United States
    Supreme Court), cert. denied, 
    534 U.S. 1142
    , 
    122 S. Ct. 1096
    , 
    151 L. Ed. 2d 993
    (2002). In many of these cases,
    the court’s decision was driven by the fact that the
    relevant state constitutional provisions were virtually
    identical to and had been previously treated as coexten-
    sive with the relevant federal constitutional provisions.
    E.g., People v. 
    Crittenden, supra
    , 129; State v. 
    Morris, supra
    , 979–80; State v. 
    Saylor, supra
    , 245–46; State v.
    
    Horton, supra
    , 216–17; State v. 
    Jennings, supra
    , 248–49;
    see also State v. 
    Perry, supra
    , 216–17 (defendant failed
    to show federal analysis is flawed or there is structural
    difference between relevant state and federal pro-
    visions).
    We have found only four states that have rejected
    Davis on the grounds that their state constitutions pro-
    vide greater protection than the federal constitution in
    this context. See Steckel v. State, 
    711 A.2d 5
    , 10–11 (Del.
    1998); State v. Hoey, 
    77 Haw. 17
    , 36, 
    881 P.2d 504
    (1994);
    State v. Risk, 
    598 N.W.2d 642
    , 648–49 (Minn. 1999);
    State v. Charboneau, 
    323 Or. 38
    , 58–60, 
    913 P.2d 308
    (1996).17 These decisions are unpersuasive, however,
    because they appear to be driven by judicial preference
    for the clarification approach rather than by a meaning-
    ful distinction between the state and federal constitu-
    tions. Indeed, none of the decisions involved any
    meaningful state constitutional analysis, such as we are
    required to perform pursuant to the Geisler decision.
    5
    The parties agree that the fifth Geisler factor, histori-
    cal insights into the intent of the constitutional framers,
    is neutral because Miranda warnings did not exist in
    1818 when our constitution was originally enacted.18
    6
    The sixth Geisler factor, relevant public policies, is
    neutral because there are policy arguments in favor of
    both the Davis bright-line approach and the clarifica-
    tion approach. The comparative merit of each approach
    was thoroughly explored in Davis. Compare Davis v.
    United 
    States, supra
    , 
    512 U.S. 458
    –62 (adopting the
    bright-line approach) with 
    id., 469–75 (Souter,
    J., con-
    curring in the judgment) (advocating for the clarifica-
    tion approach). In addition, numerous academic works
    have addressed the impact of Davis as well as the merits
    of the bright-line and clarification approaches. E.g., M.
    Strauss, ‘‘Understanding Davis v. United States,’’ 40
    Loy. L.A. L. Rev. 1011, 1012–13 (2007) (analyzing com-
    parative impact of Davis on women, minorities, and
    Caucasian men); T. Levenberg, ‘‘Fifth Amendment—
    Responding to Ambiguous Requests for Counsel Dur-
    ing Custodial Interrogations Davis v. United States,
    
    114 S. Ct. 2350
    (1994),’’ 85 J. Crim. L. & Criminology 962,
    963 (1995) (analyzing merits of bright-line, clarification,
    and per se approaches and proposing modified clarifica-
    tion approach); see also State v. Effler, 
    769 N.W.2d 880
    ,
    896 (Iowa) (Appel, J., specially concurring) (collecting
    academic and judicial writings criticizing Davis), cert.
    denied, 
    558 U.S. 1096
    , 
    130 S. Ct. 1024
    , 
    175 L. Ed. 2d 627
    (2009). These policy perspectives need not be repeated
    here except to note that the policy debate among the
    legal and academic communities reflects the fact that
    ‘‘Miranda represents a compromise between the need
    of the state for effective interrogation of a suspect to
    solve a crime and the right of the individual to say
    nothing that may incriminate him.’’ State v. 
    Stoddard, supra
    , 
    206 Conn. 181
    (Shea, J., dissenting); accord
    Davis v. United 
    States, supra
    , 460–61; Davis v. United
    
    States, supra
    , 469 (Souter, J., concurring in the judg-
    ment). In essence, the bright-line approach adopted
    by Davis prioritizes society’s interest in effective law
    enforcement whereas the clarification approach the
    defendant advocates prioritizes the individual’s right
    not to say something that may incriminate him by secur-
    ing the advice of counsel.
    Having performed a complete Geisler analysis of the
    defendant’s state constitutional claim in this appeal, we
    conclude that article first, § 8, does not provide greater
    protection than the federal constitution with respect to
    ambiguous or equivocal references to counsel during
    a custodial interrogation. Having reviewed our own con-
    stitutional language, precedents and history, we cannot
    discern any meaningful difference between the state
    and federal constitutional protections against compul-
    sory self-incrimination that would justify or require a
    ‘‘third layer of prophylaxis’’ that the United States
    Supreme Court has found to be unnecessary. Moreover,
    the vast majority of our sister states have concluded
    that their state constitutions do not afford greater pro-
    tections than the federal constitution in this context.
    Although some states have elected to adopt the clarifi-
    cation approach as a matter of state constitutional law,
    the reasoning in those decisions is not persuasive.
    Finally, although the defendant’s position finds some
    support in the academic and legal communities, we do
    not believe that countervailing policy arguments are
    sufficient justification to diverge from our Supreme
    Court’s well established precedent holding that our self-
    incrimination and due process clauses are coextensive
    with the federal self-incrimination and due process
    clauses. We therefore decline to adopt a new state con-
    stitutional standard at this time.
    Nonetheless, we believe that it is appropriate in this
    opinion to reiterate the advice offered by the United
    States Supreme Court in Davis: ‘‘[W]hen a suspect
    makes an ambiguous or equivocal statement it will
    often be good police practice for the interviewing offi-
    cers to clarify whether or not he actually wants an
    attorney. . . . Clarifying questions help protect the
    rights of the suspect by ensuring that he gets an attorney
    if he wants one, and will minimize the chance of a
    confession being suppressed due to subsequent judicial
    second-guessing as to the meaning of the suspect’s
    statement regarding counsel.’’ (Emphasis added.) Davis
    v. United 
    States, supra
    , 
    512 U.S. 461
    .
    The judgment is affirmed.
    In this opinion the other judges concurred.
    1
    General Statutes § 53-21 provides in relevant part: ‘‘(a) Any person who
    (1) wilfully . . . causes or permits any child under the age of sixteen years
    to be placed in such a situation that . . . the morals of such child are likely
    to be impaired . . . or (2) has contact with the intimate parts . . . of a
    child under the age of sixteen years . . . in a sexual and indecent manner
    likely to impair the health or morals of such child . . . .’’
    ‘‘Intimate parts’’ means, in relevant part, ‘‘the genital area . . . .’’ General
    Statutes § 53a-65 (8).
    2
    In accordance with our policy of protecting the privacy interests of the
    victims of the crime of risk of injury to a child, we decline to identify the
    victim or others through whom the victim’s identity may be ascertained.
    See General Statutes § 54-86e.
    3
    The victim’s mother testified that he is in the middle of the autism scale
    and considered high functioning.
    4
    The defendant is not circumcised.
    5
    At trial, the victim’s father maintained that he spoke to the victim about
    his sexuality because his wife found pictures of penises on the victim’s
    Nintendo DS. In his statement to the police on September 30, 2013, however,
    he stated that he spoke to the victim about his sexuality because his wife
    found pictures of his stomach on the victim’s Nintendo DS and the victim
    was always rubbing and touching his stomach. The victim’s father did not
    mention in his police statement that his wife had found pictures of penises
    on the victim’s Nintendo DS.
    6
    We observe, without further comment, that the victim’s mother worked
    for seven years as a police officer in New Haven and approximately twenty-
    two years in adult probation. She further acknowledged at trial that, in that
    capacity, she had testified ‘‘countless’’ times and was comfortable in a
    courtroom setting.
    7
    The defendant further asks this court to exercise its supervisory authority
    over the administration of justice to implement a cease and clarify rule.
    ‘‘It is well settled that [a]ppellate courts possess an inherent supervisory
    authority over the administration of justice.’’ (Internal quotation marks omit-
    ted.) State v. Elson, 
    311 Conn. 726
    , 764, 
    91 A.3d 862
    (2014). ‘‘The exercise
    of our supervisory powers is an extraordinary remedy to be invoked only
    when circumstances are such that the issue at hand, while not rising to the
    level of a constitutional violation, is nonetheless of utmost seriousness, not
    only for the integrity of a particular trial but also for the perceived fairness
    of the judicial system as a whole.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
    
    Id., 765. The
    defendant’s request implicates the scope of our supervisory
    authority, however, ‘‘because we normally exercise this power with regard
    to the conduct of judicial actors.’’ State v. Lockhart, 
    298 Conn. 537
    , 576, 
    4 A.3d 1176
    (2010). Although imposing a cease and clarify rule on law enforcement
    would directly affect the admissibility of evidence, which is surely within
    the authority of this court, it would also directly implicate the activities of law
    enforcement agencies. Accordingly, we decline to invoke our supervisory
    authority in the present case. Accord State v. Fernandez, 
    52 Conn. App. 599
    ,
    615, 
    728 A.2d 1
    (declining defendant’s invitation to exercise our supervisory
    authority ‘‘[b]ecause acceptance of the defendant’s invitation would require
    this court to exercise our supervisory powers outside the conduct of judicial
    actors’’), cert. denied, 
    249 Conn. 913
    , 
    733 A.2d 229
    , cert. denied, 
    528 U.S. 939
    , 
    120 S. Ct. 348
    , 
    14 L. Ed. 2d 272
    (1999).
    8
    See Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
    , 478–79, 
    86 S. Ct. 1602
    , 
    16 L. Ed. 2d
    694 (1966).
    9
    Zerella testified at trial that ‘‘I actually didn’t have a picture of [the
    defendant] . . . without any clothes on. I never did.’’ He explained that
    lying to a suspect is a tactic often used by members of law enforcement to
    obtain information or an admission from a suspect.
    10
    Although the defendant invoked his right to counsel under the Connecti-
    cut constitution, he did not argue before the trial court that the Connecticut
    constitution affords greater protection than the federal constitution with
    respect to ambiguous invocations of the right to counsel during custodial
    interrogations.
    11
    Pursuant to Practice Book § 64-1 (a) (4), the defendant has provided
    this court with a signed transcript of the court’s oral ruling.
    12
    Our standard of review of a trial court’s findings and conclusions in
    connection with a motion to suppress is well defined. ‘‘A finding of fact will
    not be disturbed unless it is clearly erroneous in view of the evidence and
    pleadings in the whole record . . . . [W]hen [however] a question of fact
    is essential to the outcome of a particular legal determination that implicates
    a defendant’s constitutional rights, and the credibility of witnesses is not the
    primary issue, our customary deference to the trial court’s factual findings is
    tempered by a scrupulous examination of the record to ascertain that the
    trial court’s factual findings are supported by substantial evidence. . . .
    [When] the legal conclusions of the court are challenged, [our review is
    plenary, and] we must determine whether they are legally and logically
    correct and whether they find support in the facts set [forth] in the memoran-
    dum of decision . . . .’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Gonza-
    lez, 
    302 Conn. 287
    , 295–96, 
    25 A.3d 648
    (2011).
    13
    ‘‘Under Golding, a defendant can prevail on a claim of constitutional
    error not preserved at trial only if all of the following conditions are met:
    (1) the record is adequate to review the alleged claim of error; (2) the claim
    is of constitutional magnitude alleging the violation of a fundamental right;
    (3) the alleged constitutional violation . . . exists and . . . deprived the
    defendant of a fair trial; and (4) if subject to harmless error analysis, the
    state has failed to demonstrate harmlessness of the alleged constitutional
    violation beyond a reasonable doubt. In the absence of any one of these
    conditions, the defendant’s claim will fail.’’ (Internal quotation marks omit-
    ted.) State v. Dixon, 
    318 Conn. 495
    , 511, 
    122 A.3d 542
    (2015). ‘‘The first two
    steps in the Golding analysis address the reviewability of the claim, while
    the last two steps involve the merits of the claim.’’ (Internal quotation marks
    omitted.) State v. Britton, 
    283 Conn. 598
    , 615, 
    929 A.2d 312
    (2007). ‘‘The
    appellate tribunal is free, therefore, to respond to the defendant’s claim by
    focusing on whichever condition is most relevant in the particular circum-
    stances.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Dixon, supra, 511.
    14
    Article first, § 8, of the Connecticut constitution, as amended by articles
    seventeen and twenty-nine of the amendments, provides in relevant part:
    ‘‘No person shall be compelled to give evidence against himself . . . .’’
    The fifth amendment to the United States constitution provides in relevant
    part: ‘‘[No person] shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness
    against himself . . . .’’
    15
    Article first, § 8, of the Connecticut constitution, as amended by articles
    seventeen and twenty-nine of the amendments, provides in relevant part:
    ‘‘No person shall be . . . deprived of life, liberty or property without due
    process of law . . . .’’
    The fifth amendment to the United States constitution provides in relevant
    part: ‘‘No person shall be . . . deprived of life, liberty, or property, without
    due process of law . . . .’’
    The fourteenth amendment to the United States constitution provides in
    relevant part: ‘‘No State shall . . . deprive any person of life, liberty or
    property, without due process of law . . . .’’
    16
    North Carolina has also adopted Davis’ bright-line approach as a matter
    of state statutory law. See State v. Saldierna, 
    794 S.E.2d 474
    , 479 (N.C.
    2016). Some states have also endorsed Davis’ bright-line approach but not
    specifically evaluated whether their state constitution requires them to fol-
    low Davis. E.g., Harte v. State, 
    116 Nev. 1054
    , 1066–68, 
    13 P.3d 420
    (2000)
    (holding the rule announced in Davis applies to custodial interrogations
    in Nevada and overruling conflicting precedent but not analyzing Nevada
    constitution); Hadden v. State, 
    42 P.3d 495
    , 504 (Wyo.) (finding Davis persua-
    sive and adopting Davis’ bright-line approach but not analyzing Wyoming
    constitution), cert. denied, 
    537 U.S. 868
    , 
    123 S. Ct. 272
    , 
    154 L. Ed. 2d 114
    (2002). Other states have endorsed Davis but interpreted Davis to apply
    only to the post-Miranda waiver context. E.g., State v. Blackburn, 
    766 N.W.2d 177
    , 183 (S.D. 2009); State v. Leyva, 
    951 P.2d 738
    , 743 (Utah 1997)
    (abrogating state precedent to extent it contradicts Davis because Miranda
    warnings not required under state constitution). Accordingly, interrogating
    officers in those states must clarify an ambiguous or equivocal invocation
    of the right to counsel if the invocation is made before the suspect waives
    his Miranda rights.
    17
    New Jersey has also adopted the clarification approach, albeit not on
    state constitutional grounds. The right against self-incrimination under New
    Jersey law ‘‘is founded on a common-law and statutory—rather than a
    constitutional—basis.’’ State v. Chew, 
    150 N.J. 39
    , 50, 
    695 A.2d 1301
    (1997).
    Although ‘‘New Jersey law governing the privilege against self-incrimination
    generally parallels federal constitutional doctrine’’; id.; the New Jersey
    Supreme Court rejected Davis because it seemed ‘‘prudent’’ to continue to
    apply the clarification approach it adopted prior to Davis. 
    Id., 63. 18
          Although our state constitution has been amended since 1818, the self-
    incrimination and due process clauses were present in the original consti-
    tution.