State v. Dedrick

Citation564 A.2d 423,132 N.H. 218
Decision Date06 October 1989
Docket NumberNo. 87-506,87-506
PartiesThe STATE of New Hampshire v. Robert David DEDRICK.
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire

Stephen E. Merrill, Atty. Gen. (Kathleen A. McGuire, Asst. Atty. Gen., on the brief and orally), for the State.

Joanne Green, Asst. Appellate Defender, Concord, by brief and orally, for defendant.

JOHNSON, Justice.

The defendant, Robert David Dedrick, has been indicted for first degree murder in the stabbing death of Luis Ramirez. Following his June 1, 1987 arrest on this charge, Dedrick moved to suppress various statements he made to police officers and physical evidence seized from a Manchester apartment pursuant to a search warrant. The Superior Court (Murphy, J.) suppressed some of the statements and all of the physical evidence in question after a September 1987 hearing. Following disposition of its further motions for both reconsideration and additional factual findings, the State filed an interlocutory appeal with this Court, and Dedrick filed a cross appeal. The questions before us are whether Dedrick was in custody when he made the relevant statements and, if so, whether those statements, which followed his request for counsel, were the product of interrogation. For the reasons that follow, we affirm and remand.

The parties agree on the following facts, all of which were presented at the September 1987 suppression hearing. Sometime after 3:00 a.m. on May 31, 1987, Sergeant James Stewart of the Manchester Police Department arrived at 560 Chestnut Street to investigate a possible homicide. There he found Luis Ramirez' body in the kitchen of the first floor apartment. The body bore multiple chest wounds. Two witnesses whom Stewart subsequently questioned suggested that Dedrick might have been the last person to see Ramirez alive, and the police attempted to locate him.

On June 1, 1987, at about 9:30 a.m., Dedrick phoned the Manchester police station. He told the dispatcher who answered that he understood the police were looking for him and wanted to know why. When the dispatcher asked Dedrick whether he would come to the station to answer some questions, Dedrick said he had no transportation, but would come if someone picked him up. After Dedrick gave the dispatcher his location and a description of his clothes, Sergeant Stewart and Lieutenant William Bovaird met him, again asked whether he was willing to speak with them and, on his assent, transported him to the station. During the ride, conversation was limited to small talk about money Dedrick owed his landlord.

At the station, Sergeant Stewart and Lieutenant Bovaird accompanied Dedrick through the officers' entrance, up to the second floor, and into an interview room. There they informed him that he was not under arrest and that they would like to speak with him. Sergeant Stewart then obtained a brief background history and questioned Dedrick generally about his activities on the afternoon of May 30, 1987. During this time, Dedrick drank from a bottle of soda he had brought with him and left the room alone to use the men's room.

The interview room measures eight by eight feet and is windowless. It is lit by a single lamp and contains a round table and three chairs. Throughout the interview, Lieutenant Bovaird sat in front of the door, Dedrick sat opposite him, farthest from the door, and Sergeant Stewart sat between them. The door remained closed.

Dedrick told the officers that on the 30th he had been painting until 4:00 p.m. and had then gone to the apartment of a friend named "Luis". After a short period of time, he had left the apartment and played softball for awhile, before returning around 6:00 p.m. and leaving again around 7:00 p.m. When Dedrick finished relating his activities, the officers left the interview room and closed the door behind them. They then discussed his story and concluded that it contradicted information gathered from other witnesses. Sergeant Stewart testified at the suppression hearing that, while he and Lieutenant Bovaird were in the hallway, they also received information that Dedrick had owed Ramirez money for cocaine and that Ramirez had solicited two co-employees to "get the money back from [Dedrick] ... at any cost."

The officers then went back into the interview room and told Dedrick that they suspected he had been untruthful. Before asking him further questions, they read him his Miranda rights. Dedrick, who had never before been arrested, read and initialed each right on the State's standard waiver form and signed the accompanying waiver. The officers again told Dedrick he was not under arrest, but it was the last time they would do so. They then informed him that Ramirez was dead. According to their testimony, he put his hands to his face, apparently surprised and shaken by this news. This was the first time during their encounter with him that the officers had mentioned to Dedrick that they wanted to question him about Ramirez. Stewart and Bovaird next confronted Dedrick with discrepancies between his earlier responses and those of other witnesses. The officers revealed that they knew Ramirez had dealt cocaine and had hired someone to collect $640 Dedrick owed him. They repeatedly suggested that Dedrick and Ramirez had argued over this debt and that Dedrick, who was "not a bad kid," had stabbed Ramirez in self-defense. They told him that his fingerprints and sneakers would likely match bloody fingerprints and footprints found in Ramirez' apartment. When Dedrick vehemently denied killing Ramirez, Stewart and Bovaird told him they knew he was lying because they knew "he was in [Ramirez' apartment]" and had worn sneakers on the night of the murder. They also told him they knew he owned a knife.

After forty minutes of heated questioning, Dedrick said he did not know what to do and felt he should speak with a lawyer. Lieutenant Bovaird immediately stood up and left the room. Sergeant Stewart also stood up, gathered his papers from the table, and said "You want a lawyer, that's fine with us, but we'll never know Ramirez came at you with a knife." In response Dedrick suddenly exclaimed, "That's how it happened." He quickly added that Ramirez had indeed come at him with a knife prompting him to punch Ramirez, take the knife away, and stab him. Dedrick then leaned across the table to show Stewart a cut on his arm.

Sergeant Stewart closed the door and sat back down. Lieutenant Bovaird soon returned as well and, when Stewart said Dedrick had confessed, they asked him to tell his story from the beginning. Dedrick then gave a detailed account of the incident and stated that he had thrown the knife in a trash can and left the clothes he had been wearing in his apartment. When the officers asked him to show them where he had disposed of the knife, Dedrick again requested an attorney. The officers stopped the questioning, helped Dedrick contact counsel, arrested him for murder, and placed him in a holding cell.

Alleging violations of his State and federal constitutional rights, Dedrick moved to suppress all the statements he made to officers Stewart and Bovaird and any evidence seized pursuant to the search warrant that was issued on the basis of those statements. The superior court found that, although Dedrick was not initially in custody, his "freedom of movement was restrained to a degree associated with a formal arrest," and he was therefore in custody for purposes of Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436, 444, 86 S.Ct. 1602, 1612, 16 L.Ed.2d 694 (1966), from the time the detectives reentered the room, gave him his rights, and confronted him with his presumed falsehoods:

"The Court finds and rules that the defendant was not in custody until the point at which the detectives confronted him with his allegedly inconsistent statements, at which time he was appropriately administered Miranda warnings. As the defendant was up until that time free to wander the hallways of the police station and go to the bathroom unaccompanied, the setting cannot be said to have been custodial. When confronted with the inconsistencies by the detectives, however, Dedrick certainly would be justified in concluding he was not then free to leave, even though the detectives assured him that he was not under arrest. It is simply ludicrous to suggest that the defendant could have risen from his seat and freely exited the interview room in the middle of an escalating period of interrogation and gone along on his merry way, especially when the detectives had developed a theory which directly implicated him, and it was their intention to question him further at that point about his involvement."

The court further found that the statement Sergeant Stewart made as he prepared to leave the interview room did not constitute interrogation, but that, given Dedrick's request for counsel, the officers' failure to obtain a further waiver of his rights before eliciting a detailed confession was contrary to Miranda 's dictates. The court therefore refused to suppress the words "That's how it happened" and the further statement that Ramirez had come at Dedrick with a knife which he had taken and used to stab Ramirez. However, the court suppressed all subsequent statements and all evidence seized pursuant to the search warrant based on these statements, since it found insufficient evidence to support the warrant in their absence.

On appeal, the State argues that Dedrick was not in custody for purposes of the Federal Constitution at any time preceding his formal arrest and that the superior court erred as a matter of law in finding otherwise. It contends that the court improperly decided the custody question from a subjective rather than an objective viewpoint and that facts presented at the suppression hearing were otherwise insufficient to support a finding of custody. Dedrick replies that the court correctly found custody, but erred in holding that Sergeant Stewart's comment was not interrogation. H...

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26 cases
  • State v. Rogers
    • United States
    • Nebraska Supreme Court
    • January 30, 2009
    ...the situation presented here, for illustration of how these legal principles are applied in comparable circumstances, we consider State v. Dedrick.64 In Dedrick, the defendant voluntarily went to the police station after they had asked him to come answer some questions. Once at the station,......
  • State v. Oney
    • United States
    • Vermont Supreme Court
    • November 25, 2009
    ...interview, effectively negating the assurances that defendant was, in fact, free to walk out the door. See, e.g., State v. Dedrick, 132 N.H. 218, 564 A.2d 423, 427 (1989) (finding that "sea change" in police demeanor and tenor of interview converted what started as noncustodial encounter to......
  • State v. McKenna
    • United States
    • New Hampshire Supreme Court
    • September 9, 2014
    ...are fluid: What may begin as noncustodial questioning may evolve over time into custodial questioning. See, e.g. , State v. Dedrick, 132 N.H. 218, 225, 564 A.2d 423 (1989), abrogated on other grounds by Ford , 144 N.H. at 62–63, 738 A.2d 937 and State v. Spencer, 149 N.H. 622, 625, 826 A.2d......
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    • New Hampshire Supreme Court
    • April 7, 2020
    ...a reasonable [person] in the same circumstances that ... as often as he made denials, they would renew their accusations." Dedrick, 132 N.H. at 225, 564 A.2d 423. In addition, Hallam and McIver repeatedly confronted the defendant with AV's allegations, telling him that they were certain tha......
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