Soolook v. State

447 P.2d 55, 1968 Alas. LEXIS 195
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 8, 1968
Docket908
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 447 P.2d 55 (Soolook v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Soolook v. State, 447 P.2d 55, 1968 Alas. LEXIS 195 (Ala. 1968).

Opinion

OPINION

RABINOWITZ, Justice.

After trial by jury Reginald Soolook was found guilty of the crime of murder in the second degree. 1 Appellant was thereafter sentenced to life imprisonment. The primary issue in this appeal involves the trial court’s admission into evidence of two separate confessions which were made by appellant. It is argued that these confessions should have been excluded because prior to appellant’s confessions the law enforcement authorities involved failed to comply with the criteria announced in Miranda v. State of Arizona. 2

The record shows that on the morning of February 7, 1966, Hannah Teayoumeak was found dead in the snow behind a bowling alley at Nome, Alaska. After a joint investigation which was conducted by the Nome City Police and the Alaska State Police, the district attorney of Nome signed a complaint which charged appellant with the first degree slaying of Hannah Teayoumeak. On the basis of this complaint a warrant for appellant’s arrest was issued by the district magistrate in Nome.

Thereafter, Trooper Lowell Parker of the Alaska State Police and Homer Throne, Chief of Police of the city of Nome, flew *57 to Teller to arrest appellant. 3 After their arrival in Teller the officers proceeded to the home of appellant’s parents where they were informed that appellant was down the street visiting at a friend’s home. Trooper Parker testified that he located appellant and stated, “I asked Mr. Soolook if he was Reginald Soolook and he said, ‘yes.’ ” Trooper Parker further stated that he then asked appellant if he had returned from Nome yesterday or the day before and that after appellant answered affirmatively, appellant was requested to accompany the two officers back to the elder Soolook’s residence.

After returning to the Soolook home the following occurred, according to Trooper Parker’s testimony:

I advised him of the fact that he did not have to talk to us if he didn’t wish to, that he could have a lawyer and that whatever he said could be used against him * * *
* * * * * *
I asked Mr. Soolook if he understood what I meant when I had advised him, he said yes he understood. 4

According to Trooper Parker, appellant then asked both the Chief of Police of Nome and Parker himself if they would step into the bedroom as appellant wanted to talk to them in private. Once in the bedroom appellant was asked by Trooper Parker if he had killed Hannah Teayoumeak. Appellant then admitted that he had. At this point Trooper Parker handed appellant a copy of the warrant and placed him under arrest.

Appellant then gathered several items of luggage from his bedroom and

walked out into the living room and * * * told his father and step-mother that he had something he would like to tell them. So his father was sitting on the bed. He went over to his father and says I killed Hannah and broke down and started crying. 5

Officers Parker and Throne, together with appellant, then returned to Nome in a light aircraft the officers had previously chartered. During this flight, Trooper Parker asked appellant what he had used to kill Hannah and appellant informed him that he had used a knife. In response to Parker’s further questions, appellant stated he had thrown the knife away and would show them the area where he had disposed of the knife. Upon arrival at Nome, appellant pointed out the area where he had thrown the knife. Appellant was then taken directly to the district attorney’s office in Nome.

Fred D. Crane, district attorney for the Second Judicial District, testified that upon meeting appellant in his office he advised appellant

that he did not have to make any statements at this time. I advised him that he had the right to remain silent now any time during the proceedings. I particularly advised him that he had a right to an attorney at this time or during any of the proceedings. I further told him that if he was unable to get an attorney that an attorney would be appointed for him. I asked him if he completely understood his rights, his answer was yes. 6

After a short interval of time, appellant said, “Oh, well, I might as well tell you about it now.” Appellant was then interrogated by Officers Parker, Throne, and *58 the district attorney. In this interrogation appellant confessed to the murder of Hannah Teayoumeak. After the confession was transcribed by the district attorney’s secretary, appellant asked the district attorney to “go down and see Hannah’s father and mother and tell them I’m sorry I killed Hannah.”

Prior to trial appellant’s counsel moved to suppress these confessions, as well as certain physical evidence, on the grounds that this evidence had been obtained without appellant’s having been advised of his rights as required by Miranda v. Arizona 7 and without appellant having knowingly and intelligently waived these same rights. Additionally, appellant asserted that this evidence should have been suppressed because it represented the poisoned fruit of an unlawful arrest. In appellant’s view the arrest was illegal because the complaint itself did not disclose that it was issued upon probable cause.

The superior court ruled inadmissible the oral confession given at Teller to Officers Parker and Throne on the ground that appellant had not been advised that if he was indigent an attorney could be appointed to be present and represent him during any police interrogation; that the confession made to appellant’s father and step-mother in the presence of Officers Parker and Throne was admissible because it was a voluntary statement and not the result of any police interrogation; and that the confession given to the district attorney at Nome was admissible because prior to its utterance appellant had been properly advised of his Miranda rights and had knowingly and intelligently waived them. During the course of the trial which took place in July 1967 at Nome, a mistrial was declared and the case was reset for trial at Anchorage on August 7, 1967. Prior to the actual taking of evidence, the trial court made similar rulings to the ones it had previously made in regard to appellant’s confessions. At the second trial, the prosecution introduced into evidence the confessions made by appellant to his parents in the presence of the police officers, as well as the confession given to the district attorney at his office in Nome.

Miranda v. Arizona, 8 which was decided approximately four months after appellant had made the two confessions in question, established constitutional criteria for the admissibility of statements obtained during custodial police interrogation. In Miranda the Supreme Court of the United States held that

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Bluebook (online)
447 P.2d 55, 1968 Alas. LEXIS 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/soolook-v-state-alaska-1968.