US v. Bocharnikov, No. 19-30163 (7-27-20)(Bybee w/VanDyke; concurrence by Chhabria). The 9th reverses the denial of a suppression motion for inculpatory statements. The issue was whether a second interview, and confession, was tainted by the illegality of the first due to a Miranda violation.
The defendant was arrested (in his home) without a
warrant. Without Miranda warnings,
handcuffed, in boxer shorts, surrounded by three sheriffs, the police
questioned the defendant about aiming a laser at aircraft. He admitted he did,
not thinking it would shine that far up. He gave up the laser. Then, nothing
happened. A month later, the County Sheriff turns the matter to the FBI. Eight
months later, the FBI, concerned with the no Miranda warnings at the first interrogation, has a second
interview. The agent, and later his
partner, go to the defendant’s house, and speak to him on the street. The agent
starts by saying this is a “follow up” to the first interview. The government
concedes there was a Miranda and
other violations.
The 9th engages in an attenuation analysis under Brown v. Illinois, 422 U.S. 590 (1975).
Did the taint of the first illegal questioning link it to the second? The 9th
holds it did. There is a three-part test: (1) time span; (2) intervening circumstances;
and (3) flagrancy of the misconduct.
The government argued that passage of 8 months was
enough. The 9th noted that though 8 months is lengthy, the key is the agent’s
stating that his second interview was a “follow up.” It connected the second to
the first. The 9th found, for the second factor, that no intervening
circumstances arose. No Miranda
warnings were ever read: the first or the second time. The defendant could have assumed that all was
well. Last, there was no flagrant misconduct. As the case is presented, the
second statement must be suppressed.
The concurrence by Chhabria grudgingly agrees, taking
the government to task for apparently conceding there were violations. Had the
government analyzed the violations separately, there may have been no need for
attenuation analysis, as Oregon v. Elstad,
470 U.S.298 (1985) would likely control; the statements were voluntary; and
warnings not required as no arrest. Likewise, if arrested with in the house
without a warrant but with probable cause, then no attenuation was required.
Attenuation is only required if arrested in the house without probable cause.
The concurrence chides the government, stating that the court cannot do the
work of the government and won’t bend over backwards.
Congrats to Conor Huseby, AFPD, D. Oregon (Portland).
The decision is here:
https://cdn.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/opinions/2020/07/27/19-30163.pdf
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