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In assessing a Miranda related 5th Amendment issue, what constitutes custody?

Bar Exam Prep Criminal Procedure Miranda In assessing a Miranda related 5th Amendment issue, what constitutes custody?
🫥 Criminal Procedure • Miranda CRIMPRO#025

Legal Definition

A person is in custody if, at the time of the interrogation, they feel that they are not free to leave. This is an objective, reasonable person standard.

Plain English Explanation

The most obvious example of someone being in custody is when they are pinned to the ground or placed in handcuffs by police. However, legally, this does not define the standard. Rather, a person is in custody by merely being placed in a situation where a reasonable person would feel as if they are not free to leave or disengage from the police. These coercive situations have the same psychological affect on a suspect, like cornering someone until they give you what you want.

Hypothetical

Hypo 1: Sam is walking down the sidewalk. Officer is standing next to the sidewalk. As Sam walks by, Officer shouts, "Hi! Commit any crimes today?" Result: By no stretch of the imagination has Sam been detained. He is just walking by Officer and, if he wants, he can ignore Officer and keep on walking.

Hypo 2: Sam is walking down the sidewalk. Officer is standing next to the sidewalk. As Sam walks by, Officer says, "Hey, stop right there, I want to talk to you." Result: This still probably isn't coercive enough to be custody. Sam may be intimidated by the Officer, but he is out in the public, and it's just a single Officer. Sam could decline the Officer and continue walking until the Officer makes it more clear that he is ordering Sam to stop because he is being detained.

Hypo 3: Sam is walking down the sidewalk. Four officers are standing on the sidewalk. As Sam walks by, an officer blocks Sam's path while the three other officers surround Sam. Result: Sam is in custody. It is clear that Sam has no freedom to leave or disengage with the officers. This lack of freedom is what defines being in custody.

Hypo 4: Same facts as Hypo 3, but now one officer notices Sam is wearing a Dodgers jersey. The officer is also a baseball fan, so he asks Sam, "Did you catch the Dodgers game last night?" Sam freaks out. Sam missed last night's baseball game because he was too busy murdering someone. Sam confesses, "No! I'm sorry. I didn't mean to kill her! It just happened!" Result: Sam is in custody, but the question that the officer is asking is not an interrogation because it was not asked for the purpose of eliciting a criminal response. It was just the officer making small talk. The fact that it coincidentally provoked Sam into confessing a crime isn't the officer's fault, which means Sam's statements can be used against him.

Hypo 5: Same facts as Hypo 3, but now one officer notices Sam is wearing a Dodgers jersey. The officer becomes suspicious because a person matching Sam's description and wearing a Dodgers jersey is being sought in relation to a murder that happened last night during the same time that the baseball game occurred. The officer asks Sam, "Did you catch the Dodgers game last night? Or were you busy doing anything else?" Sam freaks out and admits that he didn't see the game because he got in an argument with someone and killed them. Result: Sam's Miranda rights were violated and, as a result, his statements cannot be used against him as evidence during trial. So what changed in this hypo? Well, first off Sam is clearly in custody, as he is being surrounded by officers who have demanded he stop and answer their questions. Second, the officer's question about seeing the Dodger's game was not small talk; rather, it was a question designed to try to elicit a response that would help the officer figure out whether or not Sam was the suspect they are looking for. Because its intent was to seek out an incriminating response, the officer was required to first notify Sam of his Miranda rights before the question because it qualifies as an interrogation.
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