Cite as 2024 Ark. App. 9 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION IV No. CR-22-701
Opinion Delivered January 10, 2024 JASON BAXTER APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE WHITE COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NO. 73CR-20-357] V. HONORABLE MARK PATE, JUDGE STATE OF ARKANSAS APPELLEE AFFIRMED
WENDY SCHOLTENS WOOD, Judge
Jason Baxter entered a conditional plea of guilty to first-degree murder in the White
County Circuit Court and was sentenced to forty years’ imprisonment. On appeal, he argues
that the circuit court erred in denying his five motions to suppress his interrogation. We
affirm.
On May 14, 2020, while conducting a welfare check on the seventy-seven-year-old
victim, Julius Williams, Officer Dillon Chandler of the Kensett Police Department
discovered Williams’s front door cracked open and Williams lying dead on the floor just
inside the door with a gunshot wound to his face. Williams’s next-door neighbor, Brandon
Swain, told police that he heard a gunshot around 1:00 p.m. the day before police discovered
Williams’s body and that he saw a heavy-set white male with dark hair running through
Williams’s yard immediately after the gunshot in the direction of the neighboring trailer park. Swain said that the man returned later with his shirt off and that he had a large scar
on his back.
During the investigation, Officer Robert Parsons, chief of police of the Judsonia
Police Department, went to the trailer park and took pictures of four white males who
matched Swain’s description: Baxter; Baxter’s father, who was also at Baxter’s trailer when
Officer Parsons arrived; and two other individuals. While taking these photos, Officer
Parsons told Baxter that they were investigating “a shooting” at Williams’s home and asked
if he knew anything about it. Baxter denied knowing Williams or knowing anything about a
shooting. He also said he did not have a gun but admitted that he heard three shots “the
other day” while he was in his home and mentioned that “if there’s a murder . . . you need
to know something about it.” When Officer Parsons returned to Swain’s home with the four
photos he had taken, Swain identified Baxter as the man he saw running through Williams’s
yard. Officer Parsons then returned to Baxter’s trailer, told him the neighbor had identified
him, and said that the police wanted to speak to him if he was willing to go to the Kensett
Police Department. Baxter agreed, and his father drove him to the police station.
When Baxter arrived, Officer Chandler read to him an Arkansas Rule of Criminal
Procedure 2.3 rights form, which Baxter signed, acknowledging that the police asked him
there to furnish information or cooperate in an investigation but that he was not legally
obligated to do either. Officer Chandler also read to him a Miranda statement-of-rights form,
which Baxter executed, waiving his Miranda rights. Both Officers Chandler and Parsons, who
questioned Baxter at the police department, testified that Baxter did not appear intoxicated
2 or impaired. They recorded the entire interview on a video that was played for the circuit
court at the suppression hearing.
Officer Chandler initiated the questioning by asking if Baxter knew why he was there,
to which Baxter replied, “I heard three shots, looked outside. Wouldn’t know what to do if
I was around a murder. Freaked the hell out.” When asked what Baxter knew about
Williams, Baxter said that he “caught him outside the other day” at Williams’s house and
spoke to him about mowing his yard. Baxter said that they had not discussed a price and that
he had never mowed Williams’s yard. He also said that he had walked past Williams’s house
on the day of the murder on his way to get a soda, then claimed he said he had simply been
“on a jog” that day. When Officer Parsons asked Baxter if he could explain “why people
[had] seen you run from this guy’s house after hearing a gunshot,” Baxter replied, “I was on
a jog, and I cut through[.]”
Officer Parsons eventually told Baxter that someone had shot and killed Williams,
and Baxter replied, “For real?” and “I heard shots.” Officer Parsons informed Baxter that a
neighbor had seen him running through Williams’s yard after hearing a gunshot, to which
Baxter responded, “I wasn’t there.” When Parsons asked Baxter whether it was self-defense,
Baxter continued to deny having anything to do with the shooting. He explained that he had
simply been running through Williams’s yard because he was on a jog and “cut through”
Williams’s yard. He had his shirt off because he “was sweaty,” but when the officers asked to
see his scar, he refused to show them. He said, “You hear a shot, you’re going to run.” Baxter
3 denied actually witnessing the shooting, however, explaining that “[h]earing shots and seeing
them is total[ly] different.”
When Officer Parsons began asking Baxter if he was trying to protect anyone—
explaining to Baxter that he wanted Baxter to “give” him something so he could “help” him—
and asking Baxter the difference if a crime is committed in self-defense, Baxter replied,
“Texas.” Officer Parsons said he needed to know if it was self-defense because if it was not,
he would have to arrest the offender and “work it like a capital murder case.” Baxter said he
hoped Officer Parsons “find[s] them.”
Officer Parsons and Baxter then began discussing Baxter’s conversation with
Williams about mowing his yard. Baxter said Williams wanted him to mow it and that they
had agreed he would mow it “[w]hen it’s dried out.” He then revised his account and said he
had not actually been to Williams’s home to discuss the job but had spoken to him on the
phone. When pressed again, Baxter said he had not actually called Williams, and he refused
to consent to a search of his cell phone. When Officer Chandler asked Baxter why he had
lied about calling Williams, Baxter said, “I’ve got so much anxiety from being questioned.”
Chad Everetts, Baxter’s probation officer, arrived during the interview and stood in
the open doorway while Baxter was being questioned. Officers Parsons and Chandler left
the room midway through the interview, and the following colloquy occurred between Baxter
and Everetts:
BAXTER: Shut the door.
EVERETTS: Do what?
4 BAXTER: Close the door.
EVERETTS: No. We’re running this. You sit there and shut up and don’t move.
BAXTER: Be nice if I could leave.
EVERETTS: I’m sure it would be, buddy, but you’re not. I told you to sit there and be quiet.
(Detective Chandler returned to the interview room.)
CHANDLER: Right now is the best time to talk to us, man, ‘cause later on down the road, it’s not going to be good talk. Everything’s been good right now.
BAXTER: I’ve said what I had to say. Answered what you’ve asked.
CHANDLER: But you also lied to us.
BAXTER: I’ve got so much anxiety.
CHANDLER: Why?
BAXTER: Anxiety, flipping out, being questioned.
CHANDLER: If you didn’t do anything, you shouldn’t have anything to flip out about.
BAXTER: I’ve never been questioned like this before.
CHANDLER: I understand that.
BAXTER: Silence kills me.
CHANDLER: Well, what do you want to talk about?
BAXTER: Say what I got to say and get out of here.
The questioning continued, and Baxter admitted that he had knocked on Williams’s door
and then shot Williams in the face when he answered the door. He said he had thrown the
5 gun in some foliage behind his (Baxter’s) house, which he later showed to the police, who
recovered the gun.
In an information filed on June 18, 2020, Baxter was charged with one count of
capital murder. On March 16, 2021, Baxter filed five separate motions to suppress the
interrogation due to (1) violation of Arkansas Rule of Criminal Procedure Rule 2.3; (2)
violation of the Fourth Amendment; (3) violation of the Fifth Amendment; (4) violation of
the Arkansas Rules of Criminal Procedure when police prevented Baxter from leaving the
interrogation; and (5) the State’s failure to obtain a voluntary, knowing, and intelligent
waiver of his Miranda rights.
On August 20, 2021, the circuit court held a hearing on Baxter’s suppression
motions. In addition to the testimony of Officers Chandler and Parsons about their
investigation and recorded interview of Baxter, Baxter’s father also testified. He said that he
drove Baxter to the police station and remained in the room with him during the interview.
He said that Baxter was acting peculiarly and not answering in complete sentences. He also
testified that the police officers requested that he ask Baxter to tell the truth and give Baxter
a hug, which he did. He said Baxter became very emotional and started crying.
Everetts testified that one of the conditions of Baxter’s probation was that he not use
or possess alcohol or illegal drugs. He testified that he was at the police station for Baxter’s
interview because the police had called Everetts to “maybe do a home visit” on Baxter and
asked Everetts to come to the Kensett police station. After he arrived, he was told that there
had been a homicide Baxter was “possibly involved in.” Everetts said he could tell something
6 was wrong when he saw Baxter because he was acting much differently than he had in
Everetts’s previous interactions with him. He said in his earlier meetings with Baxter, he had
been “cool and collected.” Everetts said Baxter did not appear intoxicated but rather “in
shock” or “kind of weirded out with this situation.”
Baxter presented the testimony of psychologist Dr. Benjamin Silber, a certified
forensic examiner. In addition to reviewing police records and the video of the interrogation,
Dr. Silber evaluated Baxter on March 23, 2021, nine months after his arrest. During Dr.
Silber’s examination, Baxter told Dr. Silber that he had been hearing voices in his head for
years telling him that he was gay. Dr. Silber testified that it was clear to him Baxter was
hearing these voices during his interrogation with the police and that he was responding to
the voices throughout the interrogation, including his responses of “[s]tay straight,” “[i]t’s
three years,” “not married,” and “stuck,” none of which were appropriate responses to the
officer’s questions. He opined that Baxter’s delusions impacted his decision-making during
the interrogation and that Baxter was “derailed” and “distracted” by the voices. He testified
that the hallucinations “raise concerns for whether he is truly knowing and intelligent in
what he is doing.” Dr. Silber said Baxter explained that he intended to “plead the Fifth”
when he responded “Texas” to Officer Parson’s question about self-defense. Baxter told Dr.
Silber that Texas was the state you can “plead the Fifth in.” Dr. Silber said this concerned
him because it suggested Baxter probably did not “knowingly and intelligently recognize he
had these rights in the first place to waive them in a knowing and intelligent manner.” Dr.
Silber opined that Baxter suffered from a “settled insanity,” which he said is a substance-
7 abuse psychotic disorder due to his lengthy history of methamphetamine use. He testified
that the symptoms, hallucinations, and delusions increase significantly during times of stress.
Dr. Silber noted that, during the interrogation, Baxter often sat still and closed his
eyes. Baxter explained to Dr. Silber that the voices told him they could “teleport him to
another location,” which he hoped would happen if he closed his eyes. Finally, Baxter told
Dr. Silber that the voices informed him that if he told the officers he did it, they would let
him go. He said he believed them and thought “everything would be okay” if he said he shot
Williams. Dr. Silber opined that Baxter’s responses were directly related to the hallucinations
rather than to a rational understanding of the consequences of waiving his rights.
On December 3, 2021, the circuit court issued an oral ruling denying Baxter’s
motions to suppress, specifically rejecting Dr. Silber’s opinion, and orally pronouncing that
the “best evidence in the case . . . is the video itself.” The court credited the officers’ testimony
that they did not believe Baxter was intoxicated, stated that it had reviewed the video more
than twice and did not see that Baxter was intoxicated or that alcohol had any influence in
the interview process, and specifically found that Baxter was not intoxicated during the
interrogation. The court recognized that Baxter exhibited “some strange behavior” but noted
that Dr. Silber never said Baxter suffered a mental breakdown during the interrogation. The
court reasoned that Baxter was a twenty-four-year-old high-school graduate with no evidence
to indicate that he had a low IQ and thus was old enough to understand the circumstances;
agreed to go to the police station and rode there in his father’s car; and was “properly” read
Miranda warnings and the Rule 2.3 rights form, both of which he initialed and signed. The
8 court found that the entire interview did not last more than two hours; that the officers did
not brandish their weapons or hover over Baxter during the interrogation; and that Baxter’s
father was present, able to hear what was happening, and participated. Regarding Baxter’s
statement to Everetts that it would be “nice if I could go home,” the circuit court found
Baxter never asked for an attorney and never “specifically asked for the interview to cease.”
The court entered a written order on March 30, 2022, denying Baxter’s motions to suppress,
and on April 12, Baxter entered a conditional guilty plea reserving his right to appeal the
suppression issues.
When reviewing the denial of a motion to suppress evidence, the appellate courts
conduct a de novo review based on the totality of the circumstances, reviewing findings of
fact for clear error and determining whether those facts give rise to reasonable suspicion or
probable cause. Baird v. State, 357 Ark. 508, 513, 182 S.W.3d 136, 139 (2004). We will not
reverse the circuit court’s decision unless it is clearly against the preponderance of the
evidence. Fricks v. State, 2016 Ark. App. 415, at 4, 501 S.W.3d 853, 856. We give due weight
to inferences drawn by the circuit court, recognizing that it has a superior opportunity to
determine the credibility of witnesses and weight to be given to their testimony. Batchelor v.
State, 2014 Ark. App. 682, at 2, 450 S.W.3d 245, 246.
I. Violation of Arkansas Rules of Criminal Procedure 2.2 and 2.3
Baxter contends that law-enforcement officers violated his rights under Arkansas
Rules of Criminal Procedure 2.2. and 2.3 by implying that he was required to go to the police
station and failing to inform him that he had no legal obligation to do so. The State responds
9 that the police made it clear to Baxter that his appearance was voluntary. The relevant rules
provide the following:
(a) A law enforcement officer may request any person to furnish information or otherwise cooperate in the investigation or prevention of crime. The officer may request the person to respond to questions, to appear at a police station, or to comply with any other reasonable request.
(b) In making a request pursuant to this rule, no law enforcement officer shall indicate that a person is legally obligated to furnish information or to otherwise cooperate if no such legal obligation exists. Compliance with the request for information or other cooperation hereunder shall not be regarded as involuntary or coerced solely on the ground that such a request was made by a law enforcement officer.
Ark. R. Crim. P. 2.2 (2022).
If a law enforcement officer acting pursuant to this rule requests any person to come to or remain at a police station, prosecuting attorney’s office or other similar place, he shall take such steps as are reasonable to make clear that there is no legal obligation to comply with such a request.
Ark. R. Crim. P. 2.3 (2022). A police officer is not required to make an express statement
that the person is under no legal obligation to comply; the question is whether a reasonable
person would feel free not to comply. Green v. State, 2012 Ark. 347, at 7, 423 S.W.3d 62, 67.
Here, Officer Parsons testified that he told Baxter, “[T]he Kensett Police Department
does want to speak to you . . . if you’re willing to come up to the PD.” He specifically said
that he did not tell Baxter he had to go. Officer Parsons then told Baxter’s father, “I’ll let
you bring him up there.” Moreover, as soon as Baxter arrived at the police station, police
provided him with a Rule 2.3 rights form and read his Miranda rights to him. Baxter executed
both forms. Further, there is no evidence in the record that Baxter was threatened. We hold
10 that the circuit court did not clearly err in denying Baxter’s motion to suppress his
interrogation on this basis. Charland v. State, 2011 Ark. App. 4, 380 S.W.3d 465 (holding
suppression not required when officers failed to expressly inform defendant that he was not
legally obliged to comply with officers’ request to accompany them to police station where
police officers did not threaten defendant in any way when asking defendant to go to station,
defendant and his wife traveled to station in their own vehicle, and defendant was advised
of his Miranda rights before statements were made).
II. Violation of Arkansas Rules of Criminal Procedure 3.1 and 4.1
Baxter argues that the officers violated the Arkansas Rules of Criminal Procedure
when they prevented him from leaving the interrogation. He alleges that he was detained for
two hours and that neither Rule 3.1 nor Rule 4.1 sanctions the officers’ conduct. Rule 3.1
permits an officer to “detain any person who he reasonably suspects is committing, has
committed, or is about to commit” a crime for a period of fifteen minutes or for a reasonable
time under the circumstances. Ark. R. Crim. P. 3.1 (2022). Rule 4.1 involves the arrest of a
suspect, which did not occur in this case until after Baxter was interviewed. See Ark. R. Crim.
P. 4.1. Neither of these rules is relevant because Baxter came willingly to the police station
as discussed earlier. He was not detained under Rule 3.1, nor was he arrested before he was
interviewed.
III. Violation of the Fifth Amendment
Baxter argues that the circuit court should have suppressed his interrogation because
the police violated his right to remain silent and end the interrogation under the Fifth
11 Amendment. He points specifically to his request to his probation officer to close the door
after the investigative officers left the interrogation room during the interrogation. Everetts
said, “No. We’re running this. You sit there and shut up and don’t move.” And Baxter
replied, “Be nice if I could leave.” Everetts responded, “I’m sure it would be, buddy, but
you’re not. I told you to sit there and be quiet.” The officers then returned, and the
questioning continued. Baxter cites Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436, 473–74 (1966), in
support of his argument that if an individual indicates at any time prior to or during
questioning that he wishes to remain silent, the interrogation must end.
It is blackletter law that a defendant’s right to remain silent must be “scrupulously
honored” when it is invoked. Fritts v. State, 2013 Ark. 505, at 8, 431 S.W.3d 227, 231. The
question in this case is whether Baxter invoked that right. An invocation of the right to
remain silent must be unequivocal and unambiguous, id. at 10, 431 S.W.3d at 233, and
answering questions following a statement that attempts to invoke the right to remain silent
may waive that right by implication. Bryant v. State, 2010 Ark. 7, at 15, 377 S.W.3d 152, 161.
In support of his argument, Baxter cites State v. Kasel, 488 N.W.2d 706 (Iowa 1992),
which he contends is “nearly identical” to the case at bar. Kasel was twenty-two years old,
had been enrolled in special-education classes when in school, was of “limited abilities,” was
dependent on her parents, had been unable to maintain a job other than babysitting, and
had been charged with sexually abusing a seven-year-old boy for whom she regularly babysat.
Id. at 708. During questioning at the police station, Kasel refused to execute a waiver of her
Miranda rights, stormed out of the interrogation, and was grabbed by her arm and returned
12 to the room by an officer who told her that “the rules have changed.” Id. Crying and upset,
Kasel broke down, telling police she would tell them what happened if she could go home
with her mother. Id. at 709. The Iowa Supreme Court held that Kasel’s privilege against self-
incrimination was not honored because her “obvious attempt to end the interrogation and
rejoin her mother was met with a firm rebuke and physical restraint.” Id.
We hold that Kasel is inapposite. First, unlike Kasel, Baxter executed a waiver of his
Miranda rights before the officers began to question him. Moreover, the circuit court
specifically found no evidence that Baxter was impaired or of limited abilities. Finally, Baxter
did not “storm out” of the interrogation room indicating an unequivocal and unambiguous
invocation of his right to remain silent, and he was not physically restrained. Rather, after
the police officers left the room midway through the interview, he told his probation officer
that it would be nice if he could leave. Kasel is not persuasive.
In Standridge v. State, 329 Ark. 473, 951 S.W.2d 299 (1997), the supreme court held
that a suspect’s statement that “I ain’t ready to talk” was not an unequivocal invocation of
his right to remain silent when he continued to talk and answer questions. In addition, in
Bryant v. State, 2010 Ark. 7, at 15, 377 S.W.3d 152, 161, the supreme court held that the
following statement was not an unequivocal request to invoke the right to remain silent:
“Okay, then we’re through with this interview then.” The court reasoned that the statement
was made after the defendant had repeatedly denied committing the offense and the
detective had repeatedly refused to believe the defendant. Id. at 15, 377 S.W.3d at 161. That
is, the two had been arguing when defendant made the statement that the interview was
13 “through.” However, after making the statement, the defendant kept talking and denying his
involvement. Id. at 15, 377 S.W.3d at 161. The court held not only that this was not an
unequivocal request but also that the defendant’s willingness to continue the conversation
implicitly waived any attempt to invoke that right. Id. at 15, 377 S.W.3d at 161.
In the case at bar, during a break in the interrogation, Baxter told Everetts—who was
merely present but not a participant in the interrogation—that it would be nice if he could
leave. When the officers who were questioning Baxter returned to continue the
interrogation, Baxter continued to answer their questions and said he wanted to say what he
had to say and then “get out.” Never again did Baxter indicate that he did not want to
continue the interrogation, nor did he attempt to invoke his right to remain silent.
Therefore, we hold that Baxter’s statement to his probation officer that it would be nice if
he could leave did not constitute an unequivocal and unambiguous invocation of his right
to remain silent. And, in any case, by continuing the interrogation with the officers, he
waived this right.
IV. Violation of Fourth Amendment
Baxter argues that the circuit court should have suppressed the interrogation because
the officers violated his rights under the Fourth Amendment. He contends that when he
asked to leave and Everetts told him “you’re not” and to “sit there and be quiet,” he had
been seized for purposes of the Fourth Amendment and thus that the officers were required
to have probable cause to arrest him. The State does not dispute that Baxter transitioned
from a witness to a suspect at that point and had been “seized” for purposes of the Fourth
14 Amendment, but it contends that the officers then had probable cause at that point to detain
him.
Probable cause is determined by applying a totality-of-the-circumstances test and exists
where facts and circumstances within the collective knowledge of the officers are sufficient
to permit a person of reasonable caution to believe that an offense has been committed by
the person to be arrested. Baird v. State, 357 Ark. 508, 513, 182 S.W.3d 136, 140 (2004);
Hudson v. State, 316 Ark. 360, 364, 872 S.W.2d 68, 70 (1997); Harris v. State, 2017 Ark. App.
348, at 4, 525 S.W.3d 472, 475. Probable cause does not require the degree of proof
necessary to sustain a conviction, Harris, 2017 Ark. App. 348, at 5, 525 S.W.3d at 475, and
in assessing the existence of probable cause, our review is liberal rather than strict. Erby v.
State, 2023 Ark. App. 220, at 3–4, 663 S.W.3d 811, 814.
The record reflects that when Baxter asked to leave the interrogation, the officers had
knowledge of the following facts and circumstances. Baxter was seen by a neighbor running
in Williams’s yard immediately after the neighbor heard the shots fired. When asked to
explain why the neighbor saw him there, Baxter said, “I was on a jog, and I cut through[.]”
Baxter also gave inconsistent statements about where he was when he heard the shots on the
day of the murder—first at home, then walking in Williams’s yard on the way to get a soda,
and then on a jog. He gave conflicting statements about whether he knew Williams and
when and in what manner he had spoken with him. He initially denied knowing Williams
but later admitted that he and Williams had discussed his mowing Williams’s yard at
Williams’s home “the other day.” He said that he had not yet mowed the yard, and his
15 explanation on whether or when they had agreed he would do so was inconsistent. He also
said that he had spoken on the phone to Williams about the yard but then denied that he
had talked to him on the phone. Finally, Baxter mentioned “murder” twice—once at his
trailer and once at the initiation of the interview, both times before officers had informed
him that Williams had been killed—and then he feigned surprise later in the interview when
he was told Williams was dead. Recognizing that probable cause does not require the degree
of proof necessary to sustain a conviction and that our review in probable-cause-suppression
cases is liberal rather than strict, we hold that the officers had probable cause to believe that
Baxter had committed the offense of capital murder. Thus, the circuit court’s decision to
deny Baxter’s motion to suppress on the basis of the Fourth Amendment is not clearly against
the preponderance of the evidence.1
V. Waiver of Miranda Rights
Finally, Baxter argues that the circuit court erred in not suppressing the interrogation
because it was conducted without a voluntary, knowing, and intelligent waiver of his Miranda
rights. In order to determine whether a waiver of Miranda rights is voluntary, knowing, and
1 In deciding that probable cause existed to detain or arrest Baxter, the circuit court stated that it had reviewed “[its] notes, testimony, video, the officers were aware that there had been a report filed by the decedent regarding some criminal mischief alleging that a person who – had recently moved in the trailer park may have been the person behind – behind the criminal mischief issue.” Although the State mentioned this report in a pleading and in closing argument at the suppression hearing, no such report was ever introduced into evidence, and the record does not contain the alleged report. Despite the circuit court’s mistaken analysis including a report that is not in evidence, the circumstances outlined above are sufficient to establish probable cause.
16 intelligent, the appellate courts look to see if the statement was the product of free and
deliberate choice rather than intimidation, coercion, or deception. Flanagan v. State, 368
Ark. 143, 243 S.W.3d 866 (2006). To make this determination, we review the totality of the
circumstances surrounding the waiver, including the age, education, and intelligence of the
accused; the lack of advice as to his constitutional rights; the length of the detention; the
repeated and prolonged nature of the questioning; the use of mental or physical punishment;
and statements made by the interrogating officers and the vulnerability of the defendant.
Bryant v. State, 2010 Ark. 7, at 11–12, 377 S.W.3d 152, 159. Although mental capacity is a
factor to be considered, standing alone, it does not support suppression. Sweet v. State, 2011
Ark. 20, at 19, 370 S.W.3d 510, 523. Additionally, the fact that the defendant is not a
stranger to the criminal-justice system is a factor to be considered in determining whether a
custodial statement was voluntarily made. Id. at 19, 370 S.W.3d at 523. Finally, we will
reverse the circuit court’s ruling on this issue only if it is clearly against the preponderance
of the evidence. Id. at 19, 370 S.W.3d at 523.
The circuit court specifically found at the hearing that Baxter’s waiver of his right to
counsel and his Miranda rights was voluntary, knowing, and intelligent and provided the
following explanation: Baxter was twenty-four years old, had a high-school education, and
could read and write with no evidence that his IQ was “low or improper”; the proper rights
forms were provided and read to him, and he initialed them; the detention did not last more
than two hours; and there was no use of physical or mental punishment during the interview.
We also note that the record indicates that Baxter properly filled out the statement-of-rights
17 forms by providing his name, birth date, and Social Security number. Moreover, although
he said some things that appeared unresponsive to the officers’ questions, both officers
testified that Baxter did not appear intoxicated. The circuit court specifically found that
Baxter was not intoxicated and noted that he did not appear to be mentally impaired or of
low IQ, rendering him unable to understand his rights. In addition, Baxter refused to
consent to a search of his phone or to show the officers the scar on his back when asked,
indicating he understood his right to deny the officers’ requests. Finally, Baxter is not a
stranger to the criminal-justice system and was on probation at the time of the offense. Our
de novo review of this record does not convince us that the circuit court’s finding that he
understood his rights and that his waiver was voluntary, knowing, and intelligent was clearly
against the preponderance of the evidence.
Affirmed.
VIRDEN and KLAPPENBACH, JJ., agree.
Short Law Firm, by: Lee D. Short, for appellant.
Tim Griffin, Att’y Gen., by: Joseph Karl Luebke, Ass’t Att’y Gen., for appellee.