State of Iowa v. Anthony Devon Polk , 2012 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 33 ( 2012 )


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  •                  IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
    No. 10–0335
    Filed April 6, 2012
    STATE OF IOWA,
    Appellee,
    vs.
    ANTHONY DEVON POLK,
    Appellant.
    On review from the Iowa Court of Appeals.
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Black Hawk County,
    Thomas N. Bower, Judge.
    Defendant appeals denial of motion to suppress confession.
    COURT       OF   APPEALS   DECISION    VACATED;     DISTRICT   COURT
    JUDGMENT REVERSED; CASE REMANDED FOR NEW TRIAL.
    Mark C. Smith, State Appellate Defender, and David Arthur
    Adams, Assistant State Appellate Defender, for appellant.
    Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Elisabeth S. Reynoldson and
    Richard J. Bennett, Assistant Attorneys General, Thomas J. Ferguson,
    County Attorney, and Joel A. Dalrymple, Assistant County Attorney, for
    appellee.
    2
    WATERMAN, Justice.
    Defendant, Anthony Devon Polk, confessed in a jailhouse interview
    to firing his handgun at the scene of a gang-related shooting that left two
    men with gunshot wounds. We must decide whether the interrogating
    police officer’s tactics rendered Polk’s confession inadmissible.     Polk
    contends the officer baited him into talking after Polk had invoked his
    Fifth Amendment right to remain silent and made improper promises of
    leniency that suggested by talking to police Polk could get a better deal
    and spend less time away from his children.
    The district court denied Polk’s motion to suppress his confession
    and convicted him on charges of intimidation with a dangerous weapon
    in violation of Iowa Code section 708.6 (2009), going armed with intent in
    violation of section 708.8, and carrying a weapon in violation of section
    724.4(1).   Polk was sentenced to ten-year, five-year, and two-year
    concurrent prison terms for those convictions.       The court of appeals
    affirmed Polk’s convictions but found the officer came “dangerously close
    to the line” when eliciting Polk’s confession.    We conclude the officer
    crossed the line with promises of leniency.      We hold Polk’s confession
    was inadmissible for that reason and, therefore, do not decide whether
    Polk was in custody for Miranda purposes or whether his right to remain
    silent was violated.
    We vacate the court of appeals decision, reverse Polk’s convictions
    and sentences, and remand the case for a new trial.
    I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
    Polk, age twenty-two, and his friend, Devin Pendleton, “got into it”
    with Treyvon Henley during Waterloo’s Fourth of July fireworks
    celebration in 2008. Henley, also known as “Stix,” was associated with
    the Chopper City gang based near Sumner and Manson Streets. Henley
    3
    pulled a revolver on Pendleton in front of a liquor store and fired a shot
    at him. Later that night, Polk and Pendleton, both armed, returned to
    the area of Sumner and Manson Streets looking for Henley.           About
    2 a.m., they spotted Henley drinking outside with two other men,
    Dontrell Hoskins and Willie Evans. Pendleton and Polk both fired shots
    at Henley.   The bullets missed their target but struck Hoskins in the
    back and grazed Evans’ left forearm. Evans later identified Polk from an
    array of photographs.
    On July 30, Polk was held in the Black Hawk County jail on an
    unrelated arrest warrant. Officer Shawn Monroe questioned Polk there
    about the shooting. Inmates are housed in pods on the jail’s second and
    third floors. Polk’s questioning took place in a designated interview room
    on the first floor. The room is small, approximately four- to six-feet wide
    and eight-feet deep.    Monroe audio recorded the interrogation using a
    small digital recorder.    Whether Polk was in custody for Miranda
    purposes is disputed. See generally Howes v. Fields, ___ U.S. ___, 
    132 S. Ct. 1181
    , ___ L. Ed. 2d ___ (2012) (addressing whether prison
    interview is custodial for Miranda purposes); State v. Pearson, 
    804 N.W.2d 260
    , 268 (Iowa 2011) (“When an inmate is questioned, we look
    for ‘some added restriction on the inmate’s freedom of movement
    stemming from the interrogation itself.’ ” (quoting State v. Deases, 518
    N.W.2d. 784, 789 (Iowa 1994))).
    Monroe began by advising Polk he was “in custody” and read him
    his Miranda rights. He informed Polk he wanted “to talk about some of
    the stuff that has been going on in Waterloo” and that Polk’s name “has
    been brought up in a couple of things.” Monroe asked Polk about his
    association with Pendleton and gangs. Monroe told Polk “somebody says
    you shot somebody.” Claiming he “did not have a gun to shoot anybody
    4
    with,” Polk denied the accusation. Monroe followed up by asking Polk
    why he was found in a house near two guns, one ten feet from him. Polk
    continued to deny he shot anyone, raising his voice, “I ain’t shoot
    nobody, I ain’t got nothing to say, can I go back to my [jail] pod?”
    Monroe responded, “Well if you don’t want to know what happens from
    here on out, yeah you can.” Polk asked Monroe “what happens?”
    Monroe explained that “what happens from here can be influenced
    by what we talk about.” Monroe continued, “Let me just lay it out for
    you like this okay, it has been my experience working cases like this,
    that if somebody cooperates with us, on down the road the county
    attorney is more likely to work with them.”       Polk asked, “What’s the
    county attorney?” Monroe informed Polk that the county attorney has
    discretion as to “how much time somebody does if they are found guilty
    or the one that cuts a deal.” Monroe continued:
    [County attorneys] are much more likely to work with an
    individual who is cooperating with police than somebody
    who sits here and says I didn’t do it, I don’t know what is
    going on. What we can talk about now can influence and
    has the potential to influence things that happen on down
    the road.
    At this point, Polk again attempted to end the questioning stating,
    “I want to go back to my cell, I didn’t do it, can I go?” Monroe answered,
    “You are free to go, the door’s right there. If that’s what you want to do.”
    Polk stood up, left the interview room, and walked down the hall toward
    the elevator to the jail pods.   Monroe stepped to the doorway of the
    interview room and said, “Hey Anthony, I do want to tell you I got
    paperwork down here charging you with possession of a firearm and
    going armed with intent.” Polk asked Monroe, “How did I get charged
    with a firearm?” Monroe told Polk, “We can talk about it . . . but you
    want to go back to your cell or we can talk? You can make the decision
    5
    now . . . .” Polk returned to the interview room. Monroe asked Polk to
    answer in the affirmative that he returned voluntarily to learn “what is
    going on,” which Polk did.
    Monroe then resumed his interrogation of Polk:
    I’m telling you, you need to start thinking about what
    you are going to do for yourself because I know you got a
    couple of kids out there and I’d hate to see the kids miss their
    daddy for a long time because you didn’t want to talk about
    what’s going on, that you wanted to keep this I don’t know
    what’s up.
    ....
    If you want keep your story, I’ll tell you what, later on
    down the line nobody is going to be that willing to work with
    you. But if you are thinking I want to cop a plea, and I want
    to get the best plea possible, one of the things that can help
    you with that, possibly help you with that, is that you are
    cooperating now.
    (Emphasis added.)
    Monroe told Polk he had an eyewitness stating Polk was with
    Pendleton, the color shirts each were wearing, and from what direction
    they approached the house. Monroe continued:
    Obviously, I’m only getting one side of the story and there is
    probably more to it. But the only person that is going to be
    able to tell me that is you. If you want to talk about this we
    can talk about this. Like I said, you need to start thinking
    what is best for you. You got to quit thinking about
    [Pendleton] . . . you got to start thinking about what’s best
    for you.
    Monroe then mentioned Polk’s children again:
    Man if you don’t want to do this for you, do this for your
    kids. They need their dad around. [35-second pause] Just
    don’t forget you got kids that are depending on you. They
    need their pops around.        And you got to think about
    yourself, what’s good for you right now.
    Polk promptly admitted he went to the Sumner and Manson Streets area
    on July 5 with Pendleton, carrying a firearm with the intent to shoot
    Henley, and that he fired shots at Henley there.
    6
    On August 1, the county attorney charged Polk by trial information
    with intimidation with a weapon, going armed with intent, and carrying
    weapons. Polk filed a motion to suppress his confession. The motion
    alleged Monroe procured his confession in violation of his Fifth
    Amendment privilege against self-incrimination, his Sixth Amendment
    right to counsel, and through improper promises of leniency. The district
    court denied Polk’s motion to suppress.      The district court concluded
    Monroe’s “[s]tatements indicating that it would be in [Polk’s] best
    interests and that of his family [for Polk] to tell the truth . . . [do] not
    make [Polk’s] statements inadmissible.”
    Polk also challenged his competency to stand trial. A psychologist,
    Dr. Carroll Roland, was retained by the defense.         Dr. Rowland had
    measured Polk’s IQ at fifty-nine two years earlier when evaluating Polk as
    incompetent to stand trial on a 2006 charge. Dr. Rowland interviewed
    Polk twice in October and concluded that Polk “is not currently
    competent to stand trial.” Dr. Rowland concluded Polk functions in the
    “mild range of mental retardation” and, in his opinion, “did not
    understand his Miranda rights when they were read by the arresting
    officer.”   Experts for the State measured Polk’s IQ at sixty-four and
    seventy-one, respectively, and found him competent to stand trial. The
    district court ruled Polk was competent, but stated “it may be necessary
    that court proceedings be slowed down somewhat to give defendant an
    opportunity to fully comprehend the events as they occur in the
    courtroom.”
    The case was tried to the court on minutes of testimony.         The
    district court convicted Polk on all three charges, relying on Polk’s
    confession he went armed to the Sumner and Manson Streets area. The
    district court relied on Polk’s “admissions and the testimony of the other
    7
    witnesses.”     Polk was sentenced to ten-year, five-year, and two-year
    prison terms to be served concurrently.
    Polk appealed, arguing his confession was procured in violation of
    his Miranda rights and through promises of leniency.                 The court of
    appeals affirmed the district court’s denial of Polk’s suppression motion.
    The court of appeals found Polk was not “in custody” for Miranda
    purposes. On the promise-of-leniency issue, the court of appeals found
    “the officer is dangerously close to the line, but these statements do not
    make Polk’s confession involuntary.”
    We granted Polk’s application for further review.
    II. Scope of Review.
    We      review   de novo   Polk’s       constitutional   challenges   to   the
    admissibility of his confession. Pearson, 804 N.W.2d at 265. We review
    for correction of errors at law the district court’s ruling on promises of
    leniency under the common law evidentiary test, when “there is no
    dispute as to the words used” or their meaning under the circumstances.
    State v. Mullin, 
    249 Iowa 10
    , 15, 
    85 N.W.2d 598
    , 601 (1957) (court to
    determine promise-of-leniency issue as a matter of law).
    III. The Promise-of-Leniency Issue.
    “[I]t is obvious that confession evidence is of great importance in a
    criminal trial.” State v. LaDouceur, 
    366 N.W.2d 174
    , 177 (Iowa 1985).
    “ ‘Voluntary confessions are not merely a proper element in law
    enforcement, they are an unmitigated good, essential to society’s
    compelling interest in finding, convicting, and punishing those who
    violate the law.’ ”    Pearson, 804 N.W.2d at 266 (quoting Maryland v.
    Shatzer, 
    559 U.S.
    ___, ___, 
    130 S. Ct. 1213
    , 1222, 
    175 L. Ed. 2d 1045
    ,
    1055 (2010)) (internal quotation marks omitted).               But, we have long
    recognized promises of leniency create the risk of a false confession
    8
    leading to a wrongful conviction. See Mullin, 249 Iowa at 16, 85 N.W.2d
    at 601. Specifically, we have recognized such promises “may very well
    destroy the voluntary nature of the confession in the eyes of the law.” Id.
    at 16, 85 N.W.2d at 602 (quoting 3 Wigmore on Evidence §§ 823–24 (3d
    ed. 1940)).
    Accordingly, we have reiterated that a “ ‘confession can never be
    received in evidence where the prisoner has been influenced by any
    threat or promise.’ ”   State v. McCoy, 
    692 N.W.2d 6
    , 27 (Iowa 2005)
    (quoting Mullin, 249 Iowa at 14, 85 N.W.2d at 600)).             The rule
    suppressing confessions tainted by promises of leniency deters police
    from using a tactic that might induce the innocent to confess falsely. See
    2 Wayne R. LaFave, et al., Criminal Procedure § 6.2(b), at 612–13 (3d ed.
    2007) (noting the “exclusionary rule for confessions . . . is also intended
    to deter improper police conduct”).
    A. The Common Law Test for Reviewing Promise-of-Leniency
    Challenges. We review challenges to confessions based on a promise of
    leniency under a common law evidentiary test. McCoy, 692 N.W.2d at
    27–28. The defendant’s confession is to be suppressed if it follows the
    officer’s improper promise of leniency.      Id.   We have adopted this
    exclusionary rule out of concern that “ ‘the law cannot measure the force
    of the influence used, or decide upon its effect upon the mind.’ ” Id. at
    27 (quoting Mullin, 249 Iowa at 14, 85 N.W.2d at 600)). The exclusionary
    rule eliminates the need for the court to attempt to read the mind of the
    defendant to determine if his confession in fact was induced by or made
    in reliance upon the promise of leniency.
    B. Precedent Defining an Improper Promise of Leniency. “An
    officer can tell a defendant that it is better to tell the truth without
    crossing the line between admissible and inadmissible statements from
    9
    the defendant.” Id. at 28. Our cases, however, prohibit the investigator
    from communicating to defendants that an advantage is to be gained by
    making a confession. See, e.g., id. (The line between admissibility and
    exclusion seems to be crossed “ ‘if the officer . . . tells the suspect what
    advantage is to be gained or is likely from making a confession.’ ”
    (citation omitted)).
    In State v. Whitsel, we held the defendant’s confession was
    admissible when the officers stopped short of indicating his cooperation
    would likely result in less severe punishment.      
    339 N.W.2d 149
    , 153
    (Iowa 1983). We summarized the facts as follows:
    During the course of questioning, Whitsel volunteered
    information concerning his prior arrest on a sexual abuse
    charge . . . .  In response to this statement offered by
    Whitsel, the detectives told Whitsel that they would
    recommend to the county attorney that Whitsel receive
    psychiatric help and tell the county attorney of his
    cooperation. They emphasized, however, that they could not
    make any promises or give any guarantees and would only
    relate to the county attorney what had been said. Whitsel
    then made his confession following this exchange.
    Id. An offer to inform the county attorney of the defendant’s cooperation,
    without any further assurances, is not improper. Id.
    By contrast, we have held officers impermissibly promise leniency
    when they make “suggestion[s] . . . defendant would receive better
    treatment and less severe punishment” if he confesses. State v. Hodges,
    
    326 N.W.2d 345
    , 346 (Iowa 1982).         In Hodges, the officer told the
    defendant “there was a much better chance of him receiving a lesser
    offense than first degree murder” if he talked.      Id. at 349 (emphasis
    omitted). In State v. Kase, we held an investigator crossed the line by
    telling defendant “that if she told him what she knew about Vaughn’s
    death and signed a consent to search her apartment no criminal charges
    would be filed against her; otherwise, she was told, she would be charged
    10
    with murder.” 
    344 N.W.2d 223
    , 226 (Iowa 1984). In State v. Quintero,
    we held the police utilized improper threats by suggesting to defendant
    that if he did not tell the truth “he would anger the judge and jury and
    suffer greater punishment.”   
    480 N.W.2d 50
    , 50–51 (Iowa 1992).       In
    McCoy, we found the officer improperly promised leniency by telling the
    defendant twenty-five times that “if he didn’t pull the trigger he would
    not be in any trouble.” 692 N.W.2d at 28.
    C. Application of Precedent. After three minutes of questioning,
    Polk said, “I ain’t got nothing to say. Can I go back to my pod?” Monroe
    immediately baited Polk by saying he could go back if Polk “didn’t want
    to know what happens from here on out.” Polk took the bait, asking,
    “What happens?” and remained in the interview room.        Monroe then
    began to insinuate that cooperation could affect punishment.     Monroe
    told Polk that “what happens from here can be influenced by what we
    talk about.” Monroe elaborated, “Let me just lay it out for you like this
    okay, it has been my experience working cases like this, that if somebody
    cooperates with us, on down the road the county attorney is more likely
    to work with them.” For the next several minutes, Monroe reinforced the
    message that Polk would benefit by cooperating. For example, Monroe
    stated county attorneys “are much more likely to work with an individual
    that is cooperating with police than somebody who sits here and says I
    didn’t do it.”
    Polk indicated a second time he wanted to end the questioning.
    Monroe told him he was free to go and “the door is right there if that is
    what you want to do.” Polk walked out of the room and down the hall
    toward the elevator.    Monroe then baited Polk again, stating, “Hey
    Anthony, I do want to tell you I got paperwork down here charging you
    with possession of a firearm and going armed with intent.” Polk took the
    11
    bait a second time, asking, “How did I get charged with a firearm?” He
    returned to the room for more questioning.        After Monroe and Polk
    agreed to resume the interview, Monroe played on the fact Polk had
    children:
    I’m telling you, you need to start thinking about what you
    are going to do for yourself because I know you got a couple
    of kids out there and I’d hate to see the kids miss their
    daddy for a long time because you didn’t want to talk about
    what’s going on.
    Monroe continued: “Man if you don’t want to do this for you, do this for
    your kids. They need their dad around. [35-second pause] Just don’t
    forget you got kids that are depending on you.      They need their pops
    around.” The court of appeals observed, “It is clear from this statement
    that the officer meant to communicate that if Polk confessed, he would
    spend less time away from his children.”        We agree.      The strategy
    worked—Polk promptly confessed to taking a firearm to the scene with
    the intent to shoot Henley and firing shots at Henley there.
    Monroe’s interrogation strategy goes beyond the permissible tactics
    approved in Whitsel. Monroe did not simply offer to inform the county
    attorney of Polk’s cooperation. Instead, he suggested the county attorney
    is more likely to work with him if he cooperates and implicitly threatened
    Polk that silence will keep him from his children for “a long time.”
    Monroe’s statements are similar to the officer’s statement in Hodges that
    “there was a much better chance of . . . receiving a lesser offense” if the
    defendant confessed.     See Hodges, 326 N.W.2d at 349 (emphasis
    omitted). In each case, the officer suggested the defendant’s confessions
    would likely reduce the punishment.
    We conclude Monroe crossed the line by combining statements
    that county attorneys “are much more likely to work with an individual
    12
    that is cooperating” with suggestions Polk would not see his kids “for a
    long time” unless he confessed.        Other courts have cried foul when
    interrogators imply a confession will reduce the suspect’s time away from
    his or her children:
    The relationship between parent and child embodies a
    primordial and fundamental value of our society. When law
    enforcement officers deliberately prey upon the maternal
    instinct and inculcate fear in a mother that she will not see
    her child in order to elicit “cooperation,” they exert . . .
    “improper influence . . . .”
    United States v. Tingle, 
    658 F.2d 1332
    , 1336 (9th Cir. 1981); see also
    Lynumn v. Illinois, 
    372 U.S. 528
    , 534, 
    83 S. Ct. 917
    , 920, 
    9 L. Ed. 2d 922
    , 926 (1963) (finding confession involuntary when police told
    defendant, absent a confession, state financial aid for defendant’s child
    would be cut off); United States v. Groves, 
    470 F.3d 311
    , 322 (7th Cir.
    2006) (“Any level of threats or coercion related to [defendant’s] child
    would weigh against a finding of voluntariness.”). But see United States
    v. Lee, 
    618 F.3d 667
    , 677 (7th Cir. 2010) (finding officer statement that
    defendant “had a lot at stake” and that he had three young children to
    think about did not, by itself, make the confession involuntary). We hold
    Polk’s confession was rendered inadmissible by Monroe’s promise of
    leniency.
    IV. Conclusion.
    For these reasons, we conclude the district court erred in denying
    Polk’s motion to suppress his confession.          Because we find Polk’s
    confession followed an impermissible promise of leniency, we need not
    address Polk’s Miranda claim. We vacate the court of appeals decision,
    reverse Polk’s convictions and sentences, and remand the case for a new
    trial.
    13
    COURT OF APPEALS DECISION VACATED; DISTRICT COURT
    JUDGMENT REVERSED; CASE REMANDED FOR NEW TRIAL.
    All justices concur except Mansfield, J., who takes no part.