Vargas-Salguero v. State

185 A.3d 793, 237 Md. App. 317
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 1, 2018
Docket0159/17
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 185 A.3d 793 (Vargas-Salguero v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vargas-Salguero v. State, 185 A.3d 793, 237 Md. App. 317 (Md. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Panel: Nazarian, Reed, Beachley, JJ.

Nazarian, J.

*322 Craig Kettleman: I just think I'd look guilty if I hired a lawyer.
James McGill: No, actually it's getting arrested that makes people look guilty, even the innocent ones, and innocent people get arrested everyday. And they find themselves in a little room with a detective who acts like he's their best friend. "Talk to me," he says, "Help me clear this thing up. You don't need a lawyer, only guilty people need lawyers" and BOOM! Hey, that's when it all goes south. That's when you want someone in your corner. Someone who will fight tooth and nail. 1

We all know (from television, if nowhere else) that a person in custodial interrogation has the right to ask for counsel and that once that right is invoked, questioning must stop. The issue in this case is whether Mynor Vargas-Salguero invoked his right to counsel during questioning by Prince George's County detectives, and specifically whether the words he used conveyed that request with sufficient clarity and without ambiguity. The Circuit Court for Prince George's County found his *323 words ambiguous, and, after a trial, he was convicted of second-degree murder, robbery, and theft. He argues on appeal that his Fifth and Sixth Amendment rights were violated when detectives continued questioning him after he invoked his rights to counsel and to remain silent. We hold Mr. Vargas-Salguero invoked his Fifth (not Sixth) Amendment rights when, under these circumstances, officers continued to question him after he asked (in Spanish) for a lawyer, and we reverse the judgment and remand for further proceedings.

I. BACKGROUND

On the night of September 2, 2014, Miguel Barillas (the "victim") was killed in Langley Park by a single stab wound to the chest. While investigating the murder, detectives discovered that Mr. Barillas's phone had been taken immediately before or right after the murder. Police tracked *797 the phone to Jose Ventura, who explained that a man approached him and offered to sell it for $100. Mr. Ventura declined the offer, but loaned the man $100 and held the phone as collateral. The man gave Mr. Ventura his phone number so that he could retrieve the phone from Mr. Ventura later. That number belonged to Mr. Vargas-Salguero.

The police looked at the phone's call history and discovered a call to Glenda Matute, an acquaintance of Mr. Vargas-Salguero, that had been placed after the victim had died. When questioned, Ms. Matute told officers that Mr. Vargas-Salguero had called her late at night on September 2 nd and offered to sell her the victim's phone. Ms. Matute and another eyewitness, Hugo Cordon, also identified Mr. Vargas-Salguero as the aggressor in an altercation between Mr. Vargas-Salguero and the victim; they said that Mr. Vargas-Salguero appeared to "punch" the victim before the men walked off in separate directions. 2

*324 Detectives obtained an arrest warrant for Mr. Vargas-Salguero early in the morning on September 6, 2014. The statement of charges included first-degree murder, robbery, armed robbery, and carrying a dangerous weapon with the intent to injure. They arrested him and brought him to an interrogation room, then began questioning him at about 2:45 a.m.

Before describing the interrogation itself, though, a little context. Mr. Vargas-Salguero's first language is Spanish and he speaks some English. Two of the detectives interrogating Mr. Vargas-Salguero (Detectives Deleon and Rodriguez) spoke English and Spanish, and one (Detective Bellino) spoke only English. Most of the interrogation took place in Spanish, and the Spanish-speaking detectives occasionally translated or summarized for Detective Bellino. At times, though, Detective Bellino questioned Mr. Vargas-Salguero in English, and at other times Mr. Vargas-Salguero responded to them in English. The excerpts of the interrogation that follow come, except where otherwise noted, from the transcript prepared by the police, as they translated the discussion, but we have italicized the portions spoken in Spanish and added some further annotations to synchronize the transcripts with the actual interrogation as recorded on video. At the suppression hearing we discuss later, the circuit court had access to the video as well as the translated transcripts.

During the initial part of the questioning, Mr. Vargas-Salguero revealed that he had drunk alcohol and smoked marijuana the previous night, but he assured the detectives that he was sober as they spoke. Detective Deleon advised Mr. Vargas-Salguero of his Miranda 3 rights in Spanish. When asked if he understood his rights, Mr. Vargas-Salguero responded that he understood them perfectly. The detectives then asked Mr. Vargas-Salguero where he had been on the night of the murder, and told him (despite the arrest warrant) that he was not being accused of anything. Mr. Vargas-Salguero *325 initially denied being in Langley Park that night, but eventually admitted that he'd gone there to buy marijuana after work. He described (in Spanish) what happened next:

[DETECTIVE DELEON]: And after what did you do? When you smoked that joint that night ?
*798 A: Open the door and get my ass in the house cause I know how to hot this shit .
[DETECTIVE DELEON]: Okay, and then what happened ?
A: What do you mean what happened ?
[DETECTIVE DELEON]: Once you went inside the house, what happened ?
A: Sleep, like always .
[DETECTIVE DELEON]: And what time did you wake up ?
A: I wake up-didn't I just tell you ?
[DETECTIVE DELEON]: No, the other day. Or I don't know if it's your day off .
A: Excuse me but, you can ask me and repeat what you like and I'll answer how it is, okay? Because I don't owe you and haven't done anything to anyone. Okay? At 4:30 my sister gets up to (make) lunch. Okay ?
[DETECTIVE DELEON]: Okay .
A: At 4:30 I get up, sometimes I shower in the afternoon or sometimes I shower in the morning. Okay? So, you know, I get up at 4:30...
[DETECTIVE DELEON]: Every day ?
A: Not every day .

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Bluebook (online)
185 A.3d 793, 237 Md. App. 317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vargas-salguero-v-state-mdctspecapp-2018.