In U.S. v. Lena-Encinas, No. 08-12574 (April 13, 2010), the Court held that a defendant was not “in custody” for Miranda purposes, and affirmed the denial of a motion to suppress unMirandized statements he made to police.
The Court noted that merely being “seized” does not suffice to establish custody: the person must feel not free to leave “to a degree associated with a formal arrest.”
Lena-Encinas was encountered by police in the backyard of a townhouse. Police had their weapons out of their holsters, pointing downward. Police instructed Lena-Encinas to sit down while the townhouse was being secured, and stated that he was not a suspect. During the next ten minutes, Lena-Encinas was escorted to the front of the townhouse, and told not to speak. After police obtained information that there was a firearm in the townhouse, they asked Lena-Encinas about it. The Court held that Lena-Encinas’ response – that a firearm was under a mattress in the townhouse – was not obtained in violation of Miranda.
Lena-Encinas “was on familiar ground in his own front yard.” His detention “lasted a mere five minutes.” Lena-Encinas never asked to leave the premises, nor informed the officers that he did not wish to comply with their requests. Therefore, even assuming Lena-Encinas had been seized, he “would not have believed that he was utterly at the mercy of the police.” He was not in custody for Miranda purposes.
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