United States v. Thomas Wooten

602 F. App'x 267
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 25, 2015
Docket13-1566
StatusUnpublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 602 F. App'x 267 (United States v. Thomas Wooten) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Thomas Wooten, 602 F. App'x 267 (6th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

MARTHA CRAIG DAUGHTREY, Circuit Judge.

Thomas Wooten was indicted on six charges related to the possession, distribution, and receipt of child pornography. Before trial, Wooten moved to suppress physical evidence discovered during a search of his house, unwarned statements that he made to FBI agents during the search while he was confined in an agent’s vehicle, and a subsequent confession he gave at the FBI office after he was “Mir-andized.” The district court denied the motion as to the physical evidence and Wooten’s post -Miranda confession, but suppressed the unwarned statements Wooten made during the search after concluding that' the FBI agents elicited those statements during a custodial interrogation. A jury convicted Wooten on all six counts. Wooten now appeals the district court’s denial of his motion to suppress his post-Miranda confession, arguing that the warnings did not cure the conditions that made his initial unwarned statements inadmissible. For the reasons set out below, we affirm the district court’s judgment.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In November 2010, as part of nationwide investigation into the production and dis *268 tribution of child pornography, the FBI focused on a suspect in Indianapolis, Indiana. That investigation led agents to an internet protocol (IP) address linked to 21586 Dupont Drive in Macomb Township, Michigan. Development of an operation in New Haven, Connecticut, led agents to the same IP address. The Detroit FBI then determined that Thomas Wooten lived at the Dupont Drive address, obtained a federal search warrant for the residence, and executed it. Wooten shared the house with another tenant, Christie Teltow, and Teltow’s minor child, a daughter. To separate Wooten from the other tenants while conducting the search, agents handcuffed Wooten and placed him in the back of a sheriffs car. Wooten sat alone in the car for some period of time and then was moved to the back of FBI Special Agent William Fleming’s car, where he remained handcuffed.

While Wooten was in Agent Fleming’s car, the FBI agents asked him about his email address, about his relationship with his ex-girlfriend, who was the mother of his child, and about his access to'computers in the residence. Fleming and Chris-tianson also showed Wooten two photographs of a blond child that they had downloaded from the internet and traced to Wooten, one in which she was fully clothed and a second that showed her naked in the bathtub. When the agents asked if Wooten could identify her, he told them that she was his daughter, then three years old.

After completing the search, the agents then drove Wooten to the FBI field office in Macomb County, where they gave Wooten coffee, offered him food, and gave him an opportunity to use the restroom. Some 30 minutes after arrival, the agents advised Wooten of his Miranda rights, secured a written waiver, and began questioning Wooten. During the ensuing interrogation, the agents asked Wooten about his email address, his computer use, his internet service, and his possession, viewing, downloading, production, and distribution of child pornography. Wooten again identified photographs of his daughter, many of them depicting her nude and some of them focused on her genital area. Following interrogation, Wooten initialed a confession drafted by one of the agents and signed consent forms allowing the agents to assume his online identity and search his cell phone.

- A federal grand jury indicted Wooten on two counts of production, two counts of distribution, one count of receipt, and one count of possession of child pornography. 1 Wooten moved to suppress the images and other physical evidence discovered during the search of his house, as well as the statements he made at the FBI office. Following an evidentiary hearing, the district court denied the motion to suppress physical evidence. The district court also rejected Wooten’s argument that his statements were coerced and should be suppressed on that ground. The court then ordered supplemental briefing on whether Miranda required suppression of Wooten’s statements made at the scene and those made at the FBI office. Specifically, the parties were directed to address “whether *269 the FBI agents elicited incriminating statements during a custodial interrogation before advising Wooten of his Miranda rights ... and, if so, what effect such a violation would have on the admissibility of the written confession Wooten gave after he waived his Miranda rights.” 2

Following briefing, the district court concluded that Fleming had placed Wooten under arrest on the basis of an outstanding state warrant for unrelated domestic assault charges before he was moved from the sheriffs car to the FBI vehicle. Additionally, the district court found that “the questions asked and answered in the [FBI] agent’s car constituted interrogation” for Miranda purposes and that the FBI agents failed to give Wooten his Miranda rights before questioning him at the scene. Accordingly, the statements Wooten made during the search were suppressed. However, the district court denied Wooten’s motion to suppress the confession he subsequently made at the FBI office, finding that the later statements differed “in detail and content” from the first and “included additional information.” The district court noted that Wooten was given his rights and executed a voluntary waiver before questioning began at the FBI office. The district court thus “decline[d] to characterize [Wooten’s] two statements as one continuous statement, with Miranda warnings given ‘in the middle,’ ” and concluded that the warnings “accomplished their objective,” making his confession admissible at trial.

A jury convicted Wooten on all six counts, and the district court sentenced him to concurrent prison sentences, the longest of which was 30 years. Wooten now appeals his convictions on a single ground: that the district court erred in admitting his written confession.

DISCUSSION

“In cases involving a motion to suppress, this Court reviews the district court’s factual findings for clear error and its legal conclusions de novo.” United States v. Pacheco-Lopez, 531 F.3d 420, 423 (6th Cir.2008). We review the evidence in the light most favorable to the defendant and will conclude that a factual finding is clearly erroneous only if we are “left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed.” United States v. Navarro-Camacho, 186 F.3d 701, 705 (6th Cir.1999).

On appeal, Wooten argues that the confession he made at the FBI office should have been suppressed at trial because it was tainted by his earlier, unwarned statements at the scene. He contends that, considering the totality of • the circumstances, the Miranda warnings that he received were incapable of conveying to him that he had an “informed choice” to remain silent, citing the Supreme Court’s decision in Missouri v. Seibert, 542 U.S. 600, 612, 124 S.Ct.

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Bluebook (online)
602 F. App'x 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-thomas-wooten-ca6-2015.