html> Wisconsin Court of Appeals Docket No. 98-2746
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PUBLISHED OPINION

COURT OF APPEALS

DECISION

DATED AND FILED

NOTICE

May 27, 1999

This opinion is subject to further editing. If published, the official version will appear in the bound volume of the Official Reports.

Marilyn L. Graves

Clerk, Court of Appeals

of Wisconsin

A party may file with the Supreme Court a petition to review an adverse decision by the Court of Appeals. See § 808.10 and Rule 809.62, Stats.

[T]he Sixth Amendment is not violated whenever-by luck or happenstance-the State obtains incriminating statements from the accused after the right to counsel has attached. However, knowing exploitation by the State of an opportunity to confront the accused without counsel being present is as much a breach of the State's obligation not to circumvent the right to assistance of counsel as is the intentional creation of such an opportunity. Accordingly, the Sixth Amendment is violated when the State obtains incriminating statements by knowingly circumventing the accused's right to counsel present in a confrontation between the accused and the state agent.

Maine v. Moulton, 474 U.S. 159, 176 (1985) (citation omitted).

Although a suspect need not speak with the discrimination of an Oxford don, he must articulate his desire to have counsel present sufficiently clearly that a reasonable police officer in the circumstances would understand the statement to be a request for an attorney.

Id. at 459 (quoted sources and internal quotation marks omitted).8

Thus, while the precise degree of clarity required of right-to-counsel invocations under the Sixth Amendment appears to be unsettled in the law, it does appear that greater leeway is afforded charged defendants in this respect (under the Sixth Amendment) than uncharged suspects (under the Fifth Amendment) during custodial questioning. It follows, under Davis and its progeny, that a charged defendant may invoke his or her Sixth Amendment right to counsel with statements or actions that are somewhat less than the standard articulated in Davis.

Whatever the precise parameters of the Sixth-Amendment standard may be-or whether one is even ascertainable at this point-we are satisfied that the circumstances known to and facing Detectives Hughes and Tomlin when they questioned Dagnall in Florida would warrant a reasonable officer to understand that he was indeed invoking his right to counsel. As we have stressed above, t hey knew Dagnall had been charged with homicide, and had retained an attorney. They knew that he had talked to his attorney with respect to the investigation and the possibility of charges being filed, and that he had received legal advice with respect to those charges and the likelihood of police interrogation-including an admonition not to talk to police unless his attorney was present. And they knew that Dagnall's lawyer had written to the Sheriff's Department advising them of his representation and informing them that they were not to question Dagnall outside of his presence concerning the homicide. Finally, they heard Dagnall tell them as they began to question him: "My lawyer told me that I shouldn't talk to you guys."

1 According to the circuit court, Dagnall's "my lawyer" statement was equivocal in that it was not "an express statement that "I don't want to talk to you guys." And, after discussing several cases, the court concluded that Connors's letter did not amount to a "personal[] invo[cation]" of Dagnall's right to counsel," and, further, that Hughes, "regardless of his motive," was simply "assisting Mr. Dagnall, as far as being aware of his rights and given [him] the full information and decision making authority as far as whether or not he wished to exercise them." Finally, the court said that, in its opinion, Dagnall had made the statements to the detectives in a knowing and voluntary manner.

2 Patterson v. Illinois, 487 U.S. 285 (1988).

3 State v. Hanson, 136 Wis.2d 195, 401 N.W.2d 771 (1987).

4 State v. Kramar, 149 Wis.2d 767, 440 N.W.2d 317 (1989). In a fourth case, State v. Coerper, 199 Wis.2d 216, 544 N.W.2d 423 (1996), the only evidence was a "no questions" letter from the accused's lawyer; there was apparently nothing to indicate that the accused had ever talked to, or received advice from, the lawyer, and no evidence that he had ever even mentioned the lawyer to police. Id. at 219-221, 225, 544 N.W.2d at 423-25, 427.

5 "If I were to find fault on the part of the State in this case," said the court, "it would be ... in failing to follow the admonition of Mr. Connors to not talk to his client."

6 The State suggests in its brief that Hughes was only trying to help Dagnall when he persisted in questioning him after he stated that his lawyer didn't want him talking to them. According to the State, when Hughes told Dagnall that others had implicated him in the homicide and he just wanted to hear his side of the story-and that it was Dagnall's decision whether to answer the questions-he was simply trying to clarify his wishes with respect to legal representation. We don't think so. We agree with Dagnall that Hughes's remarks, and his attempts to get Dagnall to continue talking to them, appear to be much more a device to obtain incriminating information from him. Indeed, Hughes acknowledged in his testimony at the suppression hearing that, knowing that Dagnall had been charged, and knowing that he had a lawyer who had requested that he not be questioned alone, Hughes went to Florida with the stated intent to try to get "a statement" from him. Beyond that, Hughes knew that Dagnall's lawyer had instructed him not to talk to police, yet he persisted in attempting to obtain his statement in direct contravention to that advice. And we note in this regard that the Supreme Court, in Maine v. Moulton, 474 U.S. 159, 176 n.12 (1985), stated that "proof that the State `must have known' that its agent was likely to obtain incriminating statements from the accused in the absence of counsel suffices to establish a Sixth Amendment violation."

7 In Michigan v. Jackson, 475 U.S. 625 (1986), the Court reasoned:

[G]iven the plain language of the [Sixth] Amendment and its purpose of protecting the unaided layman at critical confrontations with his adversary, our conclusion that the right to counsel attaches at the initiation of adversary judicial criminal proceedings is far from a mere formalism. It is only at the time that the government has committed itself to prosecute, and only then that the adverse positions of government and defendant have solidified. It is then that a defendant finds himself faced with the prosecutorial forces of organized society, and immersed in the intricacies of substantive and procedural criminal law (internal quotations omitted).

....

Indeed, after a formal accusation has been made-and a person who had previously been just a "suspect" has become an "accused" within the meaning of the Sixth Amendment-the constitutional right to the assistance of counsel is of such importance that the police may no longer employ the techniques for eliciting information from an uncounseled defendant that might have been entirely proper at an earlier stage of their investigation. Thus, the surreptitious employment of a cellmate or the electronic surveillance of conversations with third parties may violate the defendant's Sixth Amendment right to counsel even though the same methods of investigation might have been permissible before arraignment or indictment.

Id. at 631-32 (quoted sources omitted).

8 We adopted that language in another Fifth Amendment case to which the State has referred us, State v. Long, 190 Wis.2d 386, 395, 526 N.W.2d 826, 829 (Ct. App. 1994).

9 Indeed, when asked at the hearing what Dagnall said after being told the detectives were there to talk about the homicide, Hughes replied:

Basically that he didn't want to talk to us or all - actually what he told us that his lawyer told him that he shouldn't be talking to us, were his words, or something to that effect. That he'd been advised by counsel not to talk to us.

10 See note 6, supra, and the accompanying text.

11 The State also suggests that, should we decide that Dagnall had invoked his right to counsel, we should conclude that he waived that right because, after he was advised of his Miranda rights, he continued to answer their questions. The Supreme Court has recognized, however, that "once a criminal defendant invokes his [or her] Sixth Amendment right to counsel, a subsequent waiver of that right-even if voluntary, knowing, and intelligent under traditional standards-is presumed invalid if secured pursuant to police-initiated interrogation." Michigan v. Harvey, 494 U.S. 344, 345 (1990); Jackson, 475 U.S. at 625; see also Jackson at 635, where the Court stated that "[j]ust as written waivers are insufficient to justify police-initiated interrogations after the request for counsel in a Fifth Amendment analysis, so too they are insufficient to justify police-initiated interrogations after the request for counsel in a Sixth Amendment analysis."