and SC14-826 State of Florida v. Michael Lindsey McAdams and Michael Lindsey McAdams v. State of Florida

193 So. 3d 824
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedApril 21, 2016
DocketSC14-788, SC14-826
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 193 So. 3d 824 (and SC14-826 State of Florida v. Michael Lindsey McAdams and Michael Lindsey McAdams v. State of Florida) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
and SC14-826 State of Florida v. Michael Lindsey McAdams and Michael Lindsey McAdams v. State of Florida, 193 So. 3d 824 (Fla. 2016).

Opinions

LEWIS, J.

This matter is before the Court for review of the decision of the Second District Court of Appeal in McAdams v. State, 137 So.3d 401 (Fla. 2d DCA 2014). In its decision, the district court ruled' upon a question that it certified to be of great public importance. We have jurisdiction. Art. V, § 3(b)(4), Fla. Const.

FACTS AND BACKGROUND INFORMATION

The Pasco County Sheriffs Office was notified that Lynda McAdams (Lynda), the estranged wife of Respondent/Cross-Petitioner Michael McAdams (McAdams), and her boyfriend/coworker, William Andrews (Andrews), had been reported missing by concerned family members. On October 21, 2009, a detective responded to Lynda’s [826]*826home on Palomino Lake Drive in Dade Gity and, after observing her truck parked at the residence, conducted a. welfare check at the. house. He found the door unlocked and walked through the residence. No one was present.

During the welfare check> the detective observed that the lid of the washing machine was open and a substance that appeared to be blood could be seen on the rim. Blood-stained clothing was inside the washing machine. Tiie detective also observed latex gloves in the kitchen, along with rolls of duct tape. He departed the residence and notified a supervisor of his observations. McAdams was contacted, and he gave written consent for a search of the Palomino Lake'Drive home.1 During the search, in addition to other items of interest, there appeared to be blood spatter on a wall, blood was. discovered on clothing, and a bedroom. door evidenced what appeared to be. a bullet hole. A projectile was later-recovered from, the wall.

A different detective entered Mc-Adams’s separate residence in Spring Hill to perform a welfare check there with the consent of McAdams’s, father. When the detective- walked through the garage, he observed a pair of blue-jean shorts that appeared to have blood on them. Further, a broken cell phone was found on a night stand and McAdams’s father stated that it did not belong to McAdams. Law enforcement subsequently obtained a search warrant for the Spring Hill home. The warrant was executed at approximately 2:22 a.m. on October 23, and McAdams was not present. Thé shorts, a grey shirt, and a black belt were seized.

Later that morning, a detective with the Hernando County Sheriffs Office approached McAdams in the driveway of the Spring Hill home, and asked if he would be willing to come to the sheriffs office to speak with detectives. McAdams understood that the detective was there because Lynda was missing and replied that he wanted to help. . McAdams rode to the sheriffs office in the back of a deputy’s vehicle, but he was not handcuffed.2 The detective specifically informed McAdams that he was not under arrest.

Upon his arrival at the Hernando County Sheriffs Office, McAdams was escorted to an interview room where he met with Pasco County Detectives Christensen and Arey. The encounter at the sheriffs office between McAdams and the detectives began at 11:55 a.m., and the interview was recorded in its entirety. - During the majority of the interview, McAdams maintained that he did not know what happened to Lynda or Andrews. ■ However, at 2:27:15 -p.m,, while McAdams was in the room with only Detective Arey,- he commenced a confession in which he admitted that he fatally shot Lynda and Andrews on October 18, 2009. McAdams also confessed that he buried the bodies and discarded the weapon off a bridge. At 2:42:07 p.m., Detective Arey read McAdams the Miranda3 warnings.- After receiving the warnings, McAdams continued to speak with Detective Arey, and he subsequently directed law enforcement to the bodies.

At 2:04 p.m., while McAdams was being interrogated by the Pasco County detectives in the Hernando office, and before [827]*827the confession commenced, an attorney retained by McAdams’s parents arrived at that office. After determining that Mc-Adams was being interrogated in the building, the deputy at the counter advised the attorney that' it would not, be possible to convey any information to the location where McAdams was being questioned by any means, including e-mail, telephone, a knock on the door, or even a note slipped under the door. Although the attorney stated:

I want all questioning to stop. I don’t want anymore [sic] questioning to go on without my presence.

he was not allowed to see or otherwise communicate with McAdams in any manner. Facing that insurmountable obstacle, the attorney departed from the sheriffs office at 2:17 p.m., just ten minutes before McAdams commenced his confession. Mc-Adams was first informed about the presence of the attorney only after he directed the detectives to the burial site. On November 10, 2009, McAdams was indicted on two counts of first-degree murder.

McAdams subsequently filed a motion to suppress any statements made to law enforcement, any evidence obtained as a result of those statements, and any audio or video evidence that resulted from, those statements.4 McAdams asserted that he was in custody when he was questioned by Detectives Arey and Christensen, and they failed to read him the Miranda warnings. McAdams also contended that he was im-, properly denied access to his attorney, who was actually at the sheriffs office while he was being interrogated.

During the hearing on the motion to suppress, Detective Christensen outlined the reason the attorney was not allowed to see or speak with McAdams:

DEFENSE COUNSEL: What did they tell you as far as this lawyer in the lobby of the Hernando County Sheriffs Office? . . • .
" CHRISTENSEN: I was told that an attorney came up wanting to speak with Mr. McAdams. And we discussed the situation about just an attorney showing up. And that—
DEFENSE COUNSEL: "what did they tell you about the attorney, anything specific that you recall?
CHRISTENSEN: I don’t remember. I don’t even know who the attorney ,was.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Did they tell you that the attorney wanted to speak to Mr. McAdams and that he wanted the questioning to stop? ■ -
CHRISTENSEN: I believe so. But I know there was an attorney present, that he wanted to speak with Mr. Mc-Adams, and I decided that the attorney wasn’t going to have access to Mr. Mc-Adams.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: And why is that?
CHRISTENSEN: Because he wasn’t under arrest, and Mr. McAdams never requested for an attorney.
'DEFENSE COUNSEL: If he’s not under arrest, why not let him talk to his attorney?
CHRISTENSEN: Because there was no need to., I did not have to have him have access to Mr. McAdams.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: And that was your call ,. or someone else?
CHRISTENSEN:, It was ultimately my call.
[828]*828DEFENSE COUNSEL: And why not tell McAdams that his lawyer is out there?
CHRISTENSEN: I didn’t have to.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: And what makes you think that you didn’t have to, based on what?

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193 So. 3d 824, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/and-sc14-826-state-of-florida-v-michael-lindsey-mcadams-and-michael-fla-2016.