Noyakuk v. State

127 P.3d 856, 2006 Alas. App. LEXIS 10, 2006 WL 147589
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedJanuary 20, 2006
DocketA-8442
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 127 P.3d 856 (Noyakuk v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Noyakuk v. State, 127 P.3d 856, 2006 Alas. App. LEXIS 10, 2006 WL 147589 (Ala. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

In March 2001, Ben Noyakuk shot and killed his girlfriend, Martha Butler. A jury ultimately convicted him of first-degree murder for this homicide.

At Noyakuk’s trial, the State relied on various statements that Noyakuk made to *858 the state troopers about the homicide. Noy-akuk made these statements during a series of interviews that took place at the Anvil Mountain Correctional Center. Noyakuk was incarcerated at this correctional center as a result of his arrest on April 12, 2001 for two misdemeanors and a probation violation, all unrelated to the homicide.

The superior court found that the troopers had violated Noyakuk’s Miranda rights at the first interview, so the superior court suppressed Noyakuk’s statements from that interview. 1 However, the superior court concluded that Noyakuk’s statements from the subsequent interviews were not tainted by this Miranda violation — because, at these subsequent interviews, Noyakuk received proper Miranda warnings and waived his rights, and because Noyakuk’s statements at these subsequent interviews were voluntary. The superior court thus ruled that the State could rely on Noyakuk’s statements from these subsequent interviews.

For the reasons explained here, we agree with the superior court’s resolution of these questions, and we therefore affirm Noya-kuk’s conviction.

Underlying facts

In early 2001, Ben Noyakuk and his girlfriend, Martha Butler, were living in Nome. On April 1, 2001, Butler’s father contacted the Nome police to report that his daughter was missing. Eleven days later, on April 12th, Thomas Noyakuk (Ben Noyakuk’s brother) informed the police that Ben had told him that he had accidentally shot and killed Butler, and that he had hidden her body near the Penny River.

Based on this information, the Nome police called the Alaska State Troopers and, together, they began searching for Noyakuk. They found Noyakuk as he was traveling by snow-machine from Nome to Teller. Noyakuk was intoxicated, and he had a rifle with him.

Noyakuk was arrested for driving while intoxicated, 2 for possession of a firearm while intoxicated, 3 and for violating the conditions of his probation from an earlier criminal conviction (by drinking alcoholic beverages). However, Noyakuk was not charged with any crime in connection with the homicide. At the time of his arrest, Noyakuk was advised of his Miranda rights, but he was not interrogated. He was taken to the Anvil Mountain Correctional Facility.

Within an hour of his arrival at the correctional facility, Noyakuk was placed on “suicide watch” — ie., he was placed in administrative segregation, and corrections officers took away his clothing, so that he had only a mattress and a blanket in his cell. Prisoners on “suicide watch” are not allowed any visitors except for their attorney — and, because Noyakuk had no attorney yet, this meant that he was being held incommunicado.

Noyakuk was still on suicide watch the next morning (April 13th), when two státe troopers — Jane Schied and Terry Shepherd — came to the correctional center to interview Noyakuk about Martha Butler’s death. Corrections officers allowed Noyakuk to dress, and then they took Noyakuk to a small room adjacent to the correctional center’s booking office, where the two troopers were waiting.

The troopers informed Noyakuk that he did not have to talk to them, and that he was free to leave (ie., terminate the interview and return to his cell) at any time. In addition, when Noyakuk asked about getting an attorney, the troopers told him that he could have an attorney present during the interview if he wished, and that they would delay the interview in that case. However, the troopers did not give Noyakuk the full set of Miranda warnings before they began to question him.

During this first interview, Noyakuk told the troopers that he had accidentally shot Butler and that, after she died, he wrapped her body in a blanket and buried her under a snowbank near the Penny River.

On the afternoon of April 13th (ie., a few hours after Noyakuk’s first interview with *859 the state troopers), Noyakuk was brought to court and arraigned on the misdemeanor charges. An attorney was appointed to represent him on those charges (as well as the probation violation).

Trooper Schied returned to the correctional center in the early evening of April 15th to conduct a second interview with Noyakuk. That is, this second interview took place a little over 48 hours after the initial interview and Noyakuk’s ensuing court arraignment. This time, Schied gave Miranda warnings to Noyakuk, and he waived his rights.

At this second interview, Noyakuk presented basically the same account of the shooting (ie., that it was an accident), but his description of events varied in some details, and Schied believed that some portions of Noyakuk’s account were unlikely or did not make sense. When Schied tried to pin Noya-kuk down on some of these discrepancies, Noyakuk became “shook up”. He told Schied that he was going to end the interview, and Schied responded that this was his right. But before Noyakuk left the interview room, he told Schied, ‘You know where I am if you have any more questions.” Schied understood this to mean that Noyakuk did not object to being interviewed again at a later time.

Schied’s third interview with Noyakuk took place in the mid-afternoon of April 16th. Schied testified that she went to the correctional center shortly after noon on the 16th, intending to interview Noyakuk, but when she arrived, she discovered that Noyakuk had just had an interview with a mental health worker and he was emotionally upset. Even though Noyakuk told Schied that he was willing to speak to her, Schied declined to interview Noyakuk at that time. Instead, she advised Noyakuk that it would be better if he got some rest first. Schied left the prison and returned two hours later, at which time she conducted her third interview with Noyakuk. Again, she Mirandized Noyakuk, and Noyakuk waived his rights.

During this third interview, Noyakuk admitted that the shooting had not been an accident. Noyakuk told Schied that he shot Butler as she lay on a couch with her eyes closed (apparently unconscious). Noyakuk explained that he shot Butler because he believed that she was going to leave him. Noyakuk also informed Schied that he would be willing to help the troopers look for Martha Butler’s body. Schied told Noyakuk that she would forward this offer to her superiors.

Schied contacted Noyakuk again on the morning of April 17th (again, with Miranda warnings). She informed Noyakuk that the troopers did want Noyakuk’s assistance in searching for Martha Butler’s body, and that the troopers would return to the prison the following day (April 18th) to come get him. When the troopers returned the next day, they Mirandized

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
127 P.3d 856, 2006 Alas. App. LEXIS 10, 2006 WL 147589, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/noyakuk-v-state-alaskactapp-2006.