SYLLABUS
(This syllabus is not part of the opinion of the Court. It has
been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for the convenience of the
reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Supreme Court. Please
note that, in the interests of brevity, portions of any opinion may not
have been summarized).
State of New Jersey v. Thomahl S. Cook (A-66-02)
Argued November 5, 2003 -- Decided May 10, 2004
LaVECCHIA, J., writing for a majority of the Court.
In this appeal from a conviction for purposeful and knowing murder, the
primary issue considered by the Court is the admissibility of statements by defendant,
Thomahl Cook, to law enforcement officers. The statements, made during several periods of
interrogation, were not recorded electronically.
The victim, fifteen-year-old Katrina Suhan, was found dead on Sunday, February 15,
1998, having been brutally beaten. Her body was found in a wooded lot
behind a bowling alley in Old Bridge. She last had been seen around
12:30 a.m., Saturday, February 14, 1998, walking home alone from a South Amboy
roller-skating rink where she had been skating with friends Friday night.
Law enforcement officials learned of Cooks possible link to the victim on February
16, 1998, through an acquaintance of defendant, who reported to the police her
suspicion of Cooks involvement in the publicized murder. Cook had been known to
go the roller rink and had been seen interacting with the Suhan there
in the past. Cook had told his girlfriend, who was to be away
for the weekend, that he was going to the rink with a friend
Friday night. The day after the killing, Cook had cuts on one hand
and swollen knuckles, and one arm appeared to be injured.
After hearing of the suspicions about Cooks involvement the day after the
body was found, the police arrested Cook that evening on the basis of
two outstanding municipal warrants and took him to police headquarters in Somerville for
questioning about the murder.
Cook was interrogated during four sessions with the investigating authorities between 9:50
p.m. on February 16, 1998, and 8:00 p.m. on February 18, 1998, at
times by one interrogator and at times by two. The third session was
a polygraph examination. Before each session, the officers advised Cook of his Miranda
rights and he agreed to speak to them.
On February 18, 1998, around mid-day, an attorney from the Office of
the Public Defender called the Middlesex County Prosecutor, whose detectives were involved in
the interrogations. In response to questions from the attorney, the Prosecutor told him
he did not think Cook was represented by the Public Defender because the
municipal charges he was being held on during questioning were only disorderly persons
offenses and that at that point he was not intending to charge Cook
with the murder of Katrina Suhan. The Prosecutor agreed to call the Public
Defender if he decided to charge defendant with the murder.
The information Cook gave his questioners about his activities and location during
the evening of the murder varied from session to session, and ranged from
exculpatory at the outset to increasingly inculpatory. At certain points in the questioning,
Cook became emotional and his responses were extremely delayed. Ultimately, Cook confessed that
he had killed Katrina Suhan after she had rejected his sexual advances. Although
recording equipment was available during the interrogation, it was not used. According to
the officers, during the nine-hour period of questioning on February 18, 1998, Cook
was given meal, cigarette, and beverage breaks. They acknowledged that a statement normally
would be taped; however, due to Cooks emotional state, the disjointed nature of
his responses to questions, and repeated recanting or changing of his story, the
officers decided it would be better to make a written report of the
interrogation than to attempt an electronic recording.
Cook was indicted for purposeful or knowing murder, in violation of N.J.S.A.
2C: 11-3(a)(1) and 3(a)(2). Prior to trial the court considered motions regarding evidence
to be presented. The court denied Cooks motion to introduce evidence of a
local murder with some similarities to Katrina Suhans that occurred a year later,
while Cook was incarcerated.
After a Miranda hearing, the court ruled that the State could introduce at
trial the statements Cook made during the three non-polygraph interrogation sessions. (The State
did not seek to use the polygraph results.) The court found that Cook
had received the required Miranda warnings, had understood them, and had knowingly and
voluntarily waived his rights. The court concluded that Cook had made his statements
voluntarily.
The jury convicted Cook of purposeful and knowing murder. He was sentenced
to a term of sixty years of incarceration with a lengthy period of
parole ineligibility. Cook appealed to the Appellate Division, which affirmed his conviction in
an unpublished opinion, but remanded to the trial court to correct an error
in the sentence imposed.
In affirming, the Appellate Division held that Cooks statements were admissible because
the failure to record a suspects statement electronically does not in and of
itself constitute a violation of due process, but is a factor to be
weighed in assessing the reliability of the statement. Also, the panel held that
Cooks rights had not been violated by the failure of the prosecutor to
inform him that a public defender had called while he was being questioned,
noting that no attorney-client relationship existed at the time of the call. Finally,
the court concluded the trial court had not erred in refusing to admit
evidence of the later murder.
The Supreme Court granted Cooks petition for certification.
HELD : The statements Thomahl Cook made during questioning by police were properly admitted
into evidence at his murder trial. Electronic recordation of a custodial interrogation is
not required as a matter of due process under the New Jersey Constitution.
Pursuant to the Supreme Courts supervisory authority over the criminal justice system, the
Court will establish a committee to examine and make recommendations on the use
of electronic audio and video recording of custodial interrogations.
1. There was no attorney-client relationship between Cook and the public defender at
the time the public defender asked the prosecutor about defendant, so the authorities
had no duty to inform him of the contact and there was no
violation of Cooks privilege against self-incrimination. (pp. 16-20).
2.Only two state supreme courts have held that custodial interrogations must be recorded
electronically, one as a matter of due process under the Alaska Constitution, the
other, under the Supreme Court of Minnesotas supervisory powers over the criminal justice
process. Two other states have enacted legislation requiring electronic recording of interrogations. There
are perceived to be both benefits and drawbacks to recording custodial statements. Among
the benefits are a more accurate picture of the circumstances surrounding the statement,
an objective record of the statement, the enhanced ability of the trier of
fact to assess credibility and weigh evidence, and a curtailed opportunity to make
false allegations against police. Cited drawbacks to an absolute requirement of recording include
the reluctance of some suspects to speak candidly on camera and the expense
of equipment, transcription, and modifications to facilities. (pp. 20-30).
3. The imposition of a rule precluding the admissibility of a confession solely
because it was not recorded electronically would have significant consequences. The interests of
suspects and law enforcement must be balanced, and there is no uniformity in
view or practice in how electronic recording procedures are or should be implemented.
Because of the fair-minded disagreement in this area, the failure of the police
to record Cooks statements electronically did not deprive him of due process and
render his statements inadmissible. (pp. 31-33).
4. Recording custodial interrogations electronically would benefit those involved in the criminal justice
process by addressing concerns in the areas of reliability and trustworthiness of confessions.
Entities in the executive and legislative branches of government are exploring the subject
of electronic recording of statements and interrogations. The judiciary is responsible for the
proper administration of criminal justice, and it is time for the Supreme Court
to evaluate fully the protections electronic recordation provides criminal defendants and the State.
The Court will establish a committee to study and make recommendations on the
use of electronic recordation of custodial interrogations. (pp. 33-36).
5. The factors considered by the trial court at the suppression hearing and
the standards applied by the court in evaluating Cooks condition support the courts
conclusion that Cook has not shown that he was subject to substantial psychological
pressure warranting suppression of his statements. In addition, the State met its burden
of producing sufficient evidence to corroborate Cooks confession for purposes of letting the
jury decide the confessions reliability. The verdict was not against the weight of
the evidence. (pp.37-42).
6. There was no clear error of judgment or manifest denial of justice
in the trial courts determination to bar Cook from introducing exculpatory evidence of
a similar murder committed while Cook was incarcerated. (pp. 42-46).
Judgment of the Appellate Division is AFFIRMED.
JUSTICE LONG has filed a separate dissenting opinion in which she states her
view that pursuant to the Courts supervisory authority, the Court should declare now
that all criminal interrogations must be recorded electronically, where feasible, when the interrogation
takes place at police headquarters or another place of detention. She would leave
to a committee only a charge to make recommendations regarding the details and
specifics of electronic recording.
CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ and JUSTICES VERNIERO, ZAZZALI, and WALLACE join in JUSTICE LaVECCHIAs
opinion. JUSTICE LONG has filed a separate dissenting opinion. JUSTICE ALBIN did not
participate.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
A-
66 September Term 2002
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
THOMAHL S. COOK,
Defendant-Appellant.
Argued November 5, 2003 Decided May 10, 2004
On certification to the Superior Court, Appellate Division.
Marcia H. Blum, Assistant Deputy Public Defender, argued the cause for appellant (Yvonne
Smith Segars, Public Defender, attorney).
Paul H. Heinzel, Deputy Attorney General, argued the cause for respondent (Peter C.
Harvey, Attorney General of New Jersey, attorney).
Leslie Stolbof Sinemus argued the cause for amicus curiae, Association of Criminal Defense
Lawyers of New Jersey.
Marcia N. Levy, Steven A. Drizin, a member of the Illinois bar, and
Barry C. Scheck, a Member of the New York and California bars, submitted
a brief on behalf of amici curiae Northwestern University School of Laws Center
on Wrongful Convictions, Innocence Project at Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law and
Rutgers University Law School Innocence Project for Justice (Ms. Levy, attorney; Ms. Levy,
Mr. Drizin and Mr. Scheck, on the brief).
JUSTICE LaVECCHIA delivered the opinion of the Court.
Defendant Thomahl Cook appeals his conviction for the purposeful and knowing murder of
Katrina Suhan. He asserts various arguments contending that his statements to investigating law
enforcement officers improperly were admitted into evidence. Among them, defendant urges us to
find that state due process requirements impose on police officers a duty to
record electronically an accuseds statements made during a custodial interrogation, and that the
failure to record requires suppression of his incriminatory statements. Defendant also argues that
the trial court erred in refusing to admit evidence that suggested the guilt
of an unidentified third party and that the verdict was against the weight
of the evidence.
We find no reversible error and, therefore, affirm the judgment of conviction entered
against him. In respect of the assertion that custodial interrogations must be recorded
electronically, we decline to expand the due process requirements of the New Jersey
Constitution to encompass a duty that the police record electronically a custodial interrogation,
and note specifically the absence of any legislative action to support such a
requirement. That said, we conclude that, as part of our supervisory authority over
the criminal justice system, we will establish a committee to examine and make
recommendations on the use of electronic audio and video recording of custodial interrogations.
The committee shall seek input from the competing interests of law enforcement, at
the State and local levels, and the public defender and the criminal defense
bar. In sum, we conclude that it would be inappropriate to impose sweeping
changes in law enforcement practices of the sort advanced by defendant without notice
and without permitting thorough consideration of the policy and financial implications of those
changes.
I.
The facts necessary to the disposition of the issues on appeal are recited
below. They have been gleaned from the record developed during pre-trial motion applications
and at trial.
Fifteen-year-old Katrina Suhan was murdered sometime in the early morning hours of Saturday,
February 14, 1998. She was seen last on that date at about 12:30
a.m., walking home from Roller Magic, a South Amboy roller-skating rink where she
and her girlfriends frequently skated. A friend who had been with her, classmates
driving by, and a security guard closing the rink, saw her walking alone
on Stevens Avenue in South Amboy. Ordinarily it would have been at least
a fifteen-minute walk from the rink to her home. At sometime between 12:30
and 1:00 a.m., a resident of Stevens Avenue heard a male and a
female arguing outside his window. The male voice was saying Come on. Lets
go, and the female voice was saying, No, Im not going nowhere with
you. Shortly thereafter, the resident thought he heard a scream come from across
the street. Another neighbor on Stevens Avenue also heard a girl screaming, Leave
me alone. Dont touch me. Help me at approximately 12:15 a.m. That resident
testified that she heard two male voices urging the girl to shut up
and to be quiet.
Katrinas body was found on the afternoon of Sunday, February 15 in a
rough wooded lot behind the Hill Lanes bowling alley located in the neighboring
town of Old Bridge. The bowling alley was approximately three miles from where
Katrina was last seen. She had been brutally beaten. Her body was positioned
face downward and a jacket covered her head; her pants had been pulled
below her waist. Large pieces of concrete lay atop her hands and head
and an overturned red shopping cart was situated in front of, and partially
on, her body. A trail of blood led to the body and to
several rocks near her head. A forensic pathologist expressed the view that Katrina
died of blunt trauma injury to the head. There was injury also to
her left breast that was consistent with a bite mark; there were no
other physical signs of sexual assault.
Defendant, who was twenty-four years old at the time of the murder, had
been known to go to the roller rink in South Amboy and had
been observed interacting with Katrina while there.
See footnote 1
Heather McKnight, who was defendants girlfriend,
Donna Pascale, Heathers fellow tenant in Agape House (a home for young females
located in Somerville), and Robert Poquette, a tenant at the Somerville boarding home
in which defendant resided, all testified that on the night Katrina was murdered
defendant was looking for transportation to the South Amboy roller rink. According to
Pascale, defendant told her that a friend had agreed to drive him to
the rink. McKnight testified that defendant told her that he was going to
the rink with a friend named Noal. Apparently, McKnight was not planning to
be with defendant that night as she intended to stay with her sister,
who lived out of town, from Friday afternoon to Sunday afternoon.
The record reveals certain information from third parties concerning defendants whereabouts during the
evening of Friday, February 13, 1988. At approximately 9:45 p.m. that night, defendant
encountered fourteen-year-old T.S., and two of her friends, at the Bridgewater Commons Mall.
T.S. testified that she spoke with defendant at the mall for twenty minutes
to a half hour before all five departed, on foot. While walking to
T.S.s home, defendant commented to T.S. that she reminded him of Kat, a
shorthand reference that T.S. took to mean Katrina. During the walk defendant also
told her he was going to a skating rink in South Amboy to
scare someone. T.S. recalled that she entered her home sometime between midnight and
12:30 a.m. that night, and defendant left on foot five or ten minutes
before she entered the house. T.S.s mother corroborated that her daughter arrived home
at approximately midnight that evening.
Both McKnight and Pascale saw defendant on Sunday, February 15. Pascale observed that
defendant had cuts on one of his hands and that his knuckles were
swollen, and McKnight testified that defendants right arm appeared to be injured. On
Monday February 16, Pascale went to the Somerville police to report her suspicion
that defendant was involved in the publicized murder of the girl from the
roller rink.
At approximately 9:30 p.m. that evening, defendant was arrested on the basis
of two outstanding municipal warrants.
See footnote 2
He was transported to police headquarters in Somerville
for questioning about the Suhan murder. In reviewing the record concerning defendants interrogation,
we focus here on the evidence presented pre-trial at defendants Miranda hearing. There
are no video or audio tapes of defendants custodial interrogations. The entire record
consists of the reports of the investigating officers and their testimony at the
Miranda hearing.
See footnote 3
The first interrogation was conducted by Detective William Moscariotola of the Old Bridge
Township Police Department and by Investigator John Maslak of the Middlesex County Prosecutors
Office. The interrogation began at approximately 9:50 p.m. on February 16, after defendant
was advised of his Miranda rights and acknowledged that he understood them. When
the officers began questioning defendant concerning his whereabouts during the past weekend, the
officers did not tell him that he was being questioned about the murder
victim found in Old Bridge. In response to questioning, defendant told the officers
that he had not been to the South Amboy roller rink since the
Columbus Day weekend of the previous fall. He was then asked whether he
had been to the Old Bridge bowling alley during the past weekend. He
informed the officers that he had stopped there with McKnight in order for
her to use a telephone. He was unclear in respect of who was
driving. He told the two interrogating officers that while McKnight was using the
phone he had gone into the wooded area behind the building to relieve
himself. There he saw a pile that he said had a foul smell
and contained something red and that this red thing had a right angle.
After approximately ninety minutes of questioning, defendant asked whether the interview had anything
to do with the girl missing from the roller rink. The officers told
him that it did, and they then confronted him with the fact that
McKnight had been out of town for the weekend.
The interrogation continued and defendant became increasingly emotional, nervous, and halting in his
responses. At one point, defendant began to cry and told Moscariotola that, she
freaked me out. I dont know what happened. A break was taken. When
the interview resumed both officers were present in the room. Defendant, appearing to
have collected himself, recanted his earlier statement, instead claiming that he had said,
it freaked me out. A short while later defendant was shown a picture
of Katrinas body taken at the crime scene. According to both officers, defendants
comment, when shown the photo, was: I didnt sexually abuse that girl. The
officers terminated the interview at approximately three oclock in the morning.
During the course of that initial interview defendant was offered a beverage and
bathroom break after about two hours of questioning. Also, at approximately 2:15 a.m.,
after defendant had signed a consent form permitting the search of his room,
a beverage was provided to him again and Miranda warnings were readministered. Although
a tape recorder was available during the interview, the officers did not tape
any portion of the interrogation. After that initial interrogation, defendant was transported to
the Middlesex County Adult Correctional Facility in North Brunswick and held on the
municipal warrants.
Defendants second interrogation commenced at approximately 10:40 a.m. on Wednesday, February 18, at
the detention facility in which he was being held. This interrogation was conducted
by Maslak alone. Defendant was given fresh Miranda warnings and, then, during a
two-hour interview, defendant recounted a version of his whereabouts that differed from that
given in his first interview. As the questioning continued, he altered further the
version he had just provided to Maslak. Essentially, defendant provided two conflicting but
exculpatory statements placing himself far from the scene of the crime. At that
point, defendant was asked and consented to have a polygraph test administered to
him.
Investigator Angelini, a polygraph expert, was brought in. He conducted (what the motion
court later considered to be) the third interrogation of defendant, which concluded at
about 3:30 p.m. While alone with defendant, Angelini administered a pre-test polygraph and
polygraph of defendant after defendant first was given fresh Miranda warnings and he
signed consent forms for the test. Defendants statements during this portion of the
interrogation were not submitted for admission. This third interrogation is relevant only because
the negative results of the polygraph were made known to defendant during the
fourth and final interrogation.
The fourth interrogation started at about 3:30 p.m. Both Angelini and Maslak were
present during this session in which defendant made his most incriminatory statements. They
reported that defendant appeared cooperative and responsive at first. Twenty minutes into the
interview, he was told that he had failed the polygraph test. According to
Angelini, after defendant heard that, he became more pensive, withdrawn, and not as
responsive as he had been during the polygraph. His responses to questions became
extremely delayed. It was reported that he would take as long as five
minutes before responding to a question, often putting his hand to his head
as he appeared to think about how to answer. During this fourth session,
which lasted until approximately 8:00 p.m., defendant gave another version of his whereabouts
the evening of Katrinas murder. He stated that he went with a man
named Russ in a gold colored van to the Old Bridge bowling alley
vicinity. Later, he told the officers that Russ took him to South Amboy
and they both took Katrina in the van to Old Bridge, and alternatively
that he did not know how he got to South Amboy but he
remembered being on Stevens Avenue and seeing Katrina. In one version, it was
Russ who allegedly attacked Katrina. During the questioning, defendant became emotional and started
crying, trembling, and moaning.
Ultimately, defendant told the officers that he killed Katrina. He told them that
he approached Katrina when she was walking home from the rink. He stated
that after meeting up with her on Stevens Avenue near the church on
that street, he walked her to the field located behind the Old Bridge
bowling alley where he made sexual advances toward her. When she spurned him,
he became enraged and struck her in the face with his fist. According
to the officers, defendant said, She was scared. Her eyes kept looking at
me. I didnt want to see her eyes. I didnt want her eyes
to see me. Defendant struck her in the face repeatedly with a two-by-four
board that he took from a nearby pile of debris. He then hit
her head with a rock four or five times. Believing Katrina to be
dead, defendant dragged her body deeper into the field.
The officers did not record electronically the interrogation sessions that took place on
February 18. Each officer conceded at trial that a statement by an interviewee
normally would be taped; however, due to defendants emotional state, the disjointed nature
of his responses to questions posed, and his repeated recanting or changing of
his story, they believed it preferable to make a written report of the
interrogation rather than to attempt an electronically taped statement. We note here that
during the overall nine-hour period in which defendant was questioned on February 18,
he was provided with lunch (which he ate), dinner (which he declined, preferring
to have only a beverage), and beverage breaks and cigarettes. Moreover, although lengthy,
the interrogation was conducted during regular daytime hours.
Defendant was charged under Middlesex County Indictment No. 98-11-01562 with purposeful or knowing
murder, in violation of N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3a(1) and 3a(2). A Miranda hearing was conducted
in which the State sought, over defendants objection, the admission of defendants inculpatory
statements. After reviewing in summary fashion the details of each segment of defendants
interrogation, the court ruled the statements made during the first, second, and fourth
interrogations to be admissible. As noted, the State was not seeking the admission
of any statements made during the third (polygraph) portion of the interrogation. The
motion court found that the required Miranda warnings had been provided, defendant had
understood those warnings, and he had knowingly and intelligently waived his rights. The
court also determined that defendants statements had been made voluntarily. In the course
of making its findings, the court noted defendants high school education and that
he had not been subjected to any physical or mental abuse. The court
found it understandable and consistent with common sense that defendant became more emotional
as his statements became more inculpatory.
Defendant also moved in limine for permission to introduce evidence of the subsequent
January 17, 1999, murder of Nancy Noga, which had occurred while defendant was
incarcerated. Noga was close in age to Katrina. Nogas body was found near
to where she worked, in a location approximately one mile from where Katrinas
body was found. The court refused to admit the evidence, concluding that it
was too speculative notwithstanding some similarities between the murders.
Defendant was found guilty of purposeful and knowing murder following an eight-day jury
trial. He was sentenced to a term of sixty years of incarceration, with
a period of parole ineligibility of fifty years and fifteen days imposed pursuant
to the No Early Release Act (NERA), N.J.S.A. 2C:43-7.2. Defendant moved for a
new trial pursuant to Rule 3:20-1 based on newly discovered evidence. Defendant, who
is African-American, contended that a strand of hair from a Caucasian found on
a wooden board near the victim could be subjected to DNA testing and
therefore warranted a new trial. The motion was denied, but the State was
ordered nonetheless to perform DNA testing on the hair to determine if it
belonged to Katrina. Ten months afterward, the police laboratory reported that the hair
was not suitable for DNA testing.
Defendant appealed and, as part of his appeal, asserted a violation of State
v. Reed,
133 N.J. 237 (1993). Leave was granted to expand the record
to include a memorandum prepared by the Middlesex County Prosecutor memorializing a public
defender inquiry made concerning defendant. The memo in its entirety states:
MIDDLESEX COUNTY PROSECUTORS OFFICE
INTRA-OFFICE MEMORANDUM
To: FILE
From: PROSECUTOR ROBERT W. GLUCK
Date: February 20, 1998
Re: STATE V. THOMAHL S. COOK
On February 18, 1998 around mid-day I received a call from Public Defender
Tom Scully. He asked me if the Public Defenders Office represents Thomahl Cook
on the charges he was being held on (trespass out of Sayreville). I
told him that the charges were a disorderly persons so I didnt think
they would have represented him. He asked if we intended to charge Cook
with the murder of Katrina Suhan. At the time we were not and
I told him. He asked me to call him when and if we
were going to charge him. I said okay. We charged him later that
night at about 9:00 p.m.
The Appellate Division affirmed defendants conviction in an unpublished opinion, remanding only
for correction of a sentencing error.
See footnote 4
In respect of the prosecutors memorandum expanding
the record, the court observed that n
o attorney-client relationship had come into existence
at the time the public defender telephoned the prosecutor. Accordingly, the court concluded
that
there had been no violation of
Reed, supra, in the prosecutors handling
of the public defenders inquiry.
The panel further held that the failure of
law enforcement to record a suspects statement by electronic means is a factor
to be weighed when determining the statements reliability, but standing alone does not
present a violation of defendants due process rights. Finally, the Appellate Division concluded
that the trial court did not err in prohibiting defendant from presenting evidence
in respect of the Noga murder.
We granted defendants petition for certification,
175 N.J. 548 (2003).
II.
Admissibility of Defendants Statements
A. Alleged State v. Reed violation
Defendant raises multiple arguments in support of his claim that his statements to
interrogators must be suppressed. We start with his contention that the requirements of
Reed,
supra, were transgressed because the prosecutor failed to inform him that a
lawyer had contacted the prosecutor on defendants behalf while defendant was being interrogated.
Defendant argues that that failure infringed on his exercise of the privilege against
self-incrimination.
The Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution, made applicable to the states
through the Fourteenth Amendment, provides that [n]o person . . . shall be
compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself.
U.S. Const.
amend. V. In
Miranda v. Arizona,
384 U.S. 436,
86 S. Ct. 1602,
16 L. Ed.2d 694 (1966), the United States Supreme Court established that
when a person in police custody is questioned, that person must be told
that he has the right to remain silent, that any statement he makes
may be used against him, that he has the right to an attorney,
and that if he cannot afford an attorney, one will be provided for
him.
Id. at 444, 86
S. Ct. at 1612,
16 L. Ed 2d
at 706-707. A waiver of those
Miranda rights, protecting as they do a
suspects privilege against self-incrimination, must be knowing, intelligent, and voluntary, and the State
bears the burden of demonstrating that a waiver has met that test.
Ibid.
From that well-known rule, the United States Supreme Court and this Court have
established certain precepts concerning what is a knowing waiver of a defendants
Miranda
rights. While the United States Supreme Court has held that the failure of
the police to inform a defendant that his attorney was available to assist
him is irrelevant to the assessment of a suspects waiver of his
Miranda
rights,
Moran v. Burbine,
475 U.S. 412,
106 S. Ct. 1135,
89 L.
Ed.2d 410 (1986), defendant makes an argument based on additional protections provided
under State law. Specifically, defendant contends that his protections under
Reed,
supra, have
been transgressed.
In
Reed, we noted that in New Jersey the privilege against self-incrimination derives
from the common law and is codified in our statutes and rules.
133
N.J. at 250;
see also N.J.S.A. 2A:84A-19;
N.J.R.E. 503. We considered in
Reed
whether our States separate interest in preserving a defendants privilege against self-incrimination would
be served if we were to follow the approach taken in
Moran,
supra.
The defendant in
Reed was being questioned about a murder he claimed to
have witnessed. His girlfriend retained an attorney for him and that attorney attempted
to consult with the defendant while he was at the prosecutor's office. The
attorney was turned away, however, with the explanation that the defendant was not
a suspect and that the attorney had no right to walk into an
investigation. The attorney was assured that he would be called if and when
the defendant requested an attorney. Defendants questioning continued, but he was not informed
that his attorney was physically present at the office and was attempting to
confer with him. After the defendant waived his
Miranda rights, he confessed to
committing the murder.
Reed,
supra, 133
N.J. at 242-244.
In that context, we declined to follow the standard for a knowing waiver
of the privilege against self-incrimination that was established by the Supreme Court in
Moran. We held that when an attorney, who either has been retained on
behalf of a person in custody on suspicion of a crime or has
represented or is representing the suspect on another matter, is present or readily
available to assist a suspect in custody being questioned, the police must communicate
that information to the suspect in order for the suspect to make a
knowing waiver of the privilege against self-incrimination.
Reed,
supra, 133
N.J. at 269.
In such circumstances, depriving a suspect of the knowledge that his or her
attorney is present or readily accessible renders invalid the suspects subsequent waiver of
his privilege against self-incrimination.
Ibid.
A key element to the holding was that an attorney-client relationship existed between
the defendant and the attorney.
Id. at 261. Such a relationship exists when
the suspect specifically requests an attorney, when the suspect, his or her family,
or friends have retained an attorney on his behalf in the matter, or
when the attorney has represented or is representing the suspect on another matter.
Ibid. Notably, the rule laid down in
Reed does not distinguish between a
defendant who privately retains counsel and a defendant who obtains counsel through the
public defender. If the defendant asks for representation, or already has an attorney-client
relationship with a privately retained or publicly provided counsel, then the
Reed obligation
comes into force.
Thus,
Reed permits a defendant to receive the benefit of his or her
representation by retained counsel when waiving the privilege against self-incrimination.
Reed does not
permit law enforcement to thwart an existing attorney-client relationship by denying to the
defendant knowledge that his counsel is present or readily accessible before the defendant
knowingly chooses to waive his or her privilege against self-incrimination.
We find no
Reed violation in this case, although by that we intend
no implicit approbation of the prosecutors course of conduct. We simply agree with
the Appellate Divisions conclusion that an attorney-client relationship did not exist between defendant
and the public defender at the time that the public defender made his
inquiry to the prosecutor. The record does not indicate that the public defender
told the prosecutor that he was representing defendant; indeed the public defender was
asking only whether the charges for which defendant was arrested on the warrant
were of such a nature as to trigger public defender representation. As they
involved disorderly persons offenses, they were not, and no one argues to the
contrary.
See footnote 5
The public defender did not represent defendant on the unrelated disorderly persons
charge for which he had been arrested, and defendant had not yet been
charged with the Suhan murder. The circumstances here are not analogous to the
representation that had commenced and was denied to the defendant in
Reed. We
decline to extend
Reed by finding a violation in this case.
B. Failure to Record Interrogation Electronically
Defendant advances the additional argument that modern notions of due process require the
electronic recordation of his custodial statements as a condition for their admissibility. Because
that purported condition was not satisfied in this case, defendant asserts that his
statements should have been suppressed. Moreover, he asserts, with the able assistance of
amici, that the policy reasons for requiring such additional protection to defendants and
to law enforcement, and indeed, for the enhanced efficiency of the judicial system
as a whole, outweigh any inconvenience or cost occasioned by such a requirement.
We consider those assertions in turn.
The federal standard for the admissibility of confessions was established in
Colorado v.
Connelly,
479 U.S. 157, 168,
107 S. Ct. 515, 523,
93 L. Ed. 2d 473, 485 (1986), which held that a state must prove admissibility of
a confession by a preponderance of the evidence. As a matter of our
own jurisprudence, we require the voluntariness of a confession to be demonstrated beyond
a reasonable doubt.
State v. Bey,
112 N.J. 123, 134 (1988) (
Bey II).
We have held that whether a statement is memorialized or not is but
a factor contributing to the overall determination of a statements voluntariness. See
State
v. Burris,
145 N.J. 509, 534 (1996). We require the State to introduce
independent proof of facts and circumstances that tend to generate a belief in
a statements trustworthiness.
State v. Lucas,
30 N.J. 37, 56 (1959). Furthermore, the
jury is charged to treat an oral confession with caution,
State v. Kociolek,
23 N.J. 400, 421 (1957), and to judge its credibility against the circumstances
of its elicitation.
State v. Hampton,
61 N.J. 250, 272 (1972).
Despite those safeguards, and cautionary instructions about how an incriminating statement should be
evaluated, defendant contends that his statements to the police should have been suppressed
solely because his interrogation was not recorded electronically. For support, defendant relies on
decisions from two other state supreme courts. In
Stephan v. State,
711 P.2d 1156, 1158 (Alaska 1985), the Alaska Supreme Court held that the unexcused failure
to record electronically an interrogation conducted in a place of detention violates the
right to due process under the Alaska constitution. The court reasoned that a
recording requirement would provide an objective means for evaluating what occurred during an
interrogation, protect the publics interest in honest and effective law enforcement, and protect
the interests of police officers wrongfully accused of improper tactics.
Id. at 1161.
The court also noted that compliance with the recording requirement would not be
unduly burdensome as many places of detention already had working recording devices. Noting
that in the cases before the court the police had recorded portions of
the questioning, the court reasoned, turning the recorder on a few minutes earlier
entails minimal cost and effort.
Id. at 1162.
The Minnesota Supreme Court imposed a recording requirement in
State v. Scales,
518 N.W.2d 587 (Minn. 1994), although not on the basis of a due process
requirement. The Minnesota Supreme Court declined to make a determination on whether a
criminal suspect has a right to have his interrogation recorded under the Minnesota
Constitution. Relying instead on its supervisory power, the Court held that all custodial
interrogations, including any information about rights, waiver of those rights, and all questioning,
must be recorded electronically when feasible and whenever questioning occurs at a place
of detention. The court observed that many factual disputes about the denial of
a defendants constitutional rights would be avoided if all conversations between the police
and a suspect were recorded.
Id. at 591.
A
s best we can determine, t
wo additional states have enacted legislation that requires
custodial interrogations to be electronically recorded. See 725
Ill. Comp. Stat. Ann. 5/103-2.1
(West 2003) (establishing presumption against admissibility for statements made during custodial interrogation unless
statement is electronically recorded);
Tex. Crim. Proc. Code Ann. art. 38.22 § 3 (Vernon
1999) (conditioning use of oral custodial statements on electronic recording of statement). In
the absence of any such legislative requirement in other states that have considered
the issue, no court other than the Alaska Supreme Court has found a
due process requirement for electronic recordation. Thus, the overwhelming majority of courts have
declined to require recording as a constitutional dictate. See
Starks v. State,
594 So.2d 187, 196 (Ala. Crim. App. 1991),
cert. denied,
594 So.2d 187 (Ala. 1992);
State v. Jones,
49 P.3d 273, 279 (Ariz. 2002);
People
v. Holt,
937 P.2d 213, 241-43 (Cal.),
cert. denied,
522 U.S. 1017,
118 S. Ct. 606,
139 L. Ed.2d 493 (1997);
People v. Raibon,
843 P.2d 46, 49 (Colo. Ct. App. 1992);
State v. James,
678 A.2d 1338,
1357-60 (Conn. 1996);
Coleman v. State,
375 S.E.2d 663, 664 (Ga. Ct. App.
1988);
State v. Kekona,
886 P.2d 740, 745-46 (Haw. 1994);
State v. Rhoades,
809 P.2d 455, 462 (Idaho 1991),
cert. denied,
504 U.S. 987,
112 S.
Ct. 2970,
119 L. Ed.2d 590 (1992);
People v. Everette,
543 N.E.2d 1040, 1047 (Ill. App. Ct. 1989),
revd on other grounds,
565 N.E.2d 1295
(Ill. 1990);
Stoker v. State,
692 N.E.2d 1386, 1390 (Ind. Ct. App. 1998);
State v. Morgan,
559 N.W.2d 603, 609 (Iowa 1997);
State v. Speed,
961 P.2d 13, 24 (Kan. 1998);
Brashars v. Commonwealth,
25 S.W.3d 58, 60-63 (Ky.
2000),
cert. denied,
531 U.S. 1098,
121 S. Ct. 828,
148 L. Ed. 2d 710 (2001);
State v. Thibodeaux,
750 So.2d 916, 922-24 (La. 1999),
cert. denied,
529 U.S. 1112,
120 S. Ct. 1969,
146 L. Ed.2d 800 (2000);
State v. Buzzell,
617 A.2d 1016, 1018 (Me. 1992);
Baynor v.
State,
736 A.2d 325, 331-32 (Md. 1999);
Commonwealth v. Fryar,
610 N.E.2d 903,
909 n.8 (Mass. 1993);
People v. Fike,
577 N.W.2d 903, 906-07 (Mich. App.
1998);
Williams v. State,
522 So.2d 201, 208 (Miss. 1988);
Jimenez v.
State,
775 P.2d 694, 696-97 (Nev. 1989);
State v. Barnett,
789 A.2d 629,
631-33 (N.H. 2001);
People v. Martin,
741 N.Y.S.2d 763 (N.Y. App. Div.),
app.
denied,
778 N.E.2d 560 (N.Y. 2002);
State v. Thibodeaux,
459 S.E.2d 501, 507
(N.C. 1995);
State v. Smith,
684 N.E.2d 668, 686 (Ohio 1997),
cert. denied,
523 U.S. 1125,
118 S. Ct. 1811,
140 L. Ed.2d 949 (1998);
Commonwealth v. Craft,
669 A.2d 394, 394-97 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1995);
State v.
Godsey,
60 S.W.3d 759, 771-72 (Tenn. 2001);
State v. James,
858 P.2d 1012,
1017-18 (Utah Ct. App. 1993);
State v. Gorton,
548 A.2d 419, 421-422 (Vt.
1988);
State v. Spurgeon,
820 P.2d 960, 961-64 (Wash. Ct. App. 1991);
State
v. Kilmer,
439 S.E.2d 881, 892-93 (W. Va. 1993);
Gale v. State,
792 P.2d 570, 588 (Wyo. 1990).
Many of those courts have noted approvingly the protections that are provided by
recording an interrogation.
Jones,
supra, 49
P.
3d at 279 (stating that recording entire
interrogation process is preferable because it protects against admission of involuntary or invalid
confessions and enables law enforcement to establish that tactics were proper);
Holt,
supra,
937
P.
2d at 241-43 (noting that requiring recording of interrogations might enhance reliability
of confessions);
Raibon,
supra, 843
P.
2d at 49 (recognizing that recording of suspects
interview may remove questions that may arise later in respect of interviews contents);
Kekona,
supra, 886
P.
2d at 746 (stressing importance of utilizing tape recordings during
custodial interrogations when feasible);
Stoker,
supra, 692
N.E.
2d at 1390 (recommending that law
enforcement adopt procedure to record interrogations);
Buzzell,
supra, 617
A.
2d at 1018 (noting
obvious benefits to be realized when statements are recorded);
Fryar,
supra,
610 N.E 2d
at 909 n.8 (finding that electronic
recording of interrogations would be helpful in
evaluating voluntariness of confessions because defendants, prosecutors, and courts must spend considerable time
and effort to determine what transpired during custodial interrogation);
Williams,
supra,
522 So 2d
at 208 (noting that recording helps to demonstrate voluntariness, context, and content of
statement);
Jimenez,
supra, 775
P.
2d at 696-97 (stating that requiring recordings would alleviate
credibility questions for police when claiming defendant made incriminating statements);
Godsey,
supra, 60
S.W.
3d at 771-72 (noting that electronically recording custodial interrogations would reduce court time
spent on resolving interrogation disputes);
James,
supra, 858
P.
2d at 1017-18 (describing numerous
reasons for recording interrogations, including avoiding unwarranted claims of coercion and coercive tactics
by police);
Kilmer,
supra, 439
S.E.
2d at 892-93 (declining to establish blanket rule
requiring recording, and holding that law enforcement should record interrogation of suspect where
feasible and equipment is available).
So, too, have commentators canvassed the many benefits that electronic recordation would appear
to provide. Paramount is the obvious benefit derived from a
recording that creates
an objective, reviewable record. See Heath S. Berger,
Lets Go to the Videotape:
A Proposal to Legislate Videotaping of Confessions,
3
Alb. L.J. Sci. & Tech.
165, 173-74 (1993); Wayne T. Westling,
Something is Rotten in the Interrogation Room:
Lets Try Video Oversight, 34
J. Marshall L. Rev. 537, 549 (2001). Courts
are required routinely to determine what has occurred in the interrogation room, weighing
the testimony of a police officer against the testimony of an accused. Westling,
supra, 34
J. Marshall L. Rev. at 549. A recording would enhance a
judge or jurors assessment of credibility by providing a more complete picture of
what occurred. Berger,
supra,
3
Alb. L.J. Sci. & Tech. at 173-74. Because
[e]ven the most scrupulous of witnesses is subject to forgetfulness, Westling,
supra, 34
J. Marshall L. Rev. at 549, a recording of an interrogation would also
provide judges and juries with a more accurate picture of what was said,
as words can convey different meanings depending on the tone of voice or
nuance used.
Id. at 550.
The commentators are quick to point to the benefits that electronic recording would
provide to the police also, noting that recording would protect police officers from
false allegations and lend credibility to police work by demonstrating the fairness of
the methods used and the legality of confessions obtained. Richard A. Leo,
The
Impact of Miranda Revisited, 86
J. Crim. L. & Criminology 621, 683 (1996).
Recording also may improve the ability of the police to assess the guilt
or innocence of suspects, it is contended, because law enforcement officials later can
review an entire interrogation after investigation reveals new evidence.
Ibid. Finally, it is
asserted that electronic recording may improve the overall quality of police work by
providing law enforcement officials with the ability to monitor the quality of the
interrogation process and recordings can be used in training courses to demonstrate effective
versus ineffective, or legally impermissible, interrogation techniques. Leo,
supra, 86
J. Crim. L.
& Criminology at 683-84; Westling,
supra, 34
J. Marshall L. Rev. at 551.
Lastly, the commentary notes that recording ultimately may preserve judicial resources by discouraging
defendants from raising frivolous pretrial challenges to confessions. Daniel Donovan and John Rhodes,
Comes a Time: The Case for Recording Interrogations,
61
Mont. L. Rev. 223,
229 (2000);
see also Daniel Donovan and John Rhodes,
The Case for Recording
Interrogations, 26-DEC
Champion 12, 14 (2002). A recording of an interrogation might influence
a defendants decision on whether to go to trial. Donavan and Rhodes,
Comes
a Time,
supra,
61
Mont. L. Rev. at 229. The potential savings that
recording may have on judicial resources has been noticed by many of the
courts that have considered the issue because of the significant amount of time
and resources devoted to resolving disputes over confessions.
See, e.g.,
Fryar,
supra, 610
N.E.
2d at 909, n.8 (noting electronic recordation could relieve courts of enormous amount
of time and resources spent attempting to determine what transpired during custodial interrogation).
See also Godsey,
supra, 60
S.W.
3d at 772 (noting there is little doubt
that electronic recordation would reduce time spent in court resolving disputes over what
occurred during custodial interrogation).
On the other hand, the drawbacks to imposing an absolute requirement on recording
likewise have been catalogued. One of the most common arguments against a recording
requirement is the cost. Potential costs include purchase and maintenance of recording equipment,
storage of tapes, transcription of tapes, and remodeling of interrogation rooms. Leo,
supra,
86
J. Crim. L. & Criminology at 684-85. Some commentators point to the
difficulty that rural towns may have in affording appropriate equipment. Berger,
supra,
3
Alb. L.J. Sci. & Tech. at 179. Other frequently cited drawbacks are that
the recording of interrogations will hamper police interrogation techniques and reduce the ability
of police officers to obtain truthful confessions and admissions.
Id. at 180. Commentators
acknowledge that suspects may be reluctant to speak candidly in front of a
camera.
Ibid.; Leo,
supra, 86
J. Crim. L. & Criminology at 685-86.
See
also Major Joshua E. Kastenberg,
A Three-Dimensional Model for the Use of Expert
Psychiatric and Psychological Evidence in False Confession Defenses Before the Trier of Fact,
26
Seattle U. L. Rev. 783, 812 (2003) (stating that knowledge of electronic
recording can reduce chances of effective discussion because suspects often are more willing
to talk when they perceive discussion as being between only themselves and interrogating
officer(s)).
Beyond the question whether to record electronically, there is the additional consideration of
what portion of an interrogation ought to be recorded. While some police departments
already record a suspects confession at the end of an interrogation, advocates of
recording stress that the entire interrogation session must be recorded to achieve the
positive benefits of recordings. Westling,
Something is Rotten in the Interrogation Room,
supra,
34
J. Marshall L. Rev. at 554. To create a detailed and complete
record, those commentators argue that recording must begin with the initial contact, including
the
Miranda warnings and any waiver of
Miranda rights.
Ibid.; Berger,
supra,
3
Alb. L.J. Sci. & Tech. at 176. In that respect, we note that
both the Supreme Courts of Alaska and Minnesota require recording of the entire
interrogation session. See
Scales,
supra, 518
N.W.
2d at 592 (requiring all custodial interrogations,
including information about rights, waiver of those rights, and all questioning to be
electronically recorded);
Stephan,
supra, 711
P.
2d at 1162 (holding that recording of custodial
interrogation in place of detention must clearly indicate that it recounts entire interview).
See footnote 6
See also Barnett,
supra,
789 A.2d 629 (allowing admission of taped statement by
defendant only if entire interrogation is recorded; otherwise proof of defendants incriminating statement
subject to admission via traditional evidential tests for reliability).
We view as significant the consequences attendant to imposing a rule precluding the
admissibility of a confession based on a failure to record electronically. Indeed, even
apart from requiring suppression in all such cases, if we were to encourage
electronic recording of custodial interrogations, a balancing of the benefits to suspects in
custodial interrogations with any drawbacks to law enforcement would be necessary. Moreover, there
does not appear to be any agreement as to how electronic recordation should
be implemented, or whether it should be required, encouraged formally through evidential rules,
or encouraged through other informal means. We recognize that d
ue process is a
flexible concept that depends on the facts and circumstances of the matter at
hand.
New Jersey Parole Bd. v. Byrne,
93 N.J. 192, 209 (1983). But,
there is a pragmatic aspect to a due process inquiry. We have rejected
claimed due process violations in the past where the asserted deprivations implicated an
area in which fair-minded men can disagree, and points of view could range
over a spectrum of conclusions in respect of the alleged right involved.
State
v. Garvin,
44 N.J. 268, 276 (1965) (internal quotation marks omitted).
Because there is otherwise fair-minded disagreement concerning the appropriateness of imposing a sweeping
requirement of electronic recordation of custodial statements we hold that defendants point of
error is not of constitutional dimension.
Ibid. As noted,
other than Alaska, no
state has found a due process dictate that compels electronic recording of custodial
interrogations. The other states have declined to impose by judicial fiat a constitutional
requirement in the absence of any legislative direction. We similarly decline to do
so. We reject defendants constitutional due process argument. His statements were not wrongfully
admitted merely because they were not electronically recorded. Their admissibility can be assessed
adequately under our current standards for voluntariness and trustworthiness.
That said, we perceive benefits to all involved if custodial interrogations are recorded
electronically.
Our prior decisions highlight a concern for the reliability and trustworthiness of
confessions as a prerequisite to their use. Confessions obtained through undue compulsion or
coercion are considered involuntary and, therefore, unreliable. State v. Jordan, 147 N.J. 409,
425-28 (1997). We exclude from evidence such confessions, not only because we view
an involuntary confession as intrinsically unreliable, but also because its admission would offend
the communitys sense of decency and fairness. State v. Kelly, 61 N.J. 283,
292 (1972). Similarly, we have held that a confession obtained through a custodial
interrogation after an illegal arrest should be excluded unless the chain of causation
between the illegal arrest and the confession is sufficiently attenuated so that the
confession was sufficiently an act of free will to purge the primary taint.
State v. Worlock, 117 N.J. 596, 621 (1990) (quoting Wong Sun v. United
States, 371 U.S. 471, 486, 83 S. Ct. 407, 416-17, 9 L. Ed.
2d 441, 454 (1963)). The requirements of Reed, supra, likewise grew out of
our perception of the potential coerciveness of custodial interrogations. 133 N.J. at 264-65.
We also have cautioned against an unmitigated faith in the truth and probity
of confessions generally. As elaborated
infra, we require confessions to be corroborated by
independent evidence that bolster[s] the confession and tend[s] to generate a belief in
its trustworthiness.
Lucas,
supra, 30
N.J. at 56.
See also State v. Mancine,
124 N.J. 232, 261, 262 (1991) (Handler, J., concurring) (noting confessions have long
been regarded as generally suspect and describing experience of courts, the police and
the medical profession recount[ing] a number of false confessions voluntarily made (citation omitted)).
The foregoing concerns militate in favor of pursuing the study of whether and
how to implement the benefits of recording electronically part, or all, of custodial
interrogations.
We acknowledge the States concern that electronic recording may create an artificial
restriction on the interrogation dynamic. However, the fact that numerous law enforcement agencies
of this State have found themselves able to overcome that drawback and are
using electronic recording reduces the force of the States concern. Those agencies apparently
valued more the benefits that come from having a recording of a custodial
interrogation. Indeed, in that respect, we are informed that the Attorney General, acting
in conjunction with the county prosecutors, has taken steps to implement an administrative
policy requiring electronic recording of final statements of suspects in homicide investigations. We
are told that pilot projects concerning further use of electronic recordation are contemplated.
The State also has brought to our attention that there is the potential
for legislative action in this area as well. See Senate Bill No. 287
(establishing pilot program requiring use of electronic recording of custodial interrogations concerning certain
violent crimes). Those steps are welcome, but this issue deserves the broad involvement
of all stakeholders and, importantly, must involve the judiciary.
The judiciary bears the responsibility to guarantee the proper administration of justice .
. . and, particularly, the administration of criminal justice.
State v. Williams,
93 N.J. 39, 62 (1983) (citations omitted). Our courts thus have the independent obligation
. . . to take all appropriate measures to ensure the fair and
proper administration of a criminal trial.
Ibid. See also State v. Maisonet,
166 N.J. 9, 22 (2001) (noting our responsibility to guarantee the proper administration of
justice (citation omitted));
State v. Carter,
64 N.J. 382, 392 (1974),
overruled on
other grounds,
State v. Krol,
68 N.J. 236 (1975) (The courts power to
fashion remedies in the realm of criminal justice is unquestioned.). Where such appropriate
measures are available, they should be employed to the fullest extent feasible to
enhance the fairness of proceedings.
The proverbial time has arrived for this Court to evaluate fully the protections
that electronic recordation affords to both the State and to criminal defendants. That
inquiry should include whether to encourage electronic recordation through the use of a
presumption against admissibility of a non-recorded statement, or other means.
See, e.g.,
Barnett,
supra,
789 A.2d 629. Those considerations are important and nuanced,
and should be addressed in a context broader than that permitted in any
one criminal appeal. The balancing of interests will require careful and deliberate study
if we are to be successful in securing to the judicial system, law
enforcement, and defendants the benefits of recordation without unduly hampering the legitimate needs
of law enforcement. We believe that the criminal justice system will be well
served if our supervisory authority is brought to bear on this issue and
we will exercise that authority mindful of the various interests involved. Accordingly, we
will establish a committee to study and make recommendations on the use of
electronic recordation of custodial interrogations.
C. Other Arguments on Admissibility
The remaining question is whether defendants statements to police were trustworthy, reliable, and
voluntarily given and therefore were appropriately admitted into evidence. Defendant makes two arguments:
first, he claims that his confession was obtained only after his will was
overborne and, second, that his confession was not sufficiently corroborated.
As noted, the State must demonstrate the voluntariness of a confes