RECEIVED AND FILEL
KENNEBEC SUPERIOR CC STATEO SEP 26 Zuu3 ATE OF MAINE | SUPE : CRIMINAT AO NANCY DESJAROI KENNEBEC, ss. DOCKET NO. CR-03-144 SUERK OF COURTS R9- KEN 4/6 [2009 STATE OF MAINE : v. "DECISION AND ORDER DONALD L. GARBREGHE STEPHEN BERO, LAW LIBRARY Defendant OCT 7 2005
Pending before the court is the defendant’s motion to suppress which seeks to exclude as evidence statements the defendant apparently made to his wife and stepdaughter, the alleged victim in this case.
The motion to suppress articulates the customary bases for exclusion of evidence, namely that the defendant made statements to police officers without having first been advised of his Miranda warnings or that his statements were made involuntarily. The motion also expresses a third ground to suppress which is based on the defendant’s claim that a State Police Detective, Adam Kelly, had arranged for the defendant’s wife and stepdaughter to make pretextual phone calls to the defendant during which he, apparently, made inculpatory statements. The defendant complains that these pretextual calls were arranged by Detective Kelly after the defendant had asserted his right not to make a statement and his attorney had told the detective that his client would make no statements.
Because this last contention is at the heart of the defendant’s grievance, the parties have entered into the following stipulation:
On January 3, 2003, Detective Kelly called the defendant at his attorney’s office. During this telephone conversation, the defendant said he would not make himself
available for an interview. On this same oecasion, the defendant’s attorney told Kelly that the defendant would not be making a statement. The parties agree that at this time no charges were pending, the defendant was not in custody, and he had not been provided with the Miranda warnings.
The parties have further Stipulated that on January 7, 2003, Nikki Bero, age 14, the defendant’s stepdaughter and alleged victim, called the defendant at Detective Kelly’s request for the Purpose of engaging him in a conversation which might yield inculpatory statements. To that end, Detective Kelly was present during the call and prompted Nikki with written suggestions as to the questions or statements she should pose to her stepfather.
On January 17, 2003, Detective Kelly arranged for a similar situation to occur by having the defendant's wife, Dina, call the defendant and engage him in conversation about his alleged sexual abuse of Nikki. Again, Detective Kelly was present and gave Dina questions to pose to her husband.
On neither occasion was the deferdant told of Detective Kelly’s role in making these telephone calls, his presence during them, or the purpose of the calls which was to solicit incriminating statements. Both conversations were taped. It is the contents of these statements which the defendant seek:s to suppress.
The defendant, through counsel, his recognized that his request to suppress his statements cannot rest on a violation of Miranda principles. That is because the defendant was not in custody when he was interrogated by his wife and stepdaughter. State v. Bleyl, et al., 435 A.2d 1349, 1357, n.5 (Me. 1981)(”“A defendant must be both under interrogation and in custody for Miranda warnings to be requisite”) (emphasis supplied).
The defendant also agrees that at the time of the phone calls with his wife and
stepdaughter, he had not been formally charged so that his right to have counsel assist
2 him had not “attached.” Thus, this “interrogation,” while police-influenced, did not entail an occasion in the criminal process for which the defendant had the right to legal counsel as guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment to the Constitution. “The right to counsel attaches ‘at or after the initiation of adversary judicial criminal proceedings — whether by way of formal charge, preliminary hearing, indictment, information or arraignment.’” State v. Shackelford, 634 A.2d 1292, 1295 (Me. 1993) (quoting Kirby v. Illinois, 406 U.S. 682, 689 L.Ed.2d 411, 92 S.Ct. 1877 (1972)).
He apparently also agrees that there is no factual basis to support a claim that his statements were involuntarily given as there is no evidence of compulsion or coercive police conduct that would render his statements inadmissible as violative of his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination. “A confession is voluntary if it results from the free choice of a rational mind, if it is not the product of coercive police conduct, and if under all the circumstances its adinission would be fundamentally fair.” State v. Coombs, 1998 ME 2, J 10, 704 A.2d 387, 390 (quoting State v. Mikulewicz, 462 A.2d 497, 501 (Me. 1983)).
Perhaps recognizing that these traditional bases to suppress a statement do not apply, defendant’s counsel, in a letter asking the court for an evidentiary hearing on the pending motion, also requested the court:
exercise its supervisory powers arid suppress the statements made by the
Defendant because of the outrageous conduct by Trooper Kelly in
willfully and deliberately questioning, through a third party, a defendant
who has specifically asserted his right to counsel.
While not so articulated, the court understands that the defendant’s claim of outrageous behavior by the police is, in essence, a demand that his statements be
suppressed on due process grounds. In support of this contention, he urges this court
apply a higher standard than that whict. may be found in federal jurisprudence. Our Law Court, however, has held that, “the Maine Constitution and the Constitution of the United States are declarative of identical concepts of due process.” Penobscot Area Housing Dev. Corp. v. City of Brewer, 434 A.2d 14, 24, n.9 (Me. 1981). See also State v. Cote, 1999 ME 123, J 11, n.6, 736 A.2d 262, 265 n.6. In this regard, if federal precedent were interchangeable with our own, suppression would not be available as a remedy for outrageous governmental misconduct which leads to a confession. United States v. Bouchard, 886 F.Supp. 111, 121 (D.Me. 1995).
Nevertheless, in the case of State v, McCenkie, 2000 ME 158, (19-11, 755 A.2d 1075, 1078-79, the Law Court held that a statement not obtained “within the bounds of fair play” may be suppressed as a violation of due process. In that case, a police detective interrogated the defendant in a noncustodial situation, but affirmatively misled him as to his rights, telling him that any information he gave the detective would “stay confidential.” Id., {| 4, 755 A.2d at 1077. This misadvice yielded a confession which not only contravened the express purposes of the Miranda warning, it affected the voluntariness of the statement which was provided as the result of a promise of confidentiality which would not be kept.
Thus, this court understands that the defendant seeks suppression of his statements to his wife and stepdaughter because they were obtained in a manner which “offends the community’s sense of justice, decency and fair play.” State v. McConkie, id., 19; 755 A.2d at 1078.
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RECEIVED AND FILEL
KENNEBEC SUPERIOR CC STATEO SEP 26 Zuu3 ATE OF MAINE | SUPE : CRIMINAT AO NANCY DESJAROI KENNEBEC, ss. DOCKET NO. CR-03-144 SUERK OF COURTS R9- KEN 4/6 [2009 STATE OF MAINE : v. "DECISION AND ORDER DONALD L. GARBREGHE STEPHEN BERO, LAW LIBRARY Defendant OCT 7 2005
Pending before the court is the defendant’s motion to suppress which seeks to exclude as evidence statements the defendant apparently made to his wife and stepdaughter, the alleged victim in this case.
The motion to suppress articulates the customary bases for exclusion of evidence, namely that the defendant made statements to police officers without having first been advised of his Miranda warnings or that his statements were made involuntarily. The motion also expresses a third ground to suppress which is based on the defendant’s claim that a State Police Detective, Adam Kelly, had arranged for the defendant’s wife and stepdaughter to make pretextual phone calls to the defendant during which he, apparently, made inculpatory statements. The defendant complains that these pretextual calls were arranged by Detective Kelly after the defendant had asserted his right not to make a statement and his attorney had told the detective that his client would make no statements.
Because this last contention is at the heart of the defendant’s grievance, the parties have entered into the following stipulation:
On January 3, 2003, Detective Kelly called the defendant at his attorney’s office. During this telephone conversation, the defendant said he would not make himself
available for an interview. On this same oecasion, the defendant’s attorney told Kelly that the defendant would not be making a statement. The parties agree that at this time no charges were pending, the defendant was not in custody, and he had not been provided with the Miranda warnings.
The parties have further Stipulated that on January 7, 2003, Nikki Bero, age 14, the defendant’s stepdaughter and alleged victim, called the defendant at Detective Kelly’s request for the Purpose of engaging him in a conversation which might yield inculpatory statements. To that end, Detective Kelly was present during the call and prompted Nikki with written suggestions as to the questions or statements she should pose to her stepfather.
On January 17, 2003, Detective Kelly arranged for a similar situation to occur by having the defendant's wife, Dina, call the defendant and engage him in conversation about his alleged sexual abuse of Nikki. Again, Detective Kelly was present and gave Dina questions to pose to her husband.
On neither occasion was the deferdant told of Detective Kelly’s role in making these telephone calls, his presence during them, or the purpose of the calls which was to solicit incriminating statements. Both conversations were taped. It is the contents of these statements which the defendant seek:s to suppress.
The defendant, through counsel, his recognized that his request to suppress his statements cannot rest on a violation of Miranda principles. That is because the defendant was not in custody when he was interrogated by his wife and stepdaughter. State v. Bleyl, et al., 435 A.2d 1349, 1357, n.5 (Me. 1981)(”“A defendant must be both under interrogation and in custody for Miranda warnings to be requisite”) (emphasis supplied).
The defendant also agrees that at the time of the phone calls with his wife and
stepdaughter, he had not been formally charged so that his right to have counsel assist
2 him had not “attached.” Thus, this “interrogation,” while police-influenced, did not entail an occasion in the criminal process for which the defendant had the right to legal counsel as guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment to the Constitution. “The right to counsel attaches ‘at or after the initiation of adversary judicial criminal proceedings — whether by way of formal charge, preliminary hearing, indictment, information or arraignment.’” State v. Shackelford, 634 A.2d 1292, 1295 (Me. 1993) (quoting Kirby v. Illinois, 406 U.S. 682, 689 L.Ed.2d 411, 92 S.Ct. 1877 (1972)).
He apparently also agrees that there is no factual basis to support a claim that his statements were involuntarily given as there is no evidence of compulsion or coercive police conduct that would render his statements inadmissible as violative of his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination. “A confession is voluntary if it results from the free choice of a rational mind, if it is not the product of coercive police conduct, and if under all the circumstances its adinission would be fundamentally fair.” State v. Coombs, 1998 ME 2, J 10, 704 A.2d 387, 390 (quoting State v. Mikulewicz, 462 A.2d 497, 501 (Me. 1983)).
Perhaps recognizing that these traditional bases to suppress a statement do not apply, defendant’s counsel, in a letter asking the court for an evidentiary hearing on the pending motion, also requested the court:
exercise its supervisory powers arid suppress the statements made by the
Defendant because of the outrageous conduct by Trooper Kelly in
willfully and deliberately questioning, through a third party, a defendant
who has specifically asserted his right to counsel.
While not so articulated, the court understands that the defendant’s claim of outrageous behavior by the police is, in essence, a demand that his statements be
suppressed on due process grounds. In support of this contention, he urges this court
apply a higher standard than that whict. may be found in federal jurisprudence. Our Law Court, however, has held that, “the Maine Constitution and the Constitution of the United States are declarative of identical concepts of due process.” Penobscot Area Housing Dev. Corp. v. City of Brewer, 434 A.2d 14, 24, n.9 (Me. 1981). See also State v. Cote, 1999 ME 123, J 11, n.6, 736 A.2d 262, 265 n.6. In this regard, if federal precedent were interchangeable with our own, suppression would not be available as a remedy for outrageous governmental misconduct which leads to a confession. United States v. Bouchard, 886 F.Supp. 111, 121 (D.Me. 1995).
Nevertheless, in the case of State v, McCenkie, 2000 ME 158, (19-11, 755 A.2d 1075, 1078-79, the Law Court held that a statement not obtained “within the bounds of fair play” may be suppressed as a violation of due process. In that case, a police detective interrogated the defendant in a noncustodial situation, but affirmatively misled him as to his rights, telling him that any information he gave the detective would “stay confidential.” Id., {| 4, 755 A.2d at 1077. This misadvice yielded a confession which not only contravened the express purposes of the Miranda warning, it affected the voluntariness of the statement which was provided as the result of a promise of confidentiality which would not be kept.
Thus, this court understands that the defendant seeks suppression of his statements to his wife and stepdaughter because they were obtained in a manner which “offends the community’s sense of justice, decency and fair play.” State v. McConkie, id., 19; 755 A.2d at 1078. More specifically, the question here is whether Detective Kelly’s successful use of family members to solicit inculpatory statements, after he had been told by the defendant and his attorney that he wished not to be interviewed, was sufficiently outrageous that the court ought to find that this strategy violated notions of governmental fair play and therefore suppress those statements as violative of the
defendant's due process rights. While the court does not endorse or approve of Detective Kelly’s circumvention of the defendant's official, expressed wishes not to be interviewed, several observations about the circumstances of this case yield the conclusion that it ought not result in a suppression order. First, as noted, supra, Detective Kelly’s strategy entailed neither a custodial interrogation nor coercive police conduct. It also did not affirmatively mislead the defendant about his rights — the police misbehavior that resulted in suppression in McConkie, id.
Instead, it appears that the defendant was neither bullied, tricked nor coerced into speaking with his family members or responding to their questions about his alleged criminal conduct. Indeed, shortly before the telephone calls occurred, the defendant had consulted with counsel and, it may be inferred, understood the perils of talking about his alleged crimes. While the advice he received may have been limited to conversations with the police, there is no reason to believe that the defendant, or one in his position, might reasonably have understood that he could confess to family members without risk that his statements might ultimately be used against him. The issue then is what police conduct might have caused the defendant to incriminate himself, not simply the propriety of Detective Kelly’s strategy.
Viewed in this way, it is plain that Detective Kelly’s maneuvers did not cause the defendant to confess; the device used here was that the defendant would not know that the questions posed to him were police influenced or that the calls were being recorded. Had he known this, he would say, he would not have talked about his alleged crimes. Nevertheless, it must also be concluded that this deception did not induce the defendant to inculpate himself: it simply set a stage in which it was hoped he would.
Once that circumstance was created, albeit by a concealed police stratagem, the defendant’s choice to speak, and the content of his statements, were freely made and
influenced in no way by police conduct,
Were the court to order Suppression of the defendant’s statements here, it would
, Such a statement may nevertheless
amount to a violation of his due Process rights if the police obtain that statement by circumventing the defendant’s desire not to be interviewed. While such a request ought to be honored, its violation does not yet result in our jurisprudence in suppression because, as noted supra, the defendant had no right to counsel when he was interviewed. Thus, in the end, Detective Kelly’s maneuver must be seen for what it was ~ an effort to circumvent a tight the defendant did not possess, namely the right not to be interviewed before the criminal process had commenced. Accordingly, even though deceptions were used for this Purpose, as there was no trespass on any of the defendant’s identifiable rights, it also follows that the police conduct, while not here approved, did not offend “the community’s sense of justice, decency and fair play,” State v. McConkie, id., I 9, 755 A.2d at 1078, so that the defendant would be deprived of due process by the admission of his alleged confession into evidence.
Based on the foregoing, the clerk, is to make the following entry:
LOE
John R. Atwood Justice, Superior Court
Motion to Suppress is DENIED.
So ordered.
Dated: September_@S _ 2003
STATE OF MAINE
vs
STEPHEN BERO 60 OLD LEWISTON ROAD NORTH MONMOUTH ME 04265
DOB:
10/22/1971
Attorney: WALTER MCKEE
LIPMAN & KATZ PA
227 WATER STREET
PO BOX 1051
AUGUSTA ME 04332-1051 RETAINED 04/18/2003
Filing Document: INDICTMENT Filing Date: 04/18/2003
Charge (s)
GROSS SEXUAL ASSAULT 17-A 253(1) (B)
UNLAWFUL SEXUAL CONTACT 17-A = 255(1) (Cc)
GROSS SEXUAL ASSAULT 17-A = 253(1) (B)
UNLAWFUL SEXUAL CONTACT 17-A = 255(1) (c)
10 UNLAWFUL SEXUAL CONTACT
Class
SUPERIOR COURT KENNEBEC, ss.
Docket No AUGSC-CR-2003-00144
DOCKET RECORD
State's Attorney: EVERT FOWLE
Major Case Type: FELONY (CLASS A,B,C)
05/17/1997 MONMOUTH
05/17/1998 MONMOUTH
05/17/1999 MONMOUTH
05/17/2000 MONMOUTH
05/17/2001 MONMOUTH
Printed on:
09/26/2003 17-A
255 (1) (c)
Docket Events:
04/18/2003 FILING DOCUMENT -
04/18/2003
04/18/2003 04/18/2003
04/22/2003
04/23/2003
04/25/2003
TRANSFER - TRANSFER -
Charge (s): HEARING -
NOTICE TO BAIL BOND
OR $2,000 WARRANT -
WARRANT - WARRANT -
CERTIFIED BAIL BOND
Class c
INDICTMENT FILED ON 04/18/2003
BAIL AND PLEADING GRANTED ON 04/18/2003
BAIL AND PLEADING REQUESTED ON 04/18/2003
1,2,3,4,5
ARRAIGNMENT SCHEDULED FOR 04/25/2003 @ 9:00
PARTIES /COUNSEL
~ $20,000.00 SURETY BAIL BOND SET BY COURT ON 04/18/2003
CASH
ON COMP/INDICTMENT REQUESTED ON 04/18/2003
ON COMP/INDICTMENT ORDERED ON 04/18/2003
ON COMP/INDICTMENT ISSUED ON 04/18/2003
COPY TO WARRANT REPOSITORY - $2,000.00 CASH BAIL BOND FILED ON 04/22/2003
Bail Receipt Type: CR
Bail Amt:
Date Baile
Conditions of Bail:
WARRANT -
ARRESTED B WARRANT -
Charge(s): HEARING -
DEFENSE ATTORNEY CALLED AND SAID HE WAS UNAB
FOR 4/24/0 Charge (s):
$2,000
d: 04/19/2003
Receipt Type: CK Prvdr Name: STEPHEN BERO Rtrn. Name: ELIZABETH BERO
ON COMP/INDICTMENT EXECUTED ON 04/19/2003
Y MONMOUTH P.D.
ON COMP/INDICTMENT RETURNED ON 04/23/2003
ARRAIGNMENT CONTINUED ON 04/22/2003
3 AT 8:30
1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10
LE TO APPEAR ON 4/25.
HEARING ~- ARRAIGNMENT SCHEDULED FOR 04/24/2003 @ 8:30
1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10 ARRAIGNMENT HELD ON 04/24/2003
DONALD H MARDEN , JUSTICE
Attorney:
WALTER MCKEE
Page
of
STEPHEN BERO AUGSC~-CR-2003-00144 DOCKET RECORD
ARRAIGNMENT RESCHEDULED
Printed on: 09/26/2003 04/25/2003
04/30/2003
05/13/2003
05/20/2003
06/20/2003
09/26/2003
STEPHEN BERO AUGSC-CR-2003-00144 DOCKET RECORD
DA: QUINN KELLEY READING WAIVED. DEFENDANT BAIL BOND -
Reporter: JANETTE COOK DEFENDANT INFORMED OF CHARGES. 21 DAYS TO FILE MOTIONS
$2,000.00 CASH BAIL BOND CONTINUED AS POSTED ON 04/24/2003
NO CONTACT WITH NIKKI BERO OR DINA BERO
Charge (s); 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10
PLEA - NOT GUILTY ENTERED BY DEFENDANT ON 04/24/2003 Charge(s): 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10
PLEA - NOT GUILTY ACCEPTED BY COURT ON 04/24/2003
MOTION - MOTION FOR DISCOVERY FILED BY DEFENDANT ON 05/13/2003 MOTION - MOTION TO SUPPRESS FILED BY DEFENDANT ON 05/13/2003 HEARING - MOTION TO SUPPRESS SCHEDULED FOR 06/03/2003 @ 9:00
NOTICE TO PARTIES/COUNSEL HEARING - MOTION FOR DISCOVERY SCHEDULED FOR 06/03/2003 @ 9:00
NOTICE TO PARTIES/COUNSEL HEARING - CONFERENCE SCHEDULED FOR 06/26/2003 @ 8:15
NOTICE TO PARTIES/COUNSEL
HEARING - MOTION FOR DISCOVERY HELD ON 06/03/2003 JOHN R ATWOOD , JUSTICE
DA: PAUL RUCHA Reporter: LAURIE GOULD
Defendant Present in Court
HEARING - MOTION TO SUPPRESS HELD ON 06/03/2003 JOHN R ATWOOD , JUSTICE Attorney: WALTER MCKEE DA: PAUL RUCHA Reporter: LAURIE GOULD
MOTION - MOTION FOR DISCOVERY GRANTED ON 06/03/2003 JOHN R ATWOOD , JUSTICE
COPY TO PARTIES/COUNSEL
MOTION - MOTION TO SUPPRESS DENIED ON 09/25/2003 JOHN R ATWOOD , JUSTICE
A TRUE COPY
ATTEST:
Clerk
Page 3 of 3 Printed on:
COPY OF INDICTMENT / INFORMATION GIVEN To