State v. Vasquez-Santiago ( 2019 )


Menu:
  •                                         90
    Argued and submitted March 9, 2017; resubmitted en banc October 16, 2018;
    reversed and remanded December 4, 2019
    STATE OF OREGON,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    ELOY VASQUEZ-SANTIAGO,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Washington County Circuit Court
    C122203CR; A159499
    456 P3d 270
    Defendant appeals a judgment of conviction for murder, arguing that the trial
    court erred in admitting evidence of confessions he made during two separate
    police interrogations. In those interrogations, the police communicated to defen-
    dant—who is an illiterate, immigrant man with significantly subaverage intel-
    lectual functioning—that three members of his family, including his nursing,
    infant son, were in custody and that his entire family was suffering as a result
    of that custody. Moreover, as defendant argues, the police also communicated
    that the key to securing his family members’ release and ending their suffer-
    ing was for defendant to confess to the murder. In defendant’s view, a confession
    obtained under those circumstances is involuntary and therefore inadmissible
    under Oregon law. The state argues that defendant’s confession was voluntary.
    Held: In keeping with the recent decision in State v. Jackson, 
    364 Or 1
    , 430
    P3d 1067 (2018), the Court of Appeals concluded that the police communi-
    cated inducements to defendant through both threats and promises. The police
    had failed to tread cautiously around the subject of familial relationships—
    particularly, defendant’s parental attachment to his infant son. The parent-child
    bond is so visceral that, in this case, its use as a point of leverage in the inter-
    rogations rose to the level of improper inducements sufficient to undermine the
    reliability of defendant’s confession. Moreover, as in Jackson, the state failed to
    demonstrate that, under the totality of the circumstances, defendant’s will was
    not overborne by those inducements. Thus, defendant’s confessions were invol-
    untary, and the trial court erred in denying defendant’s motion to suppress the
    confessions.
    Reversed and remanded.
    En Banc
    Donald R. Letourneau, Judge.
    Mary M. Reese, Deputy Public Defender, argued the
    cause for appellant. Also on the brief was Ernest G. Lannet,
    Chief Defender, Criminal Appellate Section, Office of Public
    Defense Services.
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 90
     (2019)                          91
    Joanna L. Jenkins, Assistant Attorney General, argued
    the cause for respondent. Also on the brief were Ellen F.
    Rosenblum, Attorney General, and Benjamin Gutman,
    Solicitor General.
    Before Egan, Chief Judge, and Armstrong, Ortega,
    DeVore, Lagesen, Tookey, DeHoog, Shorr, James, Aoyagi,
    and Powers, Judges, Hadlock and Garrett, Judges pro
    tempore.
    JAMES, J.
    Reversed and remanded.
    Garrett, J. pro tempore, dissenting.
    92                                             State v. Vasquez-Santiago
    JAMES, J.
    Few things are more powerful than the familial
    bonds that tie us together—especially the bonds of love and
    protection that a parent has for his or her child. When those
    bonds are used as a pressure point to induce a confession to
    a crime, there is a risk: Was the confession a product of free
    will, or the result of an inducement of hope or fear such as to
    render the confession unreliable? That question, and how a
    court goes about arriving at an answer, is the essence of this
    case.
    Defendant appeals a judgment of conviction for
    murder, arguing that the trial court erred in admitting
    evidence of confessions he made during two separate police
    interrogations. In those interrogations, police communi-
    cated to defendant—an illiterate, immigrant man with
    an IQ of 53, a number associated with mental retardation
    and significantly subaverage intellectual functioning—that
    three members of his family, including his infant son, were
    in custody, that his entire family was suffering as a result,
    and that the key to securing the family members’ release
    and ending that suffering was for defendant to confess to
    the murder. In defendant’s view, a confession obtained under
    those circumstances is involuntary and therefore inadmissi-
    ble under Oregon law.
    In light of the Oregon Supreme Court’s decision in
    State v. Jackson, 
    364 Or 1
    , 430 P3d 1067 (2018), we agree
    with defendant. For the reasons explained below, we con-
    clude that, as in Jackson, police communicated inducements
    to defendant through both threats and promises and the
    state failed to demonstrate that, under the totality of the
    circumstances, defendant’s will was not overborne by those
    inducements. We accordingly reverse and remand.1
    BACKGROUND
    The relevant facts are undisputed. The victim, a
    56-year-old woman who worked with defendant as a field
    worker at a berry farm, left home one morning in August
    1
    Defendant also challenges the restitution award of $3,030 imposed at sen-
    tencing. In light of our resolution of defendant’s first assignment of error, we need
    not reach that issue.
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 90
     (2019)                               93
    2012 after talking to defendant on the phone. When she did
    not return, her daughter notified the police.
    Defendant was quickly identified as a suspect in the
    victim’s disappearance. Detective LaMonica learned that
    defendant lived in Woodburn with his family, including his
    father, Benito; his brother, Moises; his “common-law wife,”
    Jacinta; his infant son; his mother; and his two sisters.
    Defendant, however, had abruptly left the Woodburn house
    and taken his wife, the baby, his father, and his brother with
    him. LaMonica’s investigation connected the family with
    an address in Madera, California. In late September, a few
    weeks after the victim’s disappearance, LaMonica traveled
    to California with Detective Ganete.
    Meanwhile, defendant’s father and brother had
    been arrested on unrelated local charges in California.
    After arriving in California, the detectives made contact
    with defendant’s father and brother at the police station.
    His father and brother informed the detectives that, on the
    morning of the victim’s disappearance, defendant had taken
    his father’s van without permission, saying that he was
    going to see his “girlfriend.” When defendant returned later
    that day, his father and brother observed blood on his hands
    and on both the inside and outside of the van. According
    to his father and brother, defendant told them that he had
    become upset with the victim and hit her, and that they had
    to “run.” The men explained that, after the family arrived
    in California, defendant left them and continued on alone to
    Mexico. From there, defendant called his father and brother
    and said that he had killed the victim by stabbing her.
    The detectives next visited defendant’s wife and
    inquired about defendant’s whereabouts. They left their
    contact information with her and began the return trip to
    Oregon. Defendant’s father and brother were still in jail in
    California on the local charges.
    While the detectives were traveling back to Oregon,
    defendant, who had evidently been contacted by his wife,
    called Ganete and expressed concern that defendant’s
    father, brother, and infant son were in police custody. As
    Ganete made clear in his testimony, defendant’s reason for
    94                                   State v. Vasquez-Santiago
    contacting police was to secure the release of his family,
    including his infant son:
    “[PROSECUTOR]: Detective Ganete, when the defen-
    dant first called you, what did he say he wanted from you?
    “[GANETE]: He wanted his father, his brother, his son
    released from police custody.”
    The roadside telephone conversation between defen-
    dant and the detectives occurred in Spanish, as did the
    police interactions with defendant that followed. Although
    defendant’s son had never been detained, Ganete did not
    correct defendant on that point. Ganete said that he wanted
    to talk to defendant about the victim and he advised defen-
    dant to turn himself in at the California-Mexico border.
    Defendant replied, “I want you to go leave the little boy with
    his mom, because he’s breast feeding, and let my dad go.”
    Again, the detective did not correct defendant’s belief that
    the infant was detained and separated from his mother.
    Rather, Ganete responded, “I can’t make that kind of a deal
    until I talk to you in person. I don’t make deals on anything,
    because I’m not in a position to make deals.” At the end of
    the conversation, defendant agreed to turn himself in, but
    he continued to request that Ganete release his son.
    The next day, defendant turned himself in at the
    border. When he was finally able to cross the border, defen-
    dant immediately notified the local authorities in San
    Ysidro, California, that he was seeking the release of his
    infant son.
    LaMonica and Ganete interrogated defendant in
    the San Diego county jail beginning at 10:00 p.m. The inter-
    rogation lasted until approximately 12:45 a.m. It began with
    Ganete reading defendant his Miranda rights, which defen-
    dant acknowledged understanding. Defendant said that he
    knew that he was a suspect in the victim’s disappearance
    and that the police “took” his father, brother, and infant son
    for that reason. Defendant explained that he had turned
    himself in because of the choice police had given him regard-
    ing his “defenseless baby.” He also reiterated his belief that
    the baby was still at an age that he needed to be breast
    fed:
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 90
     (2019)                                        95
    “[DEFENDANT]: * * * [T]hey think that I’m suspect
    * * * of these and that’s why they’re detaining him.
    “[GANETE]:     Uh-huh.
    “[DEFENDANT]: My baby is now about—he was born
    in April. He was born in April. I don’t know if he’s only five
    or six months old. And he is still breast feeding.
    “[GANETE]:     Okay.”
    The detectives did not correct defendant’s misun-
    derstanding that his son was detained. Rather, again, they
    reinforced defendant’s misconception and explicitly adopted
    it as their own version of events. When defendant said that
    his wife had reported that the police “detained my dad, my
    brother and my son,” Ganete replied, “Yes. Uh huh, exactly.
    They are in custody for now.”
    As the interrogation proceeded, defendant denied
    killing the victim and continued to express concern for his
    infant son, as well as for his father and brother. Ganete,
    meanwhile, referred to defendant’s family and their “suffer-
    ing” in exchanges with defendant. Ganete stated, “I don’t
    want your family to * * * suffer for something that I know
    you are responsible for. I don’t want the other family to suf-
    fer from not knowing where their family’s body is. I don’t
    know where the body is.”
    Ganete explained to defendant that, unless he could
    recover the victim’s body, defendant’s father and brother
    would be detained because “they are witnesses that, that
    have to go to the court and say, ‘[Defendant] told me that he
    killed her.’ Your dad has to testify and [your brother] has to
    testify.” Ganete later stated,
    “I believe that in your heart you want to settle this. You
    don’t want to leave it like this—a mess. You—I believe
    your dad and your mom and your family don’t deserve this,
    because everyone is suffering right now.
    “* * * * *
    “One family has a dead relative and they don’t know where
    she is and they’d at least like to give this woman a decent
    burial. And I have another family—
    “* * * * *
    96                                      State v. Vasquez-Santiago
    “—suffering over their son, that they want their son to
    tell the truth so the family can have peace. I have two fam-
    ilies and you are the key to this.”
    Ganete told defendant that, unless he “told the
    truth,” his father and brother would remain key witnesses
    in the case, but that if defendant confessed, his father’s
    and his brother’s testimony would become less important.
    Defendant then discussed a possible deal with the detec-
    tives, in which he would confess in exchange for his family’s
    release:
    “[DEFENDANT]: * * * When are you going to let my
    family go?
    “[GANETE]: I can’t let your family go until I find that
    body. And not until I get the truth from you. Because they
    are the only witnesses who can say what you told them.
    “[DEFENDANT]: I want to assure you of one thing.
    “[GANETE]:      Tell me.
    “[DEFENDANT]: If you . . . let my family go right now
    and I will tell you the truth. Just like I told you there, I’ll
    tell you here. I’m sincere.
    “[GANETE]: You’re telling me that if I—what you’re
    telling me is if your dad and brother get out of jail—
    “[DEFENDANT]:        And my son.
    “[GANETE]: —and your son, you will tell me where
    the body is and everything that happened.
    “[DEFENDANT]: Yes.
    “[GANETE]: You will take me exactly to where it is,
    where, where you dumped the body.
    “[DEFENDANT]: If you take me there to my family. I
    want to see that they are free and I will go with you.
    “[GANETE]:      Okay. The problem is that, uh—
    “[DEFENDANT]: There you have it.
    “[GANETE]:      The problem is that—
    “[DEFENDANT]: I know that this—
    “[GANETE]:      They are my key witnesses.”
    (Ellipsis in original; emphases added.)
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 90
     (2019)                                       97
    Ganete, who was speaking with defendant in Spanish,
    then brought LaMonica into the exchange:
    “[GANETE]: Let me tell Detective LaMonica what
    you’re telling me. So he’s saying he will take us to the body
    and tell us everything that happened if his father and his
    brother go free.
    “[LAMONICA]: You want me to—
    “[DEFENDANT]:       The baby.
    “[LAMONICA]: You want me to tell him and you can
    translate?
    “[GANETE]:     Absolutely.
    “[LAMONICA]: Okay, Uh, okay, [defendant], thank
    you. The family needs this, okay?
    “[DEFENDANT]:       Baby.
    “[LAMONICA]:      Your, your baby needs this.
    “[GANETE]:     Your family needs this.
    “[LAMONICA]: Your baby needs his grandpa. We can-
    not make you any promises, we’re not allowed to.
    “[GANETE]: We can’t make, make you promises
    because we—the law doesn’t allow us to make promises.”
    (Emphases added.)
    LaMonica proceeded to explain that “they’re in
    custody because they know the facts, and nobody else does,
    other than—we know what they’re telling us,” and that
    “until we can verify those facts[,] whether it be through you
    or through finding the body or both[,] then we have to keep
    them in custody[,] so we can proceed with, with the case.”
    LaMonica explained that he did not “have any problems,
    uh, asking the DA’s office to, uh, let them be released from
    custody, if we can find the body, and if we can, and, and if
    you can be, uh, truthful about what happened. * * * But I
    can’t promise you that, but I will do my best to make that
    happen.” The detectives then addressed the need for defen-
    dant’s father and brother to be released to support defen-
    dant’s family:
    “[GANETE]: And we know that it’s very important
    that your dad and brother work because they are the ones
    98                                        State v. Vasquez-Santiago
    who support the family and I know that’s important to
    you and to the family. And that is the, the perspective of
    Detective LaMonica. He is the primary investigator in this
    case. Of course I am helping do the interviews in this case
    but, uh, let me say something. I know that what you’re, uh,
    proposing and I know that you’re doing this for your family.
    I understand.”
    On multiple occasions, Ganete pointed out the lim-
    its of his ability to negotiate. He told defendant that “[a]s
    detectives we don’t have, uh, neither the responsibility nor
    the power under the law to make a deal with someone ‘if you
    do this, I’ll do that’ and so on. What we can do is, uh, pass
    the information on to the person who makes the decisions on
    this case.” He and defendant then discussed the leverage—
    or, in defendant’s words, “the little hook”—that the police
    had:
    “[GANETE]: * * * Uh, what we know is that your dad
    and your brother are key witnesses in this case. And they
    are less key if we validate the information they gave us
    through you. That means that if you tell me exactly what
    happened and tell me exactly where, where I can find that
    woman, then they aren’t so critical to this case because it
    comes straight from you. But if I don’t hear anything out
    of your mouth, nothing comes from you, they are the key
    people who can say—
    “[DEFENDANT]: The little hook.
    “[GANETE]:       Yes, exactly.
    “[DEFENDANT]: Yes.
    “[GANETE]: They are the hooks of the case. And the
    way you release that hook is if you take the responsibility
    of saying, ‘well, uh, I’ll tell what it is, I’ll tell you what hap-
    pened’ and his testimony, theirs, won’t have the same value
    as your testimony, and that’s why the hook, that hook’s not
    to—
    “[DEFENDANT]: Also to pull me.
    “[GANETE]:       Yes. Exactly. Just as you want the hook
    with me—
    “[DEFENDANT]:          Uh-huh.
    “[GANETE]: —that if I don’t give you—if your father
    and your brother aren’t freed—
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 90
     (2019)                                        99
    “[DEFENDANT]:        No—
    “[GANETE]:     —you are not going to tell me—”
    The detectives later repeated that they lacked
    authority to negotiate, stating that “my hands are tied to [a]
    certain point because I—we are detectives, we are not judges
    or district attorneys who take the cases and go to court and
    so on.” Ganete then had this exchange with defendant:
    “[GANETE]: * * * Now the—for us it’s, uh, as import-
    ant for your family and for everyone that knows—knows
    the truth. You know that if the truth comes forward, all will
    be freed. The family will be freed from being able to find its
    relative and to be able to give her a proper burial; your fam-
    ily will be freed because like—to use your word—the hook
    in this case which is your dad and [brother] is not so criti-
    cal because things come straight from your mouth. For you,
    it’s having that personal freedom about what happened—
    Because this is something you can’t live with in your heart
    your whole life. You can’t live with this. Absolutely not.
    Absolutely not. You have to free yourself of that. The truth
    will solve this case for everyone. Like you asked me, as
    an officer what do I gain by this? I gain bringing peace to
    everyone, to the whole family, closing a case, you go on with
    your life, that family to have peace, your family to be able
    to go on living so that your child can get ahead, your wife
    can get ahead and we can fulfill—spread the benefit of the
    truth among everyone. And [defendant], only you have the
    key. Why kid ourselves? Here. It, it—I don’t know how I can
    explain it any clearer than this.
    “[DEFENDANT]: Yes, but I want my family to be free.
    “[GANETE]: And me too. Your family are cool peo-
    ple. I, I really liked talking to your dad and your brother.
    I met your mom, * * * I met your whole family. And do you
    believe I—do you think I have the pleasure and I enjoy
    watching a family suffer? I don’t think you think that of
    me because I’ve shown you I’m not that kind of person.
    To the contrary, I’ve constantly shown you that all this is
    to benefit your family and everyone from all angles. So this
    is not something that, that the police take a great satisfac-
    tion [in] bringing trouble to your family and have them all
    suffer.”
    (Emphases added.)
    100                                  State v. Vasquez-Santiago
    Ganete further stated that defendant’s father and
    brother “didn’t tell me everything” and that “I know there’s
    a part you didn’t tell them. And that is the part you have
    that frees all, everyone. But that freedom, that decision is
    yours.” Later, the detective stated, “I don’t want to see your
    family suffer any longer. * * * Because that’s not right and
    you know that it’s not right. Not for you or the other fam-
    ily, or for your mother or your father or no one. We have
    to stop the suffering. And you have to have peace in your
    heart.”
    Twice more the detectives stated that, although
    they lacked the authority to agree to release defendant’s
    family, they would report the details of the interrogation
    to the prosecutor, including whether defendant had cooper-
    ated, and that a confession would benefit defendant’s family:
    “[GANETE]: * * * Simply, I can’t make promises to
    you but I will tell you that I will fight as hard as I can to
    indicate in my report and to put in black and white that
    you were honest with me, you have told the truth, and that
    you’ve cooperated with the police and that you made a huge
    effort to come from Tijuana and turn yourself in—
    “[DEFENDANT]:       Uh-huh.
    “[GANETE]: —that you take responsibility for what
    happened and that you are a straight, sincere person and
    have taken responsibility for what happened. That’s what
    I want to put in my report. That’s what I want to show the
    district attorney and show everyone who reads my report,
    that you are a man who made a mistake[.]
    “* * * * *
    “[LAMONICA]: The more responsibility you accept,
    the, the more cooperation you are helping, helping the fam-
    ily have closure, helping your family have closure[.]
    “* * * * *
    “[LAMONICA]: * * * [E]very day that she is out there
    is another day that your dad and [your brother] are in jail
    and not able to support your family.
    “* * * * *
    “[GANETE]: * * * [E]ach day we are not able to close
    this case in the sense of not knowing the details and how
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 90
     (2019)                                   101
    it all happened is one more day that your dad and [your
    brother] have to be in jail because we, we aren’t able to free
    this. And of course the sooner we can free this case and
    come to the conclusion of what happened the sooner I can
    move this case forward[.]”
    After defendant questioned whether a proposed
    deal could be unwound because of “lies,” Ganete explained:
    “Oh, what you’re asking me is if you, if you are truthful
    with me—
    “[DEFENDANT]:        Uh-huh.
    “[GANETE]:     —that we won’t do anything to release—
    “[DEFENDANT]:        Uh-huh.
    “[GANETE]: —your dad and your mom, well—sorry,
    your family. Oh, no. Because like I told you, uh, I’m not in
    the position to make this kind of deal.
    “[DEFENDANT]:        Uh-huh.
    “[GANETE]:     What I can do—
    “[DEFENDANT]: Yes, yes, yes—
    “[GANETE]:     What I can do—
    “[DEFENDANT]: Yes, you told me, uh-huh.
    “[GANETE]: I can fight for that, [defendant]. Like I say
    in the way I present the information—
    “[DEFENDANT]:        Uh-huh.
    “[GANETE]: —is that I’m going to put exactly what
    you and I talked about in my report.
    “[DEFENDANT]:        Uh-huh.
    “[GANETE]: And I put in my report your effort to
    cross the border, the conversations we’ve had, your hon-
    esty with me, the exact details of what happened so I can
    show—I want to show in my report what kind of person you
    are. And I want to put in my report your wish to have your
    mom, your dad, you brother, for your family to be free and
    for them to not be responsible for something they didn’t do.
    And I want to put that in my report.
    “[DEFENDANT]:        Uh-huh.
    102                                 State v. Vasquez-Santiago
    “[GANETE]: And the way I can put all these things in
    my report is if you and I have an honest conversation.”
    (Emphasis added.)
    As the interrogation continued, defendant admitted
    to seeing the victim on the day of her disappearance but
    denied killing her. Ganete replied that, because he believed
    that defendant was being untruthful, the detectives would
    end the interview and tell the prosecutor that defendant was
    being uncooperative. Defendant then confessed to murder-
    ing the victim by stabbing her. He then immediately asked
    for the release of his baby, father, and brother: “I killed her
    but I want you to let my son and dad go. * * * And my brother.
    * * * I want them to be free.” Less than 24 hours later, the
    detectives interviewed defendant again for five minutes and
    defendant affirmed his confession. Defendant was indicted
    for murder.
    Defendant later moved to suppress the evidence
    from both police interrogations on the ground that his con-
    fessions were involuntary. After a hearing on the suppres-
    sion motion, the trial court made the following findings:
    “The defendant is fluent in Spanish. Detective Ganete
    is fluent in Spanish. All the interrogation was in Spanish.
    There were no communication problems. The interview
    was polite in tone throughout.
    “The defendant is a Mexican citizen. He has worked as a
    migrant worker in Oregon. He has an IQ of 53 and no edu-
    cation. His limited IQ and lack of education did not impede
    his interaction with the detectives. He was not suffering
    any psychosis during his interactions with the detectives.
    Although the defendant had slept little in the proceeding
    [sic] days, he did not manifest any drowsiness during the
    interrogation. The defendant was not under the influence
    of any intoxicants.
    “* * * * *
    “[T]he defendant repeatedly voiced his concern that his
    child, father, and brother were in custody. The transcripts
    reflect over ten times in which the defendant referred
    expressly to his concerns about his son being in custody.
    Detective Ganete did not believe the child was in custody,
    but never corrected the defendant’s misunderstanding.
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 90
     (2019)                                   103
    Rather on one occasion he affirmatively agreed with the
    defendant’s statement that the child was in custody. * * *
    “In his exchanges with defendant, Ganete focused on
    the custody status of the brother and father rather than
    referencing the child.
    “The defendant consistently tried to negotiate that he
    would give a full statement regarding the incident in return
    for his family being released from custody. The detectives
    time after time told the defendant that they could not make
    such a deal, but that they would report his cooperation to
    the prosecutors in an effort to get the brother and father
    released from custody.
    “* * * * *
    “The defendant confessed because of his subjective hope
    that his cooperation would lead to the release from custody
    of his son, father, and brother.”
    The trial court also reached the following legal
    conclusions:
    “* * * Ganete’s failure to correct the defendant’s misconcep-
    tion that his son was in state custody as well as the detec-
    tive’s affirmation of the misconception constitutes police
    deception.
    “* * * * *
    “Here the police never made a promise that defendant’s
    cooperation would lead to the release of the son or the adult
    relatives from custody. They did make a permissible prom-
    ise that they would forward defendant’s cooperation to the
    prosecutors and attempt to secure the release of the adult
    relatives.
    “* * * * *
    “The defendant confessed because of his subjective hope
    that his cooperation would lead to the release from custody
    of his son and his adult relatives.
    “Under the totality of the circumstances, the defen-
    dant’s statements were the product of an essentially free
    and unconstrained choice. Defendant’s free will was not
    overborne and his capacity for self-determination was not
    critically impaired.”
    The trial court denied defendant’s motion to sup-
    press and his confessions were admitted as evidence at trial.
    104                                           State v. Vasquez-Santiago
    The jury found defendant guilty of murder. Defendant now
    appeals the resulting judgment of conviction, assigning
    error to the denial of his motion to suppress the confession,
    which he argues was involuntary under ORS 136.425(1)2
    and Article I, section 12, of the Oregon Constitution.3 While
    this case was under advisement, the Oregon Supreme Court
    issued its opinion in Jackson. As a result, we asked the par-
    ties to rebrief the arguments in light of Jackson’s analysis.
    The briefing provided by both parties has been valuable in
    helping us approach the issues in this case.
    According to defendant, the detectives engaged in
    conduct that, under the totality of the circumstances, ren-
    dered his confession unreliable as a matter of law. Specifi-
    cally, defendant argues:
    “As the trial court found and as supported by the record,
    the detectives deceived defendant into believing that his
    son was in custody and, given the circumstances, defen-
    dant’s belief was reasonable. The detectives then made an
    implied promise: the detectives would release or, at least,
    work hard to release defendant’s son if defendant stopped
    ‘lying’ and confirmed what the detectives already knew
    about the case. Defendant directly responded to that prom-
    ise and confessed in the hopes of securing the release of his
    son.”
    That is, in defendant’s view, a confession induced by that
    type of deceptive coercion is involuntary, even if the detec-
    tives hedged as to whether they could personally negotiate
    the infant’s ultimate release.
    The state, in response, argues that the underlying
    premise of defendant’s argument is wrong: There was no
    inducement or promise. According to the state, in light of the
    detectives’ repeated clarifications about what they could and
    could not promise, defendant knew that he was not being
    offered anything in exchange for his confession. Thus, the
    state argues, defendant’s claim of error “fails because it is
    2
    ORS 136.425(1) provides that “[a] confession or admission of a defendant,
    whether in the course of judicial proceedings or otherwise, cannot be given in
    evidence against the defendant when it was made under the influence of fear
    produced by threats.”
    3
    Article I, section 12, provides that “[n]o person shall * * * be compelled in
    any criminal prosecution to testify against himself.”
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 90
     (2019)                               105
    based on the factually incorrect premise that the detective
    offered defendant a quid pro quo.” In any event, the state
    argues, police deception is only one factor that should be
    considered under the totality of the circumstances. In the
    state’s view, “the officers did not make any threats regarding
    defendant’s child, and furthermore, the mere fact that the
    child was in state custody did not equate to a threat [of] the
    child’s health and safety.” Rather, “[d]efendant attempted to
    negotiate a deal for the release of his family, and the officers
    indicated that they could not make promises but would pass
    any information about his cooperation to the district attor-
    ney. That did not render defendant’s confession involuntary.”
    ANALYSIS
    As noted at the outset, the Oregon Supreme Court’s
    recent decision in Jackson, provides the framework for our
    analysis of the parties’ competing arguments under Article I,
    section 12, and ORS 136.425(1). In Jackson, the court
    explained that “both the statute and Article I, section 12
    embody the common-law rule that confessions made by a
    defendant in custody that were induced by the influence of
    hope or fear, applied by a public officer having the prisoner
    in his charge, are inadmissible against the defendant.” 
    364 Or at 21
     (internal quotation marks omitted); see State v.
    Powell, 
    352 Or 210
    , 218, 282 P3d 845 (2012) (“the statute
    encompasses the common law and thus applies to confes-
    sions induced by promises of leniency as well as by threats”);
    State v. Wintzingerode, 
    9 Or 153
    , 163 (1881) (“There seems
    to be no conflict among the numerous authorities as to the
    rule, that confessions made by a prisoner while in custody,
    and induced by the influence of hope or fear, applied by a
    public officer having the prisoner in his charge, are inad-
    missible in evidence against him.”); see also State v. Smith,
    
    301 Or 681
    , 690, 
    725 P2d 894
     (1986) (“We know of no case
    that interprets or applies ORS 136.425 independently of the
    common-law rules on confessions and admissions.”).
    To protect a defendant’s core statutory and constitu-
    tional right to be free from compelled self-incrimination, an
    out-of-court confession is presumed to be involuntary and,
    thus, inadmissible. Jackson, 
    364 Or at 21
    ; see also Powell,
    
    352 Or at 225-26
     (“It is well established that confessions
    106                                            State v. Vasquez-Santiago
    are initially deemed to be involuntary and that the state
    has the burden to overcome that presumption by offering
    evidence affirmatively establishing that the confession was
    voluntary.”). For a court to admit a defendant’s out-of-court
    confession against the defendant at trial, the state bears
    the burden of proving that the confession was voluntary. 
    Id.
    Thus, it is not defendant who must prove that his will was
    overborne. Id. at 21-22. Rather, the opposite—it is the state
    that must prove that “defendant’s free will was not over-
    borne and his capacity for self-determination was not crit-
    ically impaired, and that he made his statements without
    inducement from fear or promises.” Jackson, 
    364 Or at 22
    (emphases added).4
    One of the core rationales for this longstanding
    rule prohibiting the evidentiary use of confessions produced
    by inducements is to ensure that criminal convictions are
    based on reliable evidence and, accordingly, are themselves
    reliable: “ ‘As our cases consistently have recognized, con-
    fessions are unreliable when rendered under circumstances
    in which the confessor perceives that he or she may receive
    some benefit or avoid some detriment by confessing, regard-
    less of the truth or falsity of the confession.’ ” 
    Id. at 23
     (quot-
    ing Powell, 
    352 Or at 222
    ).5 Although “mere adjurations” to
    4
    That focus is the primary differentiator between the majority and the
    dissent. The dissent approaches this case by placing the burden, incorrectly, on
    defendant. As the dissent concludes, “It follows that, if the psychological pressure
    on a suspect is in place before the interrogation begins, and if a defendant none-
    theless has the capacity to make a valid waiver of his Miranda rights, then the
    ordinary tactics of persuasion that police employ during the ensuing interroga-
    tion should not be a basis for concluding that defendant’s capacity was lost. Under
    such circumstances, it should be harder—not easier—to show that a confession
    was caused by an unlawful police inducement.” 301 Or App at 132 (Garrett, J. pro
    tempore, dissenting). But it is not defendant’s burden to prove the confession was
    “caused by an unlawful police inducement.” Rather, the confession is presumed
    involuntary. It is the state’s burden to prove the confession was not the product of
    an unlawful inducement.
    5
    The dissent is concerned with whether an inducement existed before the
    police became involved. See 301 Or App at 119 (Garrett, J. pro tempore, dissent-
    ing) (“If that was the pressure that drove defendant to confess, then it is difficult
    to conclude that the confession was ‘induced’ by the police, as that pressure was
    being exerted on defendant before he met with the detectives.” (Emphasis in orig-
    inal.)). The dissent’s concern is misplaced.
    In Powell, interpreting Oregon’s statutory prohibition against involuntary
    confessions, the Oregon Supreme Court made clear that police inducement is not
    required:
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 90
     (2019)                                                107
    tell the truth typically do not constitute inducements for
    purposes of this analysis, communications “that convey[ ] to
    a defendant the idea of a threat or a promise” do. Id. at 24
    (relying on Wintzingerode, 
    9 Or at 163
    ).
    The court’s decision in Jackson did not establish a
    hard-and-fast test for evaluating whether the state has met
    its burden in a given case. However, it did identify a useful
    approach, explaining that it is “helpful to begin with the
    issue of whether the officers who interrogated defendant
    induced him to make admissions by the influence of hope or
    fear.” Id. at 22. If so, the next question is whether the state
    has demonstrated that, in view of the totality of the circum-
    stances, the defendant’s admissions were nonetheless the
    product of the defendant’s free will. Id. at 27-28. The “total-
    ity of the circumstances” subject to examination includes
    the individual characteristics and circumstances of the
    defendant, in addition to the circumstances of the interro-
    gation. Id. at 28. The ultimate question of whether the state
    has demonstrated that a confession was voluntary is one
    of law for the reviewing court, although an appellate court
    examining whether a confession was voluntary is bound by
    the implicit and explicit factual findings of the trial court, if
    those findings have evidentiary support. Id. at 21-22.
    Applying that same approach here, we conclude that
    the state failed to demonstrate the voluntariness of defen-
    dant’s confessions. As noted above, our review is circum-
    scribed by the trial court’s factual findings, two of which are
    particularly pertinent under the totality of these circum-
    stances. The first is that defendant’s IQ was 53. A score that
    low, courts have routinely observed, has been associated
    with mild mental retardation and significantly subaverage
    “We decline the state’s invitation to read ORS 136.425(1) to pertain only to
    confessions induced by and made to state actors. The text of the statute does
    not require that interpretation, our case law consistently has made no such
    distinction, and such a distinction would undermine the purpose of the stat-
    ute. Consequently, we hold that ORS 136.425(1) continues to apply to confes-
    sions induced by and made to private parties.”
    
    352 Or at 222-23
    . Although Jackson primarily focuses on the voluntariness of
    confessions in a constitutional framework, Jackson appears to interpret Article I,
    section 12, and the statute congruently. Accordingly, the source of the induce-
    ment is immaterial. The question, rather, is whether the presence of an induce-
    ment renders the confession unreliable.
    108                                State v. Vasquez-Santiago
    intellectual functioning. State v. Agee, 
    358 Or 325
    , 342, 364
    P3d 971 (2015), adh’d to as amended, 
    358 Or 749
    , 370 P3d
    476 (2016) (describing IQ range of 50-55 and approximately
    70 (two standard deviations below normal) as mental retar-
    dation and significant subaverage intellectual functioning
    under the Fourth Edition (text revision) of the American
    Psychiatric Association’s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual
    of Mental Disorders 49 (4th ed Text Revision 2000)); see also
    State v. Ryan, 
    361 Or 602
    , 623, 396 P3d 867 (2017) (explain-
    ing that “the undisputed evidence at sentencing showed
    that defendant is an intellectually disabled offender who
    has an IQ score between 50 and 60, a full 10 to 20 points
    below the cutoff IQ score for the intellectual function prong
    of the intellectual disability definition recognized in Hall [v.
    Florida, 
    572 US 701
    , 719, 
    134 S Ct 1986
    , 
    188 L Ed 2d 1007
    (2014)]”); accord Atkins v. Virginia, 
    536 US 304
    , 309 n 5,
    
    122 S Ct 2242
    , 
    153 L Ed 2d 335
     (2002) (observing that “an
    IQ between 70 and 75 or lower * * * is typically considered
    the cutoff IQ score for the intellectual function prong of the
    mental retardation definition”).
    Although the trial court found that defendant’s
    “limited IQ and lack of education did not impede his interac-
    tion with the detectives,” that factual finding does not insu-
    late defendant’s IQ from consideration in the legal question
    of voluntariness. “In resolving the issue [of whether defen-
    dant’s will was overborne at the time he confessed] all the
    circumstances attendant upon the confession must be taken
    into account.” Reck v. Pate, 
    367 US 433
    , 440, 
    81 S Ct 1541
    ,
    
    6 L Ed 2d 948
     (1961). That holistic approach was reinforced
    a generation later by the United States Supreme Court in
    Oregon v. Elstad, where the Court noted, “As in any such
    inquiry, the finder of fact must examine the surrounding
    circumstances and the entire course of police conduct with
    respect to the suspect in evaluating the voluntariness of his
    statements.” 
    470 US 298
    , 318, 
    105 S Ct 1285
    , 
    84 L Ed 2d 222
    (1985).
    It is true that lower levels of intellectual function-
    ing by a defendant do not, automatically of themselves,
    prohibit the state from meeting its burden to prove volun-
    tariness. State v. Hickam, 
    71 Or App 471
    , 477, 
    692 P2d 672
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 90
     (2019)                             109
    (1984) (rejecting the defendant’s argument that “because
    he is mentally retarded, his will to resist was overcome by
    the mere fact of the questioning itself”). However, it is well
    established that the personal characteristics of a defendant
    must be considered in assessing the totality of the circum-
    stances surrounding voluntariness. See, e.g., Reck, 
    367 US at 443
    ; Clewis v. Texas, 
    386 US 707
    , 712, 
    87 S Ct 1338
    , 
    18 L Ed 2d 423
     (1967) (“petitioner’s faculties were impaired by
    inadequate sleep and food, sickness, and long subjection to
    police custody with little or no contact with anyone other
    than police”).
    In this case, defendant’s low IQ is a fact that is
    binding on us on appeal and one that Jackson unequivocally
    states must be considered in assessing whether defendant
    was susceptible to inducement, even if his interactions with
    police were not impeded. 
    364 Or at 30
    ; see State ex rel Juv.
    Dept. v. Deford, 
    177 Or App 555
    , 572, 34 P3d 673 (2001) (stat-
    ing that a defendant’s personal characteristics, like age,
    education, and intelligence, “are relevant only if police, in
    fact, exert coercion and only insofar as those circumstances
    render a suspect less able to resist that coercion”); accord
    Rhode Island v. Innis, 
    446 US 291
    , 302 n 8, 
    100 S Ct 1682
    ,
    
    64 L Ed 2d 297
     (1980) (“Any knowledge the police may have
    had concerning the unusual susceptibility of a defendant to
    a particular form of persuasion might be an important fac-
    tor in determining whether the police should have known
    that their words or actions were reasonably likely to elicit
    an incriminating response from the suspect.”). Although
    the trial court found that defendant’s IQ did not impede his
    interactions with police, whether someone is susceptible to
    coercion because of low intelligence or education is a differ-
    ent question from whether the person’s intelligence is an
    impediment to communication.
    The second factual finding of the trial court that
    informs our analysis is that defendant was, in fact, under
    the belief that his infant son was in custody and under
    the subjective belief that his cooperation would lead to his
    son’s release. That is, regardless of how a father of average
    intellectual functioning would have responded to the pos-
    sibility of an infant being in police custody, this particular
    110                                           State v. Vasquez-Santiago
    defendant, with an IQ of 53, understood the circumstances
    to involve urgency, including urgency over the child being
    breast fed by his mother.6
    From the outset of the interrogation, it was readily
    apparent to detectives that defendant believed that police
    had taken his infant son from the child’s nursing mother.
    Before agreeing to turn himself in, defendant told one of
    the detectives, “I want you to go leave the little boy with
    his mom because he’s breast feeding.” When a detective was
    asked what defendant’s understanding of the situation was,
    he testified:
    “[PROSECUTOR]: Well, you first asked him, ‘What do
    you think is your understanding of the situation?’ Correct?
    “[GANETE]:        Yes.
    “[PROSECUTOR]:            And what was his response to that?
    “[GANETE]: ‘Because he is a defenseless baby, you know,
    and then getting blamed for something I had nothing to do
    with.’ ”
    Later in the interrogation defendant again pointed out that
    his baby was being detained but was still at an age that he
    needed to be breast fed. And, as the trial court found, “[t]he
    transcripts reflect over ten times in which the defendant
    referred expressly to his concerns about his son being in
    custody.” While detectives did not create defendant’s belief
    that his son was in custody, they affirmed, reinforced, and
    encouraged that mistaken belief.
    With those factual findings from the trial court, we
    turn to the initial question identified in Jackson: whether
    6
    Of note, the trial court also found defendant to be a Mexican citizen. The
    notion that the police would hold an infant in custody is not unrealistic. As the
    Ninth Circuit recently noted:
    “The State Department Human Rights Report on Mexico, while recognizing
    the national government’s efforts to eliminate corruption and police entan-
    glement with drug cartels, said that ‘corruption remained a problem at all
    levels of government,’ and some ‘public officials continued to perpetrate . . .
    some criminal acts with impunity.’ The State Department cited with approval
    reports that ‘police, especially at the state and local level, were involved in
    kidnapping, extortion, and in providing protection for, or acting directly on
    behalf of, organized crime and drug traffickers.’ ”
    Barajas-Romero v. Lynch, 846 F3d 351, 363-64 (9th Cir 2017) (ellipsis in original).
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 90
     (2019)                                   111
    the detectives communicated inducements to defendant. As
    demonstrated by the previously quoted excerpts from the
    transcript of the interrogation, the answer to that ques-
    tion is yes. The detectives made many statements through-
    out the interrogation that communicated the idea of both
    threats and promises to defendant: the threat that, if he
    did not confess, his father, brother, and son would remain
    in custody and would “suffer,” and the correlative promise
    that, if he did confess, it may well secure their release and
    prevent their suffering. The following are examples of what
    defendant was told after Ganete confirmed that defendant’s
    father, brother, and son were, in Ganete’s words, “in custody
    for now”:
    • “I don’t want your family to * * * suffer for something
    that I know you are responsible for.”
    • “You don’t want to leave it like this—a mess. You—I
    believe your dad and your mom and your family don’t
    deserve this, because everyone is suffering right now.”
    • “And I have another family * * * suffering over their son,
    that they want their son to tell the truth so the family can
    have peace.”
    • “I can’t let your family go until I find that body. And not
    until I get the truth from you. Because they are the only
    witnesses who can say what you told them.”
    • “They are in custody now because they know the infor-
    mation on this case and nobody but they knows the infor-
    mation. And until we can verify what they are telling us
    * * * through you or through finding the body or both things
    * * * and we have to have them in custody until we can
    verify.”
    • “And we know that it’s very important that your dad and
    brother work because they are the ones who support the
    family and I know that’s important to you and to the fam-
    ily. And that is the, the perspective of Detective LaMonica.
    He is the primary investigator in this case. Of course I am
    helping do the interviews in this case but, uh, let me say
    something. I know that what you’re, uh, proposing and I
    know that you’re doing this for your family.”
    • “Now the—for us it’s, uh, as important for your family
    and for everyone that everyone knows—knows the truth.
    112                                 State v. Vasquez-Santiago
    You know that if the truth comes forward, all will be
    freed. * * * [Y]our family will be free because like—to use
    your word—the hook in the case which is your dad and
    [brother] is not so critical because things come straight
    from your mouth. For you, it’s having that personal free-
    dom about what happened. Because this is something you
    can’t live with in your heart your whole life. You can’t live
    with this. Absolutely not. Absolutely not. You have to free
    yourself of that. The truth will solve this case for every-
    one. Like you asked me, as an officer what do I gain by
    this? I gain bringing peace to everyone, to the whole fam-
    ily, closing a case, you go on with your life, that family to
    have peace, your family to be able to go on living so that
    your child can get ahead, your wife can get ahead and we
    can fulfill—spread the benefit of the truth among every-
    one. And [defendant], only you have that key. Why kid our-
    selves? Here. It, it—I don’t know how I can explain it any
    clearer than this.”
    • “Your family are cool people. * * * [D]o you think I have
    the pleasure and I enjoy watching a family suffer? I don’t
    think you think that of me because I’ve shown you I’m not
    that kind of person. To the contrary, I’ve constantly shown
    you that all of this is to benefit your family and everyone
    from all angles. So this is not something that, that, that the
    police take a great satisfaction in bringing trouble to your
    family and have them all suffer.”
    • “They [defendant’s father and brother] told me but they
    didn’t tell me everything. I know there’s a part you didn’t
    tell them. And that is the part you have that frees all,
    everyone. But that freedom, that decision is yours.”
    • “I don’t want to see your family suffer any longer. I don’t
    want to see that any, any longer. * * * Because that’s not
    right and you know that it’s not right. Not for you or the
    other family, or for your mother or your father or no one.
    We have to stop the suffering. And you have to have peace
    in your heart.”
    • “[E]ach day we are not able to close this case in the
    sense of not knowing the details and how it all happened
    is one more day that your dad and [your brother] have to
    be in jail because we, we aren’t able to free this. And of
    course the sooner we can free this case and come to the con-
    clusion of what happened the sooner I can move this case
    forward[.]”
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 90
     (2019)                               113
    Those statements, as a whole, communicated to
    defendant that (1) three members of his family were in cus-
    tody; (2) his entire family was suffering as a result; and
    (3) the key to securing the family members’ release and end-
    ing the suffering was for defendant to confess to the murder.
    Those statements fall easily within the range of communi-
    cations that bring ORS 136.425 and Article I, section 12,
    into play.
    Constitutional protections against involuntary con-
    fessions protect against not only extreme methods of coer-
    cion, but also against the subtler techniques of interrogation
    that can be equally, if not more, effective at eroding the will.
    See, e.g., United States v. Tingle, 658 F2d 1332, 1335 (9th Cir
    1981) (“Law enforcement conduct which renders a confession
    involuntary does not consist only of express threats so direct
    as to bludgeon a defendant into failure of the will. Subtle
    psychological coercion suffices as well, and at times more
    effectively, to overbear a rational intellect and a free will.”
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.)). As the United States
    Supreme Court noted so powerfully in Blackburn v. Alabama,
    “coercion can be mental as well as physical, and [the] blood
    of the accused is not the only hallmark of an unconstitu-
    tional inquisition. A number of cases have demonstrated, if
    demonstration were needed, that the efficiency of the rack
    and the thumbscrew can be matched, given the proper sub-
    ject, by more sophisticated modes of ‘persuasion.’ ” 
    361 US 199
    , 206, 
    80 S Ct 274
    , 
    4 L Ed 2d 242
     (1960); see also Malloy
    v. Hogan, 
    378 US 1
    , 7, 
    84 S Ct 1489
    , 
    12 L Ed 2d 653
     (1964)
    (“We have held inadmissible even a confession secured by so
    mild a whip as the refusal, under certain circumstances, to
    allow a suspect to call his wife until he confessed.” (Relying
    on Haynes v. Washington, 
    373 US 503
    , 
    83 S Ct 1336
    , 
    10 L Ed 2d 513
     (1963).)).
    As defendant observes—and courts have routinely
    recognized—appeals to parental and familial responsi-
    bility can be especially coercive. For example, in State v.
    Ruiz-Piza, 
    262 Or App 563
    , 325 P3d 802 (2014), we affirmed
    the trial court’s suppression of a confession where police
    suggested that the defendant’s daughter’s serious medical
    issues could be ameliorated by a confession and effectively
    114                                State v. Vasquez-Santiago
    told the defendant that a confession to accidentally shak-
    ing his daughter was the only way to avoid the police con-
    cluding that he had intentionally abused her. 
    Id. at 574-76
    .
    We explained that the detective’s representation that a con-
    fession would ameliorate the child’s medical condition was
    “an assertion that, as a matter of medical fact, is without
    any support in the record.” 
    Id. at 574
    . We then stated that
    “the officers also appealed to defendant’s paternal respon-
    sibilities, his religion, stated that defendant was the only
    one who could help G, and stated, in effect, that the way to
    provide that help was to tell the officers that he had acci-
    dently shaken her.” 
    Id. at 574-75
     (emphasis in original). We
    concluded that “[t]hose statements, taken in the circum-
    stances in which they were made, constituted an ‘induce-
    ment through * * * fear’ that was specifically calculated to
    capitalize on what the trial court recognized as defendant’s
    acute vulnerability.” 
    Id. at 575
     (quoting State v. Benton, 
    92 Or App 685
    , 689, 
    759 P2d 332
     (1988)).
    In State v. Hogeland, 
    285 Or App 108
    , 395 P3d 960
    (2017), we similarly observed that psychological pressure
    related to a defendant’s family can render a confession invol-
    untary. In that case, the detective “intimated that she would
    aggravate [the consequences of an abuse investigation] by
    taking defendant’s child away from his wife—and from
    him—and placing the child with strangers.” 
    Id. at 120
    . We
    held that, “by implicitly promising defendant leniency, while
    simultaneously exploiting his vulnerabilities as a husband
    and a father, [the detectives] critically impaired defendant’s
    capacity for self determination, such that his admissions
    cannot be considered ‘the product of an essentially free,
    unconstrained, and informed choice[.]’ ” 
    Id. at 121
     (quoting
    Ruiz-Piza, 
    262 Or App at 573
    ).
    Federal courts have reached similar conclusions
    about the manifestly coercive effects of lying to a parent
    about the custodial circumstances of their children or a
    child’s health and safety. For example, in Lynumn v. Illinois,
    the Court held that the defendant’s confession was involun-
    tary where three police officers and a convicted felon falsely
    told the defendant that, if she did not cooperate, she would
    lose custody of her infant children and state financial aid for
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 90
     (2019)                                  115
    the children would be terminated. 
    372 US 528
    , 534, 
    83 S Ct 917
    , 
    9 L Ed 2d 922
     (1963).
    Following Lynumn, federal appellate courts have
    reasoned that, although police statements about family are
    not per se coercive, courts must, at the very least, “be par-
    ticularly cognizant of the risk of coercion when reviewing
    interrogations where officers invoke references to a family
    member.” United States v. Hufstetler, 782 F3d 19, 23 (1st Cir
    2015). That is particularly true when an officer’s statements
    appeal to a defendant’s “primordial” parental instincts. 
    Id.
    In Tingle, the Ninth Circuit highlighted the special relation-
    ship between parents and their children:
    “The relationship between parent and child embodies a pri-
    mordial 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 the
    improper influence[.]”
    658 F2d at 1336 (internal quotation marks omitted); accord
    Hufstetler, 782 F3d at 22 (“[Officers’] use of a family member
    uniquely tugs at a suspect’s emotions and thus can have an
    undue impact.”).
    Under the same rationale, the Ninth Circuit in
    Brown v. Horell, 644 F3d 969, 981 (9th Cir 2011), described
    the coercive nature of conditioning a defendant’s ability to
    see his child’s birth on his cooperation with authorities:
    “Rather than heed the warnings in Haynes, Lynumn and
    Tingle to tread cautiously around the subject of famil-
    ial attachments, [the agent] ‘deliberately prey[ed] upon,’
    Tingle, 658 F2d at 1336, [defendant’s] expression of his
    overwhelming desire to witness his child’s birth.”
    The case now before us involves a similar failure
    by police to “tread cautiously around the subject of famil-
    ial attachments”—particularly, a parental relationship.
    Contrary to the state’s position and the trial court’s legal
    conclusion, the detectives’ assertions in this case—including
    that they would “fight for” the release of defendant’s family,
    including his infant, from police custody and that defendant
    could alleviate his family’s suffering by confessing—were
    116                               State v. Vasquez-Santiago
    inducements by hope and fear. The relationship between a
    parent and a child, in particular the protective role that a
    parent plays over a small child, especially an infant, touches
    at the deepest parts of the human psyche. The notion that
    a parent, when faced with imminent harm to their infant,
    would cling to any branch of hope no matter how slender,
    and do or say virtually anything to prevent that harm, needs
    no citation. It is an axiom of the human experience. And,
    contrary to the state’s argument here, that is so regardless
    of whether the detectives also explained what they could
    not promise—the release from custody itself. As the court
    noted in Jackson, “[t]he hope of avoiding prosecution is not,
    however, the only inducement that may render a confession
    involuntary.” 
    364 Or at 23
    .
    In fact, the court long has held that much more
    indirect communications proposing that a confession could
    secure a benefit or avoid a harm are sufficient to trigger
    the protections of those provisions. In Wintzingerode, the
    court upheld the exclusion of a confession where the officer
    had told the defendant that “ ‘[i]t would be better for you,
    Harry, to tell the whole thing.’ ” 
    9 Or at 162
    . Although those
    words did not communicate how, precisely, it would have
    been better for Harry to confess, the court reasoned that
    “[t]he precise form of words in which the inducement is pre-
    sented to the prisoner’s mind is immaterial. It is sufficient
    if they convey to him the idea of temporal benefit or disad-
    vantage, and his confession follows in consequence of the
    hopes thereby excited.” 
    Id. at 163
    ; see also Powell, 
    352 Or at 226-27
    .
    Having concluded that the detectives communicated
    inducements to defendant, the remaining question under
    Jackson is whether the state’s affirmative evidence is suffi-
    cient to demonstrate that, under the totality of the circum-
    stances, defendant’s will was not overborne by those induce-
    ments. We conclude that the evidence was not sufficient.
    As was true in Jackson, this is a close case. On the
    one hand, the detectives made statements that qualified
    what they were offering defendant by telling him that they
    were not in the position to make promises to him. Defendant
    received Miranda warnings at the outset of the interrogation
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 90
     (2019)                              117
    and indicated that he understood that he did not have to
    speak to the detectives at all. The trial court found that,
    notwithstanding his low IQ and lack of education, defendant
    was able to comprehend the interview, which had been con-
    ducted in Spanish, a language in which defendant is fluent.
    All of this points to a conclusion that defendant’s will was
    not overborne by the inducements offered.
    On the other hand, the circumstances—both as
    defendant reasonably believed them to be based on the
    detectives’ representations and as they actually were—
    as was the case in Jackson, “indicate that the detectives’
    methods and inducements may have persuaded defendant
    to tell the detectives what they wanted to hear, whether or
    not that was the truth.” Id. at 32. The detectives commu-
    nicated to defendant that his father, brother, and infant
    son were in custody because of defendant’s conduct and
    were suffering because of it. They further communicated to
    defendant that the rest of his family was suffering because
    the family was dependent on his father and brother as
    wage earners, but they could not work to support the fam-
    ily while in custody. Defendant’s family earned their liv-
    ing as migrant farmworkers, making the incapacitation
    of defendant’s father and brother as workers a significant
    economic stressor for the family. Defendant’s son was still
    breast feeding, increasing the need for him to be reunited
    with his mother. At the time of the interview, defendant
    had barely slept for three days. Time and again, defendant
    was told that his family members’ freedom—something
    essential for the family’s economic well-being—turned on
    defendant confessing. And, even though the detectives told
    defendant that they could not make any promises of par-
    ticular results, their messages to defendant on that point
    were mixed. For example, Ganete explicitly stated to defen-
    dant that “I can’t let your family go until I find that body.
    And not until I get the truth from you.” Ganete’s use of the
    phrase “I can’t let your family go” communicated, in ten-
    sion with some of the other representations to defendant,
    that he had some role to play in the release of defendant’s
    family. Considering the totality of these circumstances, the
    state’s case falls short of establishing that defendant’s con-
    fession was voluntary.
    118                               State v. Vasquez-Santiago
    In sum, the state had the burden to overcome the
    presumption that defendant’s confession was involuntary
    by demonstrating that the confession was made without
    inducement through fear or promises, direct or implied.
    This record, in which detectives secured the confession of
    defendant—a person with an IQ of 53—when he believed
    that his infant was separated from the child’s nursing
    mother and being detained by police, was repeatedly told
    that his family was suffering, and was told that his confes-
    sion to murder was the key to securing the family members’
    release and ending that suffering, is not sufficient to demon-
    strate the absence of such inducement. The trial court erred
    in denying defendant’s motion to suppress the confessions.
    Because the erroneous admission of the confessions was
    prejudicial (a point the state does not dispute), we reverse
    and remand his murder conviction.
    Reversed and remanded.
    GARRETT, J. pro tempore, dissenting.
    After the victim’s disappearance, defendant knew
    he needed to flee. He gathered his family members and drove
    to California, leaving them there while he continued on to
    Mexico. After family members were detained for question-
    ing, defendant called the detectives; he broached the possi-
    bility of cooperating; and he chose to turn himself in at the
    U.S.-Mexico border. He met with the detectives, waived his
    Miranda rights (the validity of that waiver has never been
    challenged), and, after a “polite” interrogation, confessed to
    murder.
    The question before us is whether that confession
    was voluntary. The Supreme Court’s recent decision in State
    v. Jackson, 
    364 Or 1
    , 430 P3d 1067 (2018), provides an orga-
    nizational approach for resolving that issue. First, we con-
    sider “whether the officers who interrogated [the] defendant
    induced him to make admissions by the influence of hope or
    fear”; second, if they did, we next ask whether other circum-
    stances reflect that the defendant’s admission was nonethe-
    less the product of his free will. 
    Id. at 22, 27-28
    .
    As I will explain, the analysis in this case should
    end at the first step of the inquiry because the detectives
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 90
     (2019)                                  119
    made nothing close to the sort of “inducement” that has led
    courts in past cases to conclude that police officers crossed
    the line. But even if we assume otherwise and proceed to
    the second step of the analysis, the record establishes that
    defendant made the confession of his own free will. The
    majority’s contrary conclusion rests heavily on the sup-
    posed fact of defendant’s low intelligence, but the record on
    that point is far more ambiguous than the majority opinion
    reflects. Viewing the record in the light consistent with the
    trial court’s findings and conclusions, as we are required to
    do, the judgment should be affirmed.
    At the center of this case is the important fact that
    defendant believed that his family members, including his
    infant son, were in police custody and he hoped that, by con-
    fessing, he could help secure their release. If that was the
    pressure that drove defendant to confess, then it is difficult
    to conclude that the confession was “induced” by the police,
    as that pressure was being exerted on defendant before he
    met with the detectives. The pressure first arose, appar-
    ently, during a conversation that defendant had with his
    wife before he spoke to the police, as Ganete testified at the
    suppression hearing:
    “[PROSECUTOR]: Detective Ganete, according to the
    defendant, what had [his wife] told him about what was
    going on?
    “[GANETE]: So, [defendant] said that [she] had told
    him that they had detained his father and his brother and
    his son.”
    It was thus defendant who first introduced his fear for his
    family into the conversation with the detectives. Defendant
    called Ganete and expressed both his fear and hope that
    the police would release his family if he cooperated with the
    investigation:
    “[DEFENDANT]: That’s why I want to take care of it
    there. I, I don’t want to say anything here because, because
    it doesn’t make any sense to talk here, saying all things
    here. I want to take care of it personally.
    “[GANETE]:     Okay, when you—
    120                                 State v. Vasquez-Santiago
    “[DEFENDANT]: I want the little boy, the baby, I
    want him to be given to [his] mother.
    “[GANETE]:     When we—
    “[DEFENDANT]: That’s all I want.
    “* * * * *
    “[DEFENDANT]: That’s why I’m telling you, don’t
    involve my family—don’t involve them in [it] if you have
    problems with me.”
    Ganete later testified that the point of the call was that
    defendant “wanted to negotiate * * * the release of his father,
    his brother, and his son.”
    During the interrogation, defendant continued to
    fixate on the detention of his family. The majority focuses
    on that concern but pays insufficient attention to the fact
    that it was defendant, not the detectives, who kept bringing
    it up. The trial court found that the “transcripts reflect over
    ten times in which the defendant referred expressly to his
    concerns about his son being in custody.” Not long into the
    interrogation, defendant (not the detectives) first suggested
    the idea of confessing in exchange for the assured release of
    his family:
    “[DEFENDANT]: I want to assure you of one thing. If
    you let my family go right now[,] I will tell you the truth.
    ***
    “[GANETE]: You’re telling me that if I—what you’re
    telling me is if your dad and your brother get out of jail—
    “[DEFENDANT]: And my son.
    “[GANETE]: —and your son, you will tell me where
    the body is and everything that happened?
    “[DEFENDANT]: Yes.
    “[GANETE]: You will take me exactly to where it is,
    where, where you dumped the body.
    “[DEFENDANT]: If you take me there to my family. I
    want to see that they are free and I will go with you.”
    Defendant made such offers repeatedly, and the trial court
    found that defendant “consistently tried to negotiate that he
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 90
     (2019)                                  121
    would give a full statement regarding the incident in return
    for his family being released from custody.” Meanwhile, the
    trial court found that the detectives “time after time told
    the defendant that they could not make such a deal,” saying
    things like:
    “[LAMONICA]: * * * We cannot make you any prom-
    ises, we’re not allowed to.
    “[GANETE]: We can’t make, make you promises
    because we—the law doesn’t allow us to make promises.
    “* * * * *
    “[LAMONICA]: I want to be sure you understand the
    position we are in. It’s not that we don’t want to understand
    your position, I mean, so that’s not the case. I fully under-
    stand what you’re telling me. As detectives we don’t have
    * * * neither the responsibility nor the power under the law
    to make a deal with someone ‘if you do this, I’ll do that’ and
    so on. What we can do is, uh, pass the information on to the
    person who makes the decisions on this case.
    “* * * * *
    “[GANETE]: * * * I think that I’ve clearly explained
    our position to you, that my hands are tied to [a] certain
    point because I—we are detectives, we are not judges or
    district attorneys who take the cases and go to court and so
    on. And that is further ahead.
    “* * * * *
    “[GANETE]: * * * I can’t make promises to you, but I
    will tell you that I will fight as hard as I can to indicate
    in my report and to put in black and white that you were
    honest with me, you have told the truth, and that you’ve
    cooperated with the police[.]”
    The record thus shows that, in contrast to the
    usual fact patterns underlying our “involuntary confes-
    sion” cases, the information that supposedly led defendant
    to be coerced—that his family members were in custody—
    was known to him before the interrogation began. That
    raises an obvious question: If defendant’s confession was
    the result of coercive pressure, how much of that pressure
    was created by detectives during the interrogation, and
    how much did defendant carry into the room on his own?
    122                                            State v. Vasquez-Santiago
    One would think that we ought to consider that question
    in evaluating what causal role any police “inducements”
    played in defendant’s decision to confess. Yet the majority
    does not engage with it.
    Ganete and LaMonica did not say or do anything
    comparable to the sort of conduct that has heretofore been
    considered an unlawful inducement. Although the detec-
    tives did, to some extent, play along with defendant’s hopes
    and fears (and, unsurprisingly, did not correct his miscon-
    ception about his son1), the detectives never added to those
    pressures by, for example, asserting that other family mem-
    bers were being detained, or otherwise threatening to do
    something to the family except continue detaining them. In
    some instances, the detectives even mitigated some of those
    pressures; they repeatedly informed defendant that his
    “hope” of securing the immediate release of his family was
    unrealistic given the detectives’ lack of authority to make
    such deals. See State v. Evans, 
    1 Or App 489
    , 495, 
    463 P2d 378
    , rev den (1970) (the defendant’s independent choice to
    make a statement “in the hope or belief that it will excul-
    pate or gain leniency for his wife or anyone else” did not
    render confession involuntary where police were clear that
    they could make no such promises).
    1
    We have never held that police are required to correct misunderstandings
    or volunteer beneficial information to suspects during questioning. See, e.g., State
    v. Clifton, 
    271 Or 177
    , 180-81, 
    531 P2d 256
     (1975) (fact that the defendant inde-
    pendently attributed greater reliability to a polygraph than it deserved did not
    render his confession involuntary); State v. Tobias, 
    131 Or App 591
    , 595, 
    887 P2d 366
     (1994) (the defendant’s confession to abusing children was voluntary not-
    withstanding police’s failure to disclose to [the] defendant that some children
    had denied abuse by the defendant); State v. Harberts, 
    109 Or App 533
    , 537, 
    820 P2d 1366
     (1991), aff’d as modified, 
    315 Or 408
    , 
    848 P2d 1187
     (1993) (officer’s false
    “implied” expert qualifications in administering polygraph test, and failure to
    disclose the exact scope of qualifications, did not render the defendant’s confes-
    sion involuntary); State v. Benepe, 
    15 Or App 53
    , 58, 
    514 P2d 556
     (1973), rev den
    (1974) (police not obligated to tell the defendant that the victim in a car accident
    had died and that the defendant was going to be charged with a crime); Moran v.
    Burbine, 
    475 US 412
    , 422, 
    106 S Ct 1135
    , 
    89 L Ed 2d 410
     (1986) (“[W]e have never
    read the Constitution to require that the police 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.”); cf. State v. Burdick, 
    57 Or App 601
    , 606, 
    646 P2d 91
     (1982)
    (“[P]olice trickery or false statements, alone, may not be sufficiently coercive to
    result in involuntariness.”); Frazier v. Cupp, 
    394 US 731
    , 739, 
    89 S Ct 1420
    , 
    22 L Ed 2d 684
     (1969) (lies or deception alone by the police generally do not render the
    defendant’s statement inadmissible).
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 90
     (2019)                               123
    Oregon courts have long distinguished between
    permissible “adjuration” and impermissible “inducement.”
    See Jackson, 
    364 Or at 24
    ; State v. Linn, 
    179 Or 499
    , 510,
    
    173 P2d 305
     (1946). The difference is that “adjurations” will
    communicate to the defendant that, as a general matter, it
    would be better to tell the truth, or that he or she would
    feel better by telling the truth; “inducements,” on the other
    hand, will communicate a threat or promise. Jackson, 
    364 Or at 24
    .
    In this case, the detectives did very little. Ganete
    and LaMonica never promised to release defendant’s family
    if he confessed (on the contrary, they repeatedly shut down
    defendant’s attempts to elicit such a promise); they never
    promised defendant that he would be prosecuted more leni-
    ently if he confessed; they never threatened to do anything to
    defendant or his family if he did not confess; they never were
    hostile in their questioning (the transcript shows that they
    were, if anything, solicitous and, as the trial court found,
    “polite”). All the detectives did was affirm defendant’s pre-
    existing understanding of the situation, encourage him to
    free himself and others of the emotional and spiritual bur-
    dens of his actions by confessing to them, and promise to
    convey his cooperation to the prosecutor.
    The majority concludes that the detectives’ com-
    ments fall “easily within the range” of communications that
    have been held to constitute inducement. 301 Or App at 113.
    That characterization is hard to square with Jackson, in
    which the Supreme Court considered significantly more hos-
    tile and threatening conduct by interrogating officers and
    still described that as a “close case.” 
    364 Or at 31
    . The police
    in Jackson detained a mentally and physically disabled sus-
    pect overnight; they prohibited him from contacting family
    members on whom he regularly depended; they engaged in
    intense and combative questioning; and they made specific
    threats and promises about how the case against him would
    proceed, including that, if he did not confess, they would
    charge him with other murders and work to ensure that he
    received a harsh sentence. 
    Id. at 25
    .
    In comparison, Ganete’s and LaMonica’s conduct
    was positively mild. The majority observes that the detectives
    124                                State v. Vasquez-Santiago
    made remarks that defendant’s family was “suffering,”
    which, according to the majority, constituted a “threat” that
    the family would “remain in custody and would ‘suffer’ ” if
    defendant failed to confess. 301 Or App at 111. But, in con-
    text, the detectives’ nonspecific remarks that defendant’s
    family was “suffering” carried no implicit suggestion that
    police would make things worse for the family, legally or
    otherwise, or that the police would change the “natural con-
    sequences” of the situation if defendant failed to confess.
    On the contrary, the detectives made only “adjurations” by
    encouraging defendant to do the moral thing: recognize how
    his actions had burdened his family and lift those burdens
    by owning up to what he had done. Cf. Jackson, 
    364 Or at 27
     (police comments were to the effect that “it wasn’t just
    that the natural consequence [of the defendant’s refusal to
    cooperate] would be a certain thing, but [instead that] the
    police would actively work to make things as bad as possible
    for him” (emphases added)).
    Nor, in light of our case law, did the detectives cross
    the line by suggesting to defendant that his cooperation
    could increase the chances of his family members’ release.
    That is so for a couple of reasons.
    For one, we have generally held that assurances
    by police that they will report a defendant’s cooperation to
    the prosecutor are permissible, as opposed to promises of
    immunity or leniency, which render confessions involun-
    tary. Compare State v. Williams, 
    64 Or App 448
    , 455, 
    668 P2d 1236
    , rev den, 
    296 Or 120
     (1983) (“[T]he officers agreed
    only to forward [the] defendant’s request to the officials with
    authority to ‘deal’ with him. * * * [W]hile [the] defendant may
    have felt impelled by his desire not to disappoint his brother,
    the only ‘promise’ made to [the] defendant by the police was
    a promise to convey a request—a promise made without any
    effort by the officers to make that conveyance contingent on
    anything.”), and State v. Morris, 
    248 Or 480
    , 482-83, 
    435 P2d 1018
     (1967) (“[N]o promises of benefit or hope of bene-
    fit were held out to the defendant to obtain his confession.
    The officers merely agreed to make known his desires to the
    district attorney, and this was done.”), with State v. Aguilar,
    
    133 Or App 304
    , 307-09, 
    891 P2d 668
     (1995) (police promises
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 90
     (2019)                             125
    of leniency or immunity for the crime to which a defendant
    confesses are involuntary “as a matter of law” because “[i]t
    is assumed that when a person confesses in response to a
    promise that the person will not be charged with the crime
    for which the confession is made, the person’s confession is
    not the product of an essentially free and unconstrained
    choice”).
    As for Ganete’s and LaMonica’s suggestion that
    defendant’s cooperation might cause the prosecutor to look
    favorably on the prospect of releasing the family members,
    the speculative and contingent quality of that suggestion
    makes it unlike the sorts of promises and threats that have
    been held to render confessions involuntary. For example,
    the statements here are nothing like those in Jackson, where
    the police assured (or threatened) that, if the defendant did
    not confess, the police would charge him with other murders
    and “do everything they could to ensure that [the defendant]
    received a harsh sentence.” 
    364 Or at 25
    . Nor do they com-
    pare to the statements made to the defendant in State v.
    Hogeland, 
    285 Or App 108
    , 111, 395 P3d 960 (2017), where
    an officer told the defendant, “I’m going to have to put [your
    infant] in stranger foster care” if the defendant did not con-
    fess, or to the defendant in State v. Ruiz-Piza, 
    262 Or App 563
    , 569-70, 325 P3d 802 (2014), in which the defendant was
    accused of shaking his baby, and the police told the defen-
    dant that his child was going to die or go blind unless the
    defendant confessed and provided information that would
    help doctors ameliorate the child’s condition.
    In short, I disagree that the comments cited by the
    majority rose to the level of “inducement” capable of caus-
    ing defendant to confess involuntarily. See State v. Powell,
    
    352 Or 210
    , 222, 282 P3d 845 (2012); State v. Hickam, 
    71 Or App 471
    , 477, 
    692 P2d 672
     (1984) (involuntary confessions
    occur where coercive circumstances are “sufficient in their
    totality to overcome defendant’s will to resist”). Because the
    detectives made no improper inducement at all, I would find
    it unnecessary to proceed to the second step of the Jackson
    analysis, which is to consider whether, notwithstanding any
    inducement, the totality of the circumstances indicates that
    defendant’s confession was nonetheless voluntary. However,
    126                               State v. Vasquez-Santiago
    consideration of that second question further supports the
    trial court’s conclusion that defendant acted voluntarily.
    Defendant’s conduct and demeanor both before and
    during the interrogation strongly indicate that he was act-
    ing of his own free will. Defendant became involved in the
    investigation not because the detectives contacted him, but
    rather because he reached out to Ganete and LaMonica at
    his own initiative, evidencing his willingness from the start
    to engage with the detectives about the case. Defendant
    then left Colonet, Mexico, traveled north through Ensenada
    and Tijuana, and turned himself in at the California border.
    That sequence of events gave defendant plenty of time to
    consider his options.
    When the interrogation began, defendant waived
    his Miranda rights, and no one contends that defendant’s
    Miranda waiver was anything less than fully informed and
    valid. As I will explain further below, defendant’s valid
    Miranda waiver is an especially strong indication that his
    conduct during the ensuing interrogation was voluntary.
    See Jackson, 
    364 Or at 21
     (provision of Miranda warnings
    weighs in favor of voluntariness); State v. McAnulty, 
    356 Or 432
    , 459, 338 P3d 653 (2014), cert den, ___ US ___, 
    136 S Ct 34 (2015)
     (the defendant’s confession was voluntary where it
    followed a valid Miranda waiver and where the defendant ini-
    tiated the interrogation herself); State v. Rodriguez-Moreno,
    
    273 Or App 627
    , 638-39, 359 P3d 532 (2015), rev den, 
    358 Or 611
     (2016) (provision of Miranda warnings generally weighs
    in favor of voluntariness); see also Berkemer v. McCarty, 
    468 US 420
    , 433 n 20, 
    104 S Ct 3138
    , 
    82 L Ed 2d 317
     (1984)
    (“[C]ases in which a defendant can make a colorable argu-
    ment that a self-incriminating statement was ‘compelled’
    despite the fact that the law enforcement authorities adhered
    to the dictates of Miranda are rare.”).
    At numerous points in the interrogation, after
    waiving his Miranda rights, defendant drove the conversa-
    tion. He tried repeatedly to propose deals on his own terms,
    which suggests that he was exercising free will in choosing
    whether, and under what circumstances, he was prepared to
    confess. In addition, defendant, rather than rushing to sac-
    rifice himself for his family members, selectively withheld
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 90
     (2019)                                        127
    and disclosed information, sometimes revealing informa-
    tion only after he was sure that the detectives already knew
    about it, thus leveraging his own knowledge to figure out
    what the police knew. (Ganete described the interview as
    a “chess match” because of the way defendant selectively
    withheld and disclosed information piecemeal throughout
    the interview.)
    Defendant also challenged various assertions that
    the detectives made. At some points, defendant asked them
    to show him proof of their evidence, including evidence relat-
    ing to the location of the victim’s cell phone and the tape-
    recorded interviews of his father and brother. Defendant
    later called out the detectives’ attempts to use his family as
    leverage:
    “[GANETE]: * * * [W]hat we know is that your dad
    and your brother are key witnesses in this case. And they
    are less key if we validate the information they gave us
    through you. That means that if you tell me exactly what
    happened and tell me exactly where, where I can find [the
    victim], then they aren’t so critical to this case because it
    comes straight from you. But if I don’t hear anything out
    of your mouth, nothing comes from you, they are the key
    people who can say.
    “[DEFENDANT]: The little hook.
    “* * * * *
    “[GANETE]: They are the hooks of the case. And the
    way you release that hook is if you take the responsibility
    of saying, ‘well, uh, I’ll tell what it is, I’ll tell you what hap-
    pened’ and his testimony, theirs, won’t have the same value
    as your testimony, and that’s why the hook, that hook’s not
    to—
    “[DEFENDANT]: Also to pull me.
    “[GANETE]:       Yes. Exactly.”
    Finally, other general considerations indicate that
    defendant was not coerced: the detectives were never hostile
    toward defendant and, as the trial court found, “[t]he inter-
    view was polite in tone throughout”; the detectives gave
    defendant opportunities for breaks, including to use the
    bathroom; the interrogation was relatively short in length,
    128                                          State v. Vasquez-Santiago
    lasting only about two hours and 15 minutes; defendant was
    sober and lucid throughout the interrogation.2
    Compare all those circumstances to Jackson. In
    that case, police officers collected the defendant and brought
    him to the interrogation without giving him any infor-
    mation about what they wanted to talk about; the defen-
    dant did not know he was being accused of murder until
    that subject arose during the interrogation. Jackson, 
    364 Or at 4
    . The police officers (not the defendant) drove the
    conversation—the defendant, meanwhile, did not try to pro-
    pose deals or leverage his own knowledge against the police,
    but rather asserted that he could not remember what hap-
    pened and was trying his best to remember (which, as dis-
    cussed more below, may have been difficult for him because
    of his history of drug use, memory problems, and blackouts).
    
    Id. at 15
    . The interrogation in Jackson lasted for over 10
    hours, over the course of two days (eight hours on the first
    day), and the tone was “intense” and “hostile” at several
    points. 
    Id. at 31
    . When the police detained the defendant
    overnight, they forbade him from contacting his family
    members on whom he regularly depended due to his mental
    and physical health issues. 
    Id. at 31-32
    .
    This case is nothing like Jackson, with the excep-
    tion that this defendant, too, is asserted to have a mental
    disability. The majority relies heavily on that aspect of the
    record; after stating that it is bound by the trial court’s
    “finding” that defendant has an IQ of 54, 301 Or App at 109,
    the majority proceeds to explain why that fact supports the
    conclusion that defendant’s will was overborne.
    The majority’s treatment of the factual record is
    questionable. The trial court did make a finding that defen-
    dant has an IQ of 53, but there is more to the story. In an
    aid-and-assist hearing before the suppression hearing, the
    trial court determined that defendant was malingering
    mental illness to avoid legal responsibility and stay in the
    2
    Specifically, the trial court found that defendant “was not suffering any
    psychosis during his interactions with the detectives. Although the defendant
    had slept little in the proceeding [sic] days, he did not manifest any drowsiness
    during the interrogation. The defendant was not under the influence of any intox-
    icants.” The trial court also found that “[t]here were no communication problems”
    during the interrogation.
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 90
     (2019)                               129
    hospital rather than returning to jail. The court’s findings
    were based in part on defendant’s two admissions to “fak-
    ing” misunderstanding what was told to him. One of the
    doctors who examined defendant also testified that she
    believed that defendant intentionally underperformed on
    the IQ test and that she did not think that the test results
    were a “true measure of his IQ.” Other doctors apparently
    suspected that defendant was malingering and had seen
    defendant’s demeanor change upon his noticing that doctors
    were present, leading one doctor to suspect that defendant
    was “putting on an act” for the doctors.
    Those facts were before the trial court at the time
    that it ruled on the question of voluntariness. It is true
    that the trial court did not expressly make findings casting
    doubt on the validity of defendant’s IQ test. However, as a
    reviewing court, we are required to view the facts in the
    light consistent with the trial court’s ultimate conclusion,
    and, when in doubt, to assume that the trial court resolved
    factual issues in a manner consistent with its ultimate con-
    clusion of voluntariness. Ball v. Gladden, 
    250 Or 485
    , 487,
    
    443 P2d 621
     (1968). In light of the trial court’s ultimate
    conclusion that defendant acted voluntarily and its findings
    that defendant’s interactions with the detectives were not
    impaired, we should presume that the trial court did not
    view the bare fact of defendant’s IQ test result as dispositive
    of defendant’s mental abilities, in the face of countervailing
    evidence that suggested very different things about those
    abilities. The majority, however, ignores that other evidence,
    focusing entirely on the test result. If any legal authority
    requires that approach, the majority does not cite it.
    A defendant’s personal characteristics are relevant
    to voluntariness “only if police, in fact, exert coercion and
    only insofar as those circumstances render a suspect less able
    to resist that coercion.” State ex rel Juv. Dept. v. Deford, 
    177 Or App 555
    , 572, 34 P3d 673 (2001) (emphasis added). Here,
    assuming that defendant has below-average intelligence, it
    is notable that the majority never identifies exactly how that
    affected his conduct. That conduct supports the trial court’s
    finding that defendant was not impeded; rather, he entered
    the interrogation room with a view to securing the best deal
    130                                          State v. Vasquez-Santiago
    that he could get, and the interrogation was essentially a
    negotiation.
    By giving decisive weight to defendant’s IQ score in
    the face of evidence about how he actually conducted him-
    self, the majority departs from how we have treated defen-
    dants’ personal characteristics in past cases. We have looked
    beyond general assertions regarding a defendant’s level of
    mental competence and evaluated the record for indications
    of actual impairment in the interactions between the defen-
    dant and the police. See, e.g., State v. Davis, 
    98 Or App 752
    ,
    754-55, 
    780 P2d 807
     (1989), rev den, 
    309 Or 333
    , cert den,
    
    498 US 827
     (1990) (the defendant’s confessions were volun-
    tary, notwithstanding his “low maturity and intelligence
    levels”; concluding that “[t]he trial court’s reliance on [the]
    defendant’s ‘dull normal’ intelligence was * * * misplaced”
    because “[t]here is nothing in the record to show that [the]
    defendant was unaware of what was happening” and “[t]he
    record illustrates that he was able to comprehend the ques-
    tions asked and to respond as he saw fit”); Hickam, 
    71 Or App at 477-78
     (“Implicit also in the conclusion of voluntari-
    ness is the finding that, despite his retardation, [the] defen-
    dant was able to comprehend the questions asked and to
    respond as he saw fit.”); see also State v. Vu, 
    307 Or 419
    , 425,
    
    770 P2d 577
     (1989) (rejecting the defendant’s argument that
    “cultural differences” and “lack of English language skills”
    made his confession involuntary, where the defendant did
    “not contend that the cultural differences coerced him into
    making the false statement or that he misunderstood the
    question because of his poor language skills”).3
    3
    Jackson, in contrast, is a case in which the defendant’s personal charac-
    teristics put him at specific disadvantages in his interactions with police. The
    defendant in Jackson suffered from, among other things, schizophrenia and
    depression, which made defendant more reliant on daily assistance from fam-
    ily members as well as a live-in care provider; he also had high blood pressure
    and was generally in poor physical health. 
    364 Or at 29, 32
    . The police officers’
    techniques exploited those weaknesses: The interrogation was both “physically
    and mentally demanding,” lasting for over 10 hours and becoming “intense” and
    “hostile” at various points. The police also detained the defendant overnight
    and did not let the defendant contact the family members on whom he regularly
    depended, despite his multiple requests to do so, and the police encouraged him to
    see confession as a means of ending the interrogation. 
    Id. at 29, 32
    . Further, the
    defendant in Jackson suffered from memory loss and blackouts, which was signif-
    icant given that the murders that the defendant was being accused of committing
    had occurred several decades earlier, thereby making it all the more difficult for
    the defendant to defend himself. 
    Id. at 31-32
    .
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 90
     (2019)                              131
    For the foregoing reasons, I would conclude that the
    detectives in this case made no improper “inducements” and
    that, in all events, the record supports the trial court’s con-
    clusion that defendant’s free will was not overborne and his
    capacity for self-determination was not critically impaired.
    Under the totality of circumstances, defendant’s confession
    was voluntary.
    I conclude with an observation. As already noted,
    to the extent that defendant was under coercive pressure at
    the time that he confessed, that pressure came into being
    before the interrogation ever began. The critical piece of
    information—that defendant’s family members were in
    custody—is not a fact that the detectives imparted to defen-
    dant; he came to that understanding on his own (which is
    why he surrendered), and he fully understood the situation
    (albeit with some incorrect factual information) at the time
    that he waived his Miranda rights. That fact appears not to
    weigh in the majority’s analysis, but it should.
    The United States Supreme Court has explained
    that “cases in which a defendant can make a colorable
    argument that a self-incriminating statement was ‘com-
    pelled’ despite the fact that the law enforcement authorities
    adhered to the dictates of Miranda are rare.” Berkemer, 
    468 US at
    433 n 20. The Oregon Supreme Court has also rec-
    ognized that Miranda plays a role here. See, e.g., Jackson,
    
    364 Or at 21
     (the provision of Miranda warnings weighs in
    favor of voluntariness, even if it is not necessarily an out-
    right “guarantee” of voluntariness); McAnulty, 
    356 Or at 459
    (the defendant’s confession was voluntary where it followed
    a valid Miranda waiver and where the defendant initiated
    the interrogation herself).
    Though Oregon courts have acknowledged the
    importance of a Miranda waiver in this particular context,
    little appears to have been said about it.
    The purpose of reading Miranda rights is to coun-
    teract the inherently compelling atmosphere of an in-
    custody police interrogation by empowering the suspect
    with the knowledge that he or she can, in a certain sense,
    level the playing field by exercising certain rights. Miranda
    v. Arizona, 
    384 US 436
    , 468-70, 
    86 S Ct 1602
    , 
    16 L Ed 2d 132
                                               State v. Vasquez-Santiago
    694 (1966). When a suspect voluntarily declines to exercise
    those rights, he or she chooses to proceed knowing that the
    circumstances are inherently coercive. Thus, police tactics
    that are calculated to persuade a suspect to confess are not
    generally impermissible; nothing less than an inherently
    coercive atmosphere is to be expected.
    The reason that a valid Miranda waiver cannot
    be dispositive of voluntariness, of course, is that, even if a
    person has the capacity to execute such a waiver before the
    interrogation begins, police might do something after that
    point to impair the person’s capacity for self-determination.
    For example, they might beat him. Impairment can also
    result from psychological pressure, such as where police
    inform a suspect that his baby is in critical medical con-
    dition and that the baby’s life may depend on the suspect’s
    providing information immediately. See Ruiz-Piza, 
    262 Or App at 572-75
    .
    However, because a person who waives his Miranda
    rights is presumed to know that he is walking into the lion’s
    den, the threshold for finding psychological pressure to
    be impermissibly coercive must necessarily be high.4 That
    is why mere “adjuration”—psychological pressure to “do
    the right thing”—has never been deemed to be improper.
    It follows that, if the psychological pressure on a suspect
    is in place before the interrogation begins, and if a defen-
    dant nonetheless has the capacity to make a valid waiver of
    his Miranda rights, then the ordinary tactics of persuasion
    that police employ during the ensuing interrogation should
    not be a basis for concluding that defendant’s capacity was
    lost. Under such circumstances, it should be harder—not
    easier—to show that a confession was caused by an unlaw-
    ful police inducement.5 By finding unlawful inducement in
    4
    One of the implications of this is that pre-Miranda cases on the subject
    of involuntary confessions may be of limited value. For example, although the
    Supreme Court concluded more than a century ago that police induced a defen-
    dant to confess by saying, “[i]t would be better for you, Harry, to tell the whole
    thing,” see State v. Wintzingerode, 
    9 Or 153
    , 162 (1881), it is questionable whether
    that case, if decided after Miranda, would have come out the same way.
    5
    The majority interprets this observation to be incorrectly assigning the
    burden to defendant to prove that his confession was involuntary. 301 Or App at
    106 n 4. I agree that the converse is true; the state must prove that the confes-
    sion was voluntary. However, the point is largely academic; notwithstanding how
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 90
     (2019)                                                  133
    these circumstances, based on such relatively innocuous
    police conduct, the majority’s decision has the opposite effect.
    I respectfully dissent.
    Armstrong, DeVore, Tookey and Powers, JJ., and
    Hadlock, J. pro tempore, join in the dissent.
    cases have described the allocation of the burden of proof, they make clear that
    the state’s burden is satisfied unless the evidence shows an improper inducement
    sufficient to have caused a person to act involuntarily. That bar is a high one, and
    it should not be lowered because a defendant happens to be under pressure before
    an interrogation begins.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A159499

Judges: James

Filed Date: 12/4/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/10/2024