OPINION
COCHRAN, J.,
delivered the opinion of the Court
in which PRICE, JOHNSON, KEASLER, HERVEY, and HOLCOMB, JJ., joined.
A Child Protective Services (CPS) investigator interviewed appellant about the removal of his three children from the home after appellant and his wife were arrested for injury to a child. The court of appeals held that the trial court committed reversible error in allowing the CPS investigator to testify about appellant’s statements made during this custodial interview because the CPS worker did not administer Miranda warnings or follow the procedures in article 38.22 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure.1
We hold that only when a CPS investigator (or other non-law enforcement state agent) is acting in tandem with police to investigate and gather evidence for a criminal prosecution are such warnings required.2 Here there was no evidence that [524]*524the CPS worker was acting in tandem with police officers when she interviewed appellant. Thus, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting appellant’s statements.
I.
Appellant was charged with injury to a child for causing serious bodily injury to his three-year-old son, Andrew, by putting him in a tub of scalding water. He was also charged with causing bodily injury to his five-year-old son, Brydon, by hitting him with a belt.
At trial, Officer John Shelton of the Crowley Police Department testified that he was dispatched to investigate a complaint of injury to a child at appellant’s apartment. He found three-year-old Andrew lying in bed. His buttocks were severely burned, and his feet were so burned that the “skin was webbed together like a fin.” Officer Sheldon called paramedics who flew Andrew to Parkland Hospital on an ambulance helicopter. Appellant’s wife3 told the officer that Andrew had been burned three days earlier, on February 7, 2002, and that she and appellant had treated the burns with menthol shaving cream.
Later that day, appellant and his wife went to the home of their neighbor, De-Wayne Marshall, a Tarrant County deputy. Deputy Marshall and members of his church had befriended appellant’s family when it moved into a nearby apartment three months earlier. Appellant’s wife was crying, and she looked scared. Appellant, at the deputy’s urging, said that Andrew had been taken to Parkland Hospital in Dallas and explained, “I lost my temper because I’m under a lot of pressure ... [S]o I got a bathtub full of hot water, and ... I put him down in it to teach him a lesson.” Deputy Marshall told appellant that he needed to tell the Dallas police exactly what had happened, and he gave appellant ten dollars for gas. Shortly thereafter, appellant, his wife, and the three other children — Daniel, Curtis, and Brydon — returned to their apartment by car. Crowley police officers approached and arrested both appellant and his wife. The three children were taken to a foster home.
The next day, CPS investigator Deanna Lane-Martines met with appellant at the Crowley jail, where he was being held following his arrest for injury to a child. She needed to discuss the children’s placement in a foster home because there were no other parents or family members to care for them. At trial, she testified about her legal duties under the Texas Family Code: “Once children are removed [from the home], we have — once we interviewed the children, we have to notify the parents, speak to the parents, interview them within a 24-hour period.” First, she and a coworker interviewed Brydon, Curtis, and Daniel.4 When she interviewed Brydon at school that morning, she took pictures of marks on his buttocks and thighs. Next, she interviewed appellant and asked him about the marks on Brydon.
[525]*525At this point during the trial, appellant objected to Ms. Lane-Martines’s testimony,5 but the judge overruled the objection and admitted the testimony. Appellant told Ms. Lane-Martines that he had spanked Brydon several times on February 7th for soiling his pants.
The jury convicted appellant of causing serious bodily injury to Andrew and causing bodily injury to Brydon. It assessed his punishment at thirty years’ imprisonment on the first charge and ten years’ probation on the second. On appeal, the court of appeals affirmed appellant’s conviction and sentence on the first case, but it reversed his conviction for injuring Bry-don and remanded that case for a new trial. The court reasoned that when a defendant moves to suppress a statement,6 the burden shifts to the State to show that the proper constitutional and statutory warnings were given.7 We assume, however, that the court meant that the burden shifts if the defendant proves facts that would support a finding that the interrogator is an agent of the state. According to the court of appeals, the State failed to meet this burden, and therefore the trial court erred in overruling appellant’s oral motion to suppress the statement.8
The court of appeals’s published opinion in this case appears to be in conflict with several recent unpublished opinions from [526]*526two other Texas courts of appeals.9 We do not normally refer to or rely on unpublished opinions for their precedential value, but these opinions state that the law in this area is “well settled,”10 thus implying that publication was unnecessary. Given the conflict in applying our precedent, this area of law may not be entirely clear. Thus, we take this opportunity to provide guidance for the bench and bar on the important legal question: To what extent do the statutory requirements that a CPS worker report her independent investigation results to police make her a police surrogate for purposes of Miranda warnings when the person she interviews is in custody?
II.
The Fifth Amendment provides that no person “shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself ...” In Miranda v. Arizona,11 the Supreme Court held that the State may not use any statements stemming from “custodial interrogation of the defendant unless it demonstrates the use of procedural safeguards effective to secure the privilege against self-incrimination.”12 The Court specifically defined “custodial interrogation” as “questioning initiated by law enforcement officers after a person has been taken into custody or otherwise deprived of his freedom of action in any significant way.”13 The Court concluded [527]*527that compulsion is “inherent in custodial surroundings,” therefore special safeguards are required in the case of “incommunicado interrogation of individuals in a police-dominated atmosphere, resulting in self-incriminating statements without full warnings of constitutional rights.”14 The Supreme Court recognized that there is a unique danger of coercion in the police-arrestee relationship.15 Thus, the Miranda rule is intended to guard “against coercive custodial questioning by police; it protects a suspect from the possibility of physical or psychological ‘third degree’ procedures.”16
Of course, Miranda
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OPINION
COCHRAN, J.,
delivered the opinion of the Court
in which PRICE, JOHNSON, KEASLER, HERVEY, and HOLCOMB, JJ., joined.
A Child Protective Services (CPS) investigator interviewed appellant about the removal of his three children from the home after appellant and his wife were arrested for injury to a child. The court of appeals held that the trial court committed reversible error in allowing the CPS investigator to testify about appellant’s statements made during this custodial interview because the CPS worker did not administer Miranda warnings or follow the procedures in article 38.22 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure.1
We hold that only when a CPS investigator (or other non-law enforcement state agent) is acting in tandem with police to investigate and gather evidence for a criminal prosecution are such warnings required.2 Here there was no evidence that [524]*524the CPS worker was acting in tandem with police officers when she interviewed appellant. Thus, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting appellant’s statements.
I.
Appellant was charged with injury to a child for causing serious bodily injury to his three-year-old son, Andrew, by putting him in a tub of scalding water. He was also charged with causing bodily injury to his five-year-old son, Brydon, by hitting him with a belt.
At trial, Officer John Shelton of the Crowley Police Department testified that he was dispatched to investigate a complaint of injury to a child at appellant’s apartment. He found three-year-old Andrew lying in bed. His buttocks were severely burned, and his feet were so burned that the “skin was webbed together like a fin.” Officer Sheldon called paramedics who flew Andrew to Parkland Hospital on an ambulance helicopter. Appellant’s wife3 told the officer that Andrew had been burned three days earlier, on February 7, 2002, and that she and appellant had treated the burns with menthol shaving cream.
Later that day, appellant and his wife went to the home of their neighbor, De-Wayne Marshall, a Tarrant County deputy. Deputy Marshall and members of his church had befriended appellant’s family when it moved into a nearby apartment three months earlier. Appellant’s wife was crying, and she looked scared. Appellant, at the deputy’s urging, said that Andrew had been taken to Parkland Hospital in Dallas and explained, “I lost my temper because I’m under a lot of pressure ... [S]o I got a bathtub full of hot water, and ... I put him down in it to teach him a lesson.” Deputy Marshall told appellant that he needed to tell the Dallas police exactly what had happened, and he gave appellant ten dollars for gas. Shortly thereafter, appellant, his wife, and the three other children — Daniel, Curtis, and Brydon — returned to their apartment by car. Crowley police officers approached and arrested both appellant and his wife. The three children were taken to a foster home.
The next day, CPS investigator Deanna Lane-Martines met with appellant at the Crowley jail, where he was being held following his arrest for injury to a child. She needed to discuss the children’s placement in a foster home because there were no other parents or family members to care for them. At trial, she testified about her legal duties under the Texas Family Code: “Once children are removed [from the home], we have — once we interviewed the children, we have to notify the parents, speak to the parents, interview them within a 24-hour period.” First, she and a coworker interviewed Brydon, Curtis, and Daniel.4 When she interviewed Brydon at school that morning, she took pictures of marks on his buttocks and thighs. Next, she interviewed appellant and asked him about the marks on Brydon.
[525]*525At this point during the trial, appellant objected to Ms. Lane-Martines’s testimony,5 but the judge overruled the objection and admitted the testimony. Appellant told Ms. Lane-Martines that he had spanked Brydon several times on February 7th for soiling his pants.
The jury convicted appellant of causing serious bodily injury to Andrew and causing bodily injury to Brydon. It assessed his punishment at thirty years’ imprisonment on the first charge and ten years’ probation on the second. On appeal, the court of appeals affirmed appellant’s conviction and sentence on the first case, but it reversed his conviction for injuring Bry-don and remanded that case for a new trial. The court reasoned that when a defendant moves to suppress a statement,6 the burden shifts to the State to show that the proper constitutional and statutory warnings were given.7 We assume, however, that the court meant that the burden shifts if the defendant proves facts that would support a finding that the interrogator is an agent of the state. According to the court of appeals, the State failed to meet this burden, and therefore the trial court erred in overruling appellant’s oral motion to suppress the statement.8
The court of appeals’s published opinion in this case appears to be in conflict with several recent unpublished opinions from [526]*526two other Texas courts of appeals.9 We do not normally refer to or rely on unpublished opinions for their precedential value, but these opinions state that the law in this area is “well settled,”10 thus implying that publication was unnecessary. Given the conflict in applying our precedent, this area of law may not be entirely clear. Thus, we take this opportunity to provide guidance for the bench and bar on the important legal question: To what extent do the statutory requirements that a CPS worker report her independent investigation results to police make her a police surrogate for purposes of Miranda warnings when the person she interviews is in custody?
II.
The Fifth Amendment provides that no person “shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself ...” In Miranda v. Arizona,11 the Supreme Court held that the State may not use any statements stemming from “custodial interrogation of the defendant unless it demonstrates the use of procedural safeguards effective to secure the privilege against self-incrimination.”12 The Court specifically defined “custodial interrogation” as “questioning initiated by law enforcement officers after a person has been taken into custody or otherwise deprived of his freedom of action in any significant way.”13 The Court concluded [527]*527that compulsion is “inherent in custodial surroundings,” therefore special safeguards are required in the case of “incommunicado interrogation of individuals in a police-dominated atmosphere, resulting in self-incriminating statements without full warnings of constitutional rights.”14 The Supreme Court recognized that there is a unique danger of coercion in the police-arrestee relationship.15 Thus, the Miranda rule is intended to guard “against coercive custodial questioning by police; it protects a suspect from the possibility of physical or psychological ‘third degree’ procedures.”16
Of course, Miranda does not apply to all custodial questioning. It generally applies only to questioning by law enforcement officers or their agents.17 There are two types of “state agents”: all [528]*528those who are employed by any state agency are, by definition, “state agents,” but only those who are working for or on behalf of police are law-enforcement “state agents.” Although state employment clearly makes a person an “agent of the State,” that label does not, by itself, make the person an “agent of the State” for the purpose of defining “custodial interrogation.” 18 Not all government workers must be familiar with and ready to administer Miranda warnings or comply with the procedural requirements of Article 38.22. As noted by Professor LaFave, when “the official has not been given police powers, Miranda has been held inapplicable to questioning by school officials, welfare investigators, medical personnel, prison counselors, and parole or probation officers.” 19
Our law recognizes that different types of state employees serve different roles. It is law enforcement’s job to ferret out crime, investigate its commission, arrest the perpetrator, and gather evidence for a possible prosecution. In pursuing this legitimate goal, the police might be tempted to use physical coercion or other illegitimate methods to gather a confession. The Supreme Court was concerned with this particular power imbalance and the resulting inherently coercive interactions when it devised the Miranda warnings.20
Child Protective Services (CPS) workers, on the other hand, have a very different set of goals and responsibilities. Their mission is to protect the welfare and safety of children in the community.21 Although this duty may at times entail the investigation of child abuse claims, that alone does not transform CPS workers into law enforcement officers or their agents.22 Nor does the fact a CPS worker is statutorily required to report suspected child abuse to law enforcement authorities transform a CPS worker into an agent of law enforcement. All citizens are statutorily required to report suspected child abuse to the authorities.23 If the obligation to report sus[529]*529pected child abuse by itself could convert a CPS worker into a law enforcement agent, then every person who suspects child abuse could be called a “law enforcement agent” in the Miranda context. This is clearly not the law, and it was certainly not the purpose of the prophylactic Miranda warnings.
For the most part, CPS caseworkers, who are investigating family placement and safety matters, and police officers, who are investigating criminal matters, run on separate parallel paths. Both are interested in gathering information. While police are collecting information for an arrest and criminal prosecution, CPS workers are investigating to find safe housing and protection for abused or neglected children. When a state-agency employee is working on a path parallel to, yet separate from, the police, Miranda warnings are not required.24
On the other hand, if the once-parallel paths of CPS and the police converge, and police and state agent are investigating a criminal offense in tandem, Miranda warnings and compliance with article 38.22 may be necessary.25 At this point, a CPS worker may be viewed as an agent of the police. The term “agency” denotes a consensual relationship which exists between two persons or parties where one of them is acting for or on behalf of the other.26 The law does not, however, presume an agency relationship. The person alleging such a relationship has the burden of proving it.27 But if a defendant does prove that a particular person — whether CPS caseworker, teacher, preacher, probation officer, or mere family friend — is, in fact, working for or on behalf [530]*530of the police by interrogating a person in custody, that agent is bound by all constitutional and statutory confession rules, including Miranda and Article 38.22.28
It is sometimes difficult to determine whether the two paths, that of the police and that of CPS, are parallel or whether they have converged in a particular case. To do so, courts must examine the entire record. Central to this evaluation are the actions and perceptions of the parties involved: the police, the CPS caseworker (or other potential agent of the police), and the defendant himself.
First, courts should look for information about the relationship between the police and the potential police agent. Did the police know the interviewer was going to speak with the defendant? Did the police arrange the meeting? Were the police present during the interview? Did they provide the interviewer with the questions to ask? Did they give the interviewer implicit or explicit instructions to get certain information from the defendant? Was there a “calculated practice” between the police and the interviewer that was likely to evoke an incriminating response from defendant during the interview? 29 And finally, does the record show that the police were using the agent’s interview to accomplish what they could not lawfully accomplish themselves?30 In sum, was law enforcement attempting to use the interviewer as its anointed agent?
Second, courts should examine the record concerning the interviewer’s actions and perceptions: What was the interviewer’s primary reason for questioning the person? Were the questions aimed at gaining information and evidence for a criminal prosecution, or were they related to some other goal? How did the interviewer become involved in the case? Did the interviewer help “build a case” that led to the person’s arrest,31 or was the interviewer pursuing some other goal or performing some other duty? At whose request did the interviewer question the arrestee? In sum, did the interviewer believe that he was acting as an agent of law enforcement?
Finally, courts should examine the record for evidence of the defendant’s perceptions of the encounter. When the defendant was interviewed, did he believe that he was speaking with a law-enforcement agent, someone cloaked with the actual or apparent authority of the police? What gave him this impression?32 Alter[531]*531natively, would a reasonable person in defendant’s position believe that the interviewer was an agent of law enforcement?33
At bottom, the inquiry is: Was this custodial interview conducted (explicitly or implicitly) on behalf of the police for the primary purpose of gathering evidence or statements to be used in a later criminal proceeding against the interviewee?34 Put another way, is the interviewer acting as an “instrumentality” or “conduit” for the police or prosecution?35 Most simply: is the interviewer “in cahoots” with the police?
III.
Appellant argues that the court of appeals did not conclude that Ms. Lane-Martines was an agent of law enforcement. He contends that the factual findings by the court of appeals were
pure dicta. The court did not rely on them in any way for its decision, nor were they necessary to that decision. The courts full reliance for its holding was that once Appellant moved to suppress, the burden was on the State to establish the giving of Miranda /38.22 warnings, and the State did not go forward to meet that burden.36
[532]*532We conclude, however, than appellant misconstrues the law and reads the court of appeals’s opinion too literally. The mere filing of a motion to suppress does not thrust a burden on the State to show compliance with Miranda or article 38.22 warnings unless and until the defendant proves that the statements he wishes to exclude were the product of custodial interrogation. Thus, the State has no burden at all unless “the record as a whole clearly establishe [s]” that the defendant’s statement was the product of custodial interrogation by an agent for law enforcement.37 It is the defendant’s initial burden to establish those facts on the record.
We turn now to the record in this case to decide whether the court of appeals was mistaken in holding that the trial court abused its discretion in implicitly concluding that Ms. Lane-Martines was not an agent of law enforcement who was required to comply with Miranda warnings and all of the procedures required under article 38.22.
This record is, at best, sparse. The record does show that Ms. Lane-Martines, the CPS investigator, met with appellant for the first time on February 11, 2002, when he was already in custody on the charges concerning Andrew’s burns. It is unclear from the record whether the police or the hospital called CPS, but CPS took custody of the children because both of their parents had been arrested and there were no other known family members. What is evident from the record is that Ms. Lane-Martines visited appellant in jail as part of a routine CPS procedure. She had a duty imposed by the Texas Family Code to notify and interview parents within one working day of their children’s removal from the home.38 It was for this purpose, rather than any law enforcement purpose, that she met with appellant. Furthermore, the record fails to show that there was any “calculated practice” between Ms. Lane-Martines and the police which was likely to elicit an incriminating response. Nor does the record show that the police used Ms. Lane-Martines to accomplish what they could not lawfully accomplish themselves. In fact, it appears that the police were not involved in the CPS investigation at all.39
The court of appeals stated that appellant proved that Ms. “Lane-Martines interrogated him about his culpability concerning the instant offense,”40 that appellant was in jail for the instant offense, that she was employed by a state agency, that “she knew when she went to the jail to interview appellant that, when she questioned a defendant and made documentation of what he told her, the report of the questioning would be forwarded by duty of law to the police agencies[,]” and that “she turned over the results of her interrogation to the Crowley police; and that information was used as a basis for prosecuting appellant.”41 But the mere fact that Ms. [533]*533Lane-Martines may have told police about appellant’s incriminating statement is not sufficient to transform her into an agent of law enforcement.
There is nothing in the record to indicate that the investigating police knew about Ms. Lane-Martines’s interview, that they spoke to her before the interview, that they asked her to question appellant at all or in any particular manner, or that they made any attempt to use her as a conduit for interrogation purposes. Nor is there anything in this record that indicates that it was Ms. Lane-Martines’s intention to investigate on behalf of, or in tandem with, the Crowley police.
Finally, there is nothing in the record concerning appellant’s perceptions or how he viewed Ms. Lane-Martines’s purposes in asking him about Brydon. Therefore, we can only evaluate the situation from the standard of a reasonable person in appellant’s position. Ms. Lane-Martines told appellant that she was a CPS investigator there to interview him and inform him about the “removal” status of his children because there was no available family member to take custody. Without more information to the contrary, we cannot conclude that a reasonable person in appellant’s position would have believed that Ms. Lane-Martines was an agent of law enforcement.
In sum, based on this record, the trial court did not abuse its discretion when it implicitly concluded that Ms. Lane-Mar-tines was not acting as an “agent of law enforcement” for the purposes of Miranda when she interviewed appellant, and therefore admitted her testimony about appellant’s statement concerning how he had spanked Brydon. In this particular situation, the trial court’s ruling that the CPS investigator was not an agent of law enforcement was within the zone of reasonable disagreement. The court of appeals was mistaken in concluding otherwise.
Therefore, we reverse the judgment of the court of appeals, and affirm the judgment of the trial court.
WOMACK, J., concurred in the result.
MEYERS, J., not participating.
KELLER, P.J., filed a concurring opinion.