Evans v. Demosthenes

902 F. Supp. 1253, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14852, 1995 WL 590559
CourtDistrict Court, D. Nevada
DecidedSeptember 29, 1995
DocketCV-N-89-504-ECR
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 902 F. Supp. 1253 (Evans v. Demosthenes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Nevada primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Evans v. Demosthenes, 902 F. Supp. 1253, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14852, 1995 WL 590559 (D. Nev. 1995).

Opinion

ORDER

EDWARD C. REED, Jr., District Judge.

Michael Evans, also known as Michael Du-lin, was convicted of burglary and grand larceny in 1988, in the state trial court in Las *1255 Vegas. His state court remedies exhausted, Evans sought a writ of habeas corpus from this court. We denied it. The court of appeals affirmed on all but one issue, remanding for consideration of Evans’s claim that his confession to the crime was obtained in violation of his Miranda rights and should not have been admitted at his trial. That claim is without merit and, once again, we deny the petition.

Early on the morning of November 1, 1987, Las Vegas police officers Thomas Johnson and Arthur Burns were assigned to investigate a burglary. Doc. # 39 Exh. MM at 157-58. 1 Evans and his roommate, Daniel Barsch, were suspects. Tr. 158-59. The officers went to Evans and Barseh’s apartment on Casino Center Drive in Las Vegas, took both men into custody, handcuffed them, and took them to a balcony-walkway outside the second-story apartment. Tr. 161-62. Each was given, and verbally acknowledged, his Miranda rights. Tr. 162. Evans made it clear that he knew his rights, interrupting Johnson in what Johnson described in this court as a “deliberate, sarcastic” tone. As Johnson explained,

[wjhile I was reading the rights, he said he knew his rights, and I just told him to just be quiet and let me read the rights and tell me if you understand them as I read them, and after I had done that, he said yes, he understands them.

Tr. 154. The stolen property, which witnesses stated had been in the apartment less than half an hour before, Tr. 162, was nowhere to be seen, and both Evans and Barsch were sweating “profusely” and had mud on their shoes. Tr. 162-63.

The officers took the suspects downstairs, to the front or side of the building, where they separated the two to speak with them individually. As Burns put it on direct examination:

Officer Johnson took Mr. Barsch a few feet away so that he could speak with him independently, and I spoke with Mr. [Evans]. My — my conversation with Mr. [Evans] was extremely one-sided, as he didn’t respond to me. He didn’t answer any questions. He didn’t say anything, just that he was complaining of some sort of a stomach ailment.

Tr. 163. Burns said the same thing when cross-examined by Evans (who represented himself):

Q. Didn’t you testify just a minute ago that you said when you had us downstairs in front, that you said I said I had nothing to say?
A. That you say you had nothing to say? I said you didn’t say anything. You complained of stomach pains and something, some sort of — or you didn’t even ask. An officer told you you could sit down if you were getting dizzy or having a kind of medical problem.

Tr. 169-70. That is consistent with Burns’s testimony in this court. 2 This was apparently the first sign that Evans was in physical discomfort; there is no indication that he was in distress when Johnson, only a few moments earlier, gave him his Miranda warnings. In this court, Burns testified that Ev *1256 ans’s response to his questions consisted not of words but of physical gyrations, and that Evans was “agonized,” “writhing,” and sweating.

This encounter lasted for about five minutes, though Burns testified in this court that his verbal exchanges with Evans likely lasted for a shorter period (somewhere between one and five minutes), and that he recalls asking Evans only where the stolen property was. Burns then gave up trying to question Evans, and, leaving him and Barsch in the custody of other officers, went to the back of the apartment building to look for the stolen property. Tr. 164. In this court, Burns testified that Evans, at this point, was in “physical distress”: sitting on the ground, sweating, with his head down. Burns searched a dumpster without success and returned to the front of the building, when another officer, Harris, approached him. Harris said that Barsch had told him that the stolen property was behind the building; Harris and Burns then returned to the rear of the building and found the property. Tr. 164-65.

Once again, Burns returned to the front of the building. About fifteen to twenty minutes had elapsed since Evans and Barsch had been given their Miranda rights. Tr. 163. There is no indication that Evans was still in physical distress at this point; whatever affliction he had been suffering during his first encounter with Burns had, apparently, abated. Burns told Evans that he had found the property and asked if Evans had placed it there. Tr. 165. Evans did not respond, id., and Burns then mentioned that he worked primarily with “outlaw bikers,” who, once caught, usually admitted quite freely that they had committed the crime, and said that he “couldn’t understand why [Evans] wouldn’t make a statement concerning this with all the evidence against him.” Tr. 165. Burns said the same thing on cross-examination by Evans:

Q. That you were telling me repeatedly of all the evidence that was against me already.
A. Correct. I told you exactly of the things that indicated that you were perhaps responsible for this crime.

Tr. 170. Evans and Burns then began to talk, in Burns’s words, “about a lot of things”:

We were talking about our families. We were talking about his alleged crime and escape from Utah, how that occurred, why he was being charged from another jurisdiction with a grand theft auto. We spoke about all those kinds of things — where he’d come from, how long he’d been out of prison,....
And then I asked, “Why did you do this, then?” And he indicated to me at that time, that he knew the victim, ... and that he had had some sort of a disagreement with the victim. And that the motive for the burglary was revenge,_

Tr. 165-66. The conversation continued. Burns had called for an I.D. technician when he found the property. When the technician arrived, Burns asked Evans “Should I go ahead and have him fingerprint the — the evidence or property in the back, or are you going to admit to having put it there?” Evans responded, “I did it.” Tr. 166. Burns told the technician to simply photograph the property, rather than take fingerprints. 3 Evans and Barsch were arrested and taken to the Clark County Detention Center. Tr. 167.

At trial, Evans objected to admission of the confession. A suppression hearing was held on March 22, 1988, outside the presence of the jury, Tr. 150-72, at which the facts set forth above were brought out. Evans conveyed the essence of his theory in one of his questions to Burns:

Q. So, in fact, if the defendant is not answering questions, if he is being silent, why would you continually ask him ques *1257

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
902 F. Supp. 1253, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14852, 1995 WL 590559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-v-demosthenes-nvd-1995.