                            [J-66-2014] [MO: Saylor, J.]
                   IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
                                EASTERN DISTRICT


COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA, :              No. 33 EAP 2013
                              :
              Appellant       :              Appeal from the Order of Superior Court
                              :              entered on February 5, 2013, at 1174 EDA
                              :              2011, affirming the order of the Court of
          v.                  :              Common Pleas of Philadelphia County,
                              :              Criminal Division, dated May 2, 2011 at
                              :              No. CP-51-CR-0012459-2008
DENNIS BLAND,                 :
                              :              ARGUED: September 10, 2014
              Appellee        :
                                              DECIDED: May 26, 2015

                                DISSENTING OPINION


MADAME JUSTICE TODD
      I consider Appellee’s written request to the Philadelphia Police Department

explicitly stating that he did not wish to be questioned by officers from that department

without the assistance of an attorney, made after he was taken into custody in Florida to

face a murder charge lodged by the Philadelphia Police Department, to be a valid

invocation of his Fifth Amendment rights under the United States Supreme Court’s

landmark decision in Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966); thus, in my view,

investigators from that department were required to honor his request for the assistance

of counsel before and during their subsequent questioning of him. I further regard

Edwards v. Arizona, 451 U.S. 477 (1981), as establishing a bright-line rule that police

may not interrogate an individual being held in custody who has requested the

assistance of counsel, until and unless counsel is provided to the individual. Unlike the

Majority, I do not view dicta contained in the high Court’s later decision in McNeil v.

Wisconsin, 501 U.S. 171 (1991), as undercutting the necessity of compliance by police
with this federal constitutional mandate. As it is not disputed that an employee of the

Philadelphia Police Department disregarded Appellee’s written request for the

assistance of counsel during interrogation, from my perspective, Appellee1 was

unlawfully subjected to uncounseled interrogation by investigators from that department.

Accordingly, I dissent from the Majority’s decision to the contrary.2

       In its historic Miranda decision, the United States Supreme Court recognized the

necessity that police authorities inform an individual, who is being held in custody, of his

or her right to consult with an attorney before police questioning begins, and also inform

the individual who is being detained, prior to any questioning, of his or her right to have

counsel present during any subsequent interrogation. Securing the right of an individual

in the custody of the authorities to the assistance of counsel for coping with the process

of custodial interrogation was deemed integral by the Court to protect the long-

recognized basic right of every person, protected by the Fifth Amendment to the

Constitution, not to be compelled to provide evidence against himself or herself. The

Court observed that an individual who is taken into custody by police is held in isolation

and cut off from all contact with the outside world, and that this deprivation of contact

with traditional sources of support, such as family, friends, and community, makes the

individual more susceptible to a variety of psychologically coercive interrogation


1
  Appellee was a juvenile at the time of his interrogation.
2
  Appellee also argues to our Court that Article I, Section 9 of the Pennsylvania
Constitution independently protected his right to counsel in this situation, and the
Majority rejects this claim. See Majority Opinion at 13. Because Article I, Section 9
affords at least as much protection of the right against self-incrimination as does the
Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution, given that the lower court decisions
to exclude Appellee’s confession were based entirely on their determinations that his
Fifth Amendment rights were violated by the police, and because, as I explain infra, I
consider their determinations to have been correct, I would find that Appellee was
entitled to relief under the Pennsylvania Constitution as well.



                             [J-66-2014] [MO: Saylor, J.] - 2
techniques.   Miranda, 384 U.S. at 445, 448-58.       These techniques, the high Court

found, can lead to false confessions. Id. at 453, 455 n.24.3 Thus, to ensure that the

free will of an individual being held in custody is not overborne by these compulsive

pressures, such that he or she is unable to freely and intelligently exercise his or her

Fifth Amendment rights, the Court required a detained individual be given access to

counsel, upon request, both prior to and during police interrogation. Id. at 470.

      The high Court also made clear in Miranda that, once a person in custody makes

a request for the assistance of counsel, police are not then permitted to interrogate him

or her until counsel has been provided and the detained person is given the opportunity

to both confer with the attorney, and, also, to have the attorney advise him or her during

any subsequent police interrogation. Id. at 474. Notably, the Court did not place any

restrictions on the manner in which an individual in custody could communicate a

request to the police for the assistance of counsel for any subsequent interrogation in

which the police might engage. Hence, the written request by Appellee in this matter for

the assistance of counsel for any police questioning, which indisputably was delivered

to and received by the homicide unit of the Philadelphia Police Department — members

of which subsequently interrogated Appellee — was acceptable under the tenets of

Miranda.

      Most significantly, the high Court in Miranda did not indicate that an individual

who is in custody had to make a request for counsel during police interrogation, or

within a specific time frame preceding that interrogation, in order for the police to be

3
    As recently as 2009, the Court again recognized the vexing problem of false
confessions by individuals held in custody, and their impact on our system of justice.
See Corley v. United States, 556 U.S. 303, 321 (2009) (observing that the pressures of
custodial interrogation “can induce a frighteningly high percentage of people to confess
to crimes they never committed” (citing Drizin & Leo, The Problem of False Confessions
in the Post – DNA World, 82 N.C.L.Rev. 891, 906–07 (2004))).



                             [J-66-2014] [MO: Saylor, J.] - 3
bound by the request. Indeed, the Court indicated, as acknowledged by the Majority, a

request for counsel made at “any stage” of the process must be honored by the police.

See Miranda, 384 U.S. at 444-45 (“If, however, [an individual in custody] indicates in

any manner and at any stage of the process that he wishes to consult with an attorney

before speaking there can be no questioning.”). Moreover, the Court also specified that

a request for the assistance of counsel made by an individual being held in custody at

any time prior to the police beginning interrogation will be sufficient to guarantee the

individual’s right to consult with an attorney before interrogation commences, and the

right to have the attorney present during that questioning. See id., 384 U.S. at 470 (“An

individual need not make a pre-interrogation request for a lawyer. While such request

affirmatively secures his right to have one, his failure to ask for a lawyer does not

constitute a waiver.”     (emphasis added)).      Consequently, the Majority’s present

conclusion that a request for the assistance of counsel made by an individual being held

in custody must take place “in close temporal proximity to” police interrogation in order

for the police to be required to honor it, Majority Opinion at 12, finds no support in the

Miranda decision itself, nor is it, in my view, compelled by the high Court’s subsequent

jurisprudence in this area.

       A decade and a half after Miranda, the high Court, in Edwards v. Arizona, supra,

reaffirmed the fundamental principle espoused in Miranda that “an accused has a Fifth

and Fourteenth Amendment right to have counsel present during custodial

interrogation.” Edwards, 451 U.S. at 482. In order to provide an additional safeguard

against deprivation of that right occasioned by a failure of the custodial authority to

honor a detained individual’s request for counsel, the Court established a bright-line rule

that, when an individual being held in custody has “expressed his [or her] desire to deal

with the police only through counsel, [he or she] is not subject to further interrogation by




                              [J-66-2014] [MO: Saylor, J.] - 4
the authorities until counsel has been made available to him [or her], unless the

accused himself initiates further communication, exchanges, or conversations with the

police.” Id. at 484-85 (emphasis added). The Court further held that any statements by

an individual who is in custody, made in response to police questioning after the

individual has requested the assistance of an attorney and before counsel is made

available, are not admissible as evidence in a criminal trial unless it is clear that the

detained individual, and not the police, voluntarily initiated the discussion. Id. at 485–

87.

      Although in Edwards the individual in custody made the request for counsel

during an initial interrogation, and the police re-initiated questioning of him a day later

without providing him with the opportunity to consult with an attorney, the high Court did

not suggest that it was limiting its holding only to situations in which a request for

counsel is first made during or in close temporal proximity to the time of interrogation.

As the Court later explained, its ruling was founded on a fundamental presumption that,

if a person in custody has requested the assistance of counsel for custodial

interrogation and the request is disregarded, a purported waiver by that person of his or

her Fifth Amendment rights made during any subsequent interrogation is, ipso facto, not

the product of a genuinely free choice. Id. at 487; see also Montejo v. Louisiana, 556

U.S. 778, 787 (2009); McNeil, 501 U.S. at 177. The Court explicitly recognized that

such a rule is necessary because individuals in custody who assert their Fifth

Amendment rights are frequently pressured into surrendering them before their request

to consult with counsel is honored. See Michigan v. Harvey, 494 U.S. 344, 350 (1990)

(observing that the Edwards bright-line rule is “designed to prevent police from

badgering a defendant into waiving his previously asserted Miranda rights.”); Smith v.

Illinois, 469 U.S. 91, 98 (1984) (per curiam) (“In the absence of such a bright-line




                             [J-66-2014] [MO: Saylor, J.] - 5
prohibition, the authorities through ‘badger[ing]’ or ‘overreaching’ — explicit or subtle,

deliberate or unintentional — might otherwise wear down the accused and persuade

him to incriminate himself notwithstanding his earlier request for counsel's assistance.”).

       Thus, as the broad scope of the above-quoted language from Edwards makes

clear, in all situations where a detained individual has requested the assistance of

counsel, police are not permitted to conduct any interrogation after the request is made

— even if, as in the case at bar, it is an initial interrogation — unless they first provide

the detained individual the opportunity to consult with counsel, and to have counsel

present during the interrogation. As in Miranda, the Court in Edwards did not set forth

any specific time period before an interrogation that the request for counsel must be

made in order for the police to be required to comply with it.

       Indeed, in Smith, supra, the high Court seemingly rejected any such

interpretation of Miranda and Edwards. In that case, the appellant — Smith — was

arrested, and, while being given Miranda warnings, requested the assistance of

counsel. Although the ultimate issue the high Court decided was whether subsequent

equivocation by Smith, in response to further police questioning, on whether he desired

an attorney vitiated his initial request for counsel (and the Court ultimately held that it

did not), that tribunal expressly rejected the position taken by the lower court and the

dissenting Justices that, because Smith was not subjected to interrogation at the time

he requested counsel, this request did not obligate the custodial authorities to refrain

from further questioning. The Court stated: “Such reasoning is plainly wrong. A request

for counsel coming ‘at any stage of the process’ requires that questioning cease until

counsel has been provided.” Smith, 469 U.S. at 97 n.6 (quoting Miranda, 384 U.S. at

444-45) (emphasis in Smith).




                             [J-66-2014] [MO: Saylor, J.] - 6
      In the high Court’s jurisprudence after Edwards and Smith, it has applied the

bright-line rule of Edwards to ensure that an individual taken into custody and given

Miranda warnings will, in fact, be provided counsel upon request, prior to and during

police interrogation. In Arizona v. Roberson, 486 U.S. 675 (1988), the Court ruled that

Edwards governs situations where an individual who is arrested for one offense and

given Miranda warnings, requests the assistance of counsel, but does not receive such

assistance, and then is questioned at a later time about a separate offense.4 Key to the

Court’s rationale in extending Edwards to exclude any statements given during such

questioning was the importance it placed on the role of counsel in preventing an

arrested individual’s Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination from being

forsaken as the result of the inherently coercive pressures of custody and interrogation.

The Court observed that, when a suspect requests counsel, it is presumed “[a]s a

matter of law . . . that he considers himself unable to deal with the pressures of

custodial interrogation without legal assistance.” Roberson, 486 U.S. at 683. The Court

noted that “[t]his discomfort is precisely the state of mind that Edwards presumes to

persist unless the suspect himself initiates further conversation.” Id. at 684. The Court

found that the period of time which had elapsed between the incarcerated individual’s

unfulfilled request for counsel and the interrogation — three days — created “a serious

risk that the mere repetition of the Miranda warnings would not overcome the

presumption of coercion that is created by prolonged police custody.”        Id. at 686.

Consequently, the Court rejected the contention that, in such situations, “fresh sets of


4
    The arrested individual, Roberson, requested counsel immediately after being
arrested and was not questioned at that time. Roberson, 486 U.S. at 678. Roberson
subsequently gave the challenged statement during questioning about the separate
offense three days later, which was the first time he had been interrogated about that
offense.



                            [J-66-2014] [MO: Saylor, J.] - 7
Miranda warnings will ‘reassure’ a suspect who has been denied the counsel he has

clearly requested that his rights have remained untrammeled.” Id.

      Significant for purposes of the instant matter was the high Court’s recognition in

Roberson that “prolonged police custody” of an individual after his or her request for

counsel has not been honored is, in and of itself, presumptively coercive because it

overcomes the ability of the individual to make a genuinely free and unfettered choice

regarding the exercise of his or her Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination

when police commence the interrogation process.          Here, the period of detention

between Appellee’s initial request for the assistance of counsel, which police ignored,

and his interrogation, was twice as long — six days — as that disapproved of by the

Court in Roberson.

      After Roberson, in Minnick v. Mississippi, 498 U.S. 146 (1990), the high Court

clarified and enhanced the Edwards rule by requiring counsel’s presence at any

interrogation held after an individual in custody requests the assistance of counsel, even

if the individual in custody has been given the opportunity to consult with an attorney.

The Court noted that “[a] single consultation with an attorney does not remove the

suspect from persistent attempts by officials to persuade him to waive his rights, or from

the coercive pressures that accompany custody and that may increase as custody is

prolonged.”   Minnick, 498 U.S. at 153.5       The Court found that, to allow police

questioning of an individual in custody in the absence of counsel, even if the individual


5
  The accused, Minnick, was arrested and interrogated the following day by FBI agents
during which he gave a statement and also requested a lawyer. After that interrogation,
counsel was appointed for Minnick, and he consulted with that attorney 2 or 3 times.
Two days later, Minnick was again questioned by a deputy sheriff without being granted
the opportunity to have his attorney present at the interrogation. Although the lower
courts suppressed the statements Minnick gave to the FBI agents, it did not apply
Edwards to suppress his statements to the deputy sheriff.



                             [J-66-2014] [MO: Saylor, J.] - 8
has consulted with counsel, would be inconsistent with Edwards’ objective “to protect

the suspect's right to have counsel present at custodial interrogation,” and would

undermine Miranda’s determination that the presence of counsel at interrogation was

vital to protect a detained individual’s Fifth Amendment rights from the dangers inherent

in a “secret interrogation process.” Minnick, 498 U.S. at 154 (quoting Miranda, 384 U.S.

at 470). Consequently, the Court ruled that the interrogation “was a formal interview

which [the accused] was compelled to attend. Since [the accused] made a specific

request for counsel before the interview, the police-initiated interrogation was

impermissible,” and his statement to the deputy sheriff was inadmissible at trial.

Minnick, 498 U.S. at 156. This decision thus constitutes another admonition by the high

Court that the Fifth Amendment rights of an individual in custody who has requested the

assistance of counsel to assist him or her in facing interrogation are violated if,

thereafter, that individual is interrogated without counsel being present.

       Relevant to the case sub judice, Appellee, then in custody and just like the

accused in Minnick, made a request for counsel prior to interrogation by police, but he

nevertheless was subjected to police questioning during which there was no attorney

present with whom he could consult. Consequently, I consider Minnick to require the

suppression of any statements Appellee made during this uncounseled interrogation.

Indeed, pursuant to the teachings of Miranda, Edwards, and Minnick, our Court has

previously held, in Commonwealth v. Santiago, 599 A.2d 200 (Pa. 1991), that, even

when a person, upon arrest, requested and received counsel, but detectives subjected

him to an initial interrogation about a murder two days later without ensuring that

appointed counsel was present, his Fifth Amendment right to counsel was violated, and

the statements he made in response to police questioning were suppressed.

Importantly, our Court in Santiago did not perceive the relevant constitutional analysis




                             [J-66-2014] [MO: Saylor, J.] - 9
under the Miranda-Edwards-Minnick line of cases to depend on whether the

uncounseled interrogation was the first one after the individual had invoked his Fifth

Amendment rights, or whether it was a second or subsequent police interrogation after

such an invocation; rather, our Court found dispositive the fact that the defendant was in

custody at the time the uncounseled interrogation took place. We stated, in this regard:

              We attach no significance to the artificial distinction between
              “reinterrogation” and “initial interrogation.” For practical
              purposes, there is simply no difference from the suspect's
              point of view concerning this distinction. All that the suspect
              knows is that he has been in continuous custody and that he
              is being interrogated again. Whether it happens to be an
              “initial” interrogation by certain officials is irrelevant. The
              suspect has already been interrogated at least once while he
              has been in custody, and thus, even this “initial” interrogation
              by . . . police detectives is more properly classified as
              “reinterrogation.”
Santiago, 599 A.2d at 203 n.10.

       In my view, then, the polestar principle established by Miranda, Edwards, Minnick

and Santiago is that any invocation of the Fifth Amendment right to counsel by an

individual while he or she is in custody must be honored before police can question that

person. This is because, as these cases consistently recognize, an individual who is in

custody is subject to the inherently coercive pressures attendant to that situation and its

concomitant deleterious effect on the individual’s ability to exercise free will and to make

truly voluntary decisions. By contrast, in non-custodial situations, there is no danger

that, in responding to police questioning, the compulsive pressure created by the

circumstances of detention will lead to an involuntary waiver by the individual of his or

her Fifth Amendment rights.      This is consistent with the high Court’s oft-expressed

opinion that an individual who is not in custody possesses the freedom to terminate

police questioning at any time, and, thus, can avoid the type of “police badgering” the



                             [J-66-2014] [MO: Saylor, J.] - 10
high Court was concerned with preventing through the Miranda-Edwards line of cases.

See, e.g., Montejo, 556 U.S. at 795 (“When a defendant is not in custody, he is in

control, and need only shut his door or walk away to avoid police badgering.”).

      Thus, these cases consider a request for counsel by an individual in custody to

be, in addition to the exercise of a fundamental constitutional right, an explicit

acknowledgement that he or she requires the assistance of an attorney to deal with any

police questioning which may take place thereafter while he or she remains in custody.

Requiring interrogation to cease under these circumstances provides the individual in

custody reassurance that he or she will have the assistance of counsel promised by the

custodial authorities in the Miranda warnings, before having to face any interrogation by

those same authorities.    Consequently, in accordance with these decisions, I view

Appellee’s request for the assistance of counsel, made while he was in custody, to have

been a valid invocation of his Fifth Amendment rights which his interrogators were

obliged to honor.6

      The Majority, however, departs from these decisions based on its reading of

footnote 3 in McNeil as a predictive indication that the high Court would not consider

Appellee’s invocation of his Miranda rights to have foreclosed further interrogation.7 As

6
    In Maryland v. Shatzer, 559 U.S. 98 (2010), the high Court, while continuing to
acknowledge the coercive effects of custody on an individual’s ability to make a
genuinely free election to waive Fifth Amendment rights, held that a 14-day break in
custody was sufficient to dispel such effects so that the Edwards’ presumption of
involuntariness of a waiver of the Fifth Amendment did not apply. No such break in
custody occurred in this case, as Appellee remained in custody from the time of his
arrest until his interrogation by detectives from the Philadelphia homicide unit six days
later; thus, in my view, Edwards and its progeny govern the disposition of this matter.
See Shatzer, 559 U.S. at 108 (“The only logical endpoint of Edwards disability is
termination of Miranda custody and any of its lingering effects.”).
7
   McNeil was authored by Justice Scalia and joined by then-Chief Justice Rehnquist,
Justices White, O’Connor, Kennedy and Souter. Justice Stevens filed a dissenting
opinion, joined by Justices Marshall and Blackmun.



                            [J-66-2014] [MO: Saylor, J.] - 11
I explain at greater length infra, in addition to considering this footnote dictum, I

respectfully differ from the Majority’s interpretation of it. In McNeil, the appellant was

arrested on an armed robbery charge and was read his Miranda rights; however, he did

not request the assistance of an attorney.     Later, appellant appeared before a bail

commissioner in a preliminary hearing. At this hearing, appellant was represented by a

public defender, but said nothing during the proceeding. After the hearing, appellant

was questioned by police three separate times without counsel, and given Miranda

warnings before each of these interrogations; however, each time he was questioned,

appellant waived his Fifth Amendment rights and gave statements incriminating himself

in a murder. Subsequently, appellant sought suppression of the statements on the

basis of his contention that his appearance at the preliminary hearing accompanied by

counsel was, by itself, sufficient to invoke his Miranda right to counsel and, thus,

required suppression under the Miranda-Edwards line of cases.

      The high Court rejected this argument. The Court agreed with appellant that his

appearance at the preliminary hearing with counsel constituted a valid invocation of his

right to counsel protected by the Sixth Amendment, but noted that there was a clear

distinction between the “offense-specific” nature of the right to counsel guaranteed by

that amendment and the general right for an individual in custody to the assistance of

counsel to deal with the police which is secured by the Fifth Amendment, as was

recognized in the Miranda-Edwards line of cases. The Court concluded that the latter

right was not invoked by counsel’s mere presence at the bail hearing, explaining:

                    The purpose of the Sixth Amendment counsel
             guarantee — and hence the purpose of invoking it — is to
             “protec[t] the unaided layman at critical confrontations” with
             his “expert adversary,” the government, after “the adverse
             positions of government and defendant have solidified” with
             respect to a particular alleged crime. [United States v.]
             Gouveia, 467 U.S., at 189, 104 S.Ct., at 2298. The purpose


                            [J-66-2014] [MO: Saylor, J.] - 12
             of the Miranda–Edwards guarantee, on the other hand —
             and hence the purpose of invoking it — is to protect a quite
             different interest: the suspect's “desire to deal with the police
             only through counsel,” Edwards, supra, 451 U.S., at 484,
             101 S.Ct., at 1884. This is in one respect narrower than the
             interest protected by the Sixth Amendment guarantee
             (because it relates only to custodial interrogation) and in
             another respect broader (because it relates to interrogation
             regarding any suspected crime and attaches whether or not
             the “adversarial relationship” produced by a pending
             prosecution has yet arisen). To invoke the Sixth Amendment
             interest is, as a matter of fact, not to invoke the Miranda-
             Edwards interest. One might be quite willing to speak to the
             police without counsel present concerning many matters, but
             not the matter under prosecution. It can be said, perhaps,
             that it is likely that one who has asked for counsel's
             assistance in defending against a prosecution would want
             counsel present for all custodial interrogation, even
             interrogation unrelated to the charge. That is not necessarily
             true, since suspects often believe that they can avoid the
             laying of charges by demonstrating an assurance of
             innocence through frank and unassisted answers to
             questions. But even if it were true, the likelihood that a
             suspect would wish counsel to be present is not the test for
             applicability of Edwards. The rule of that case applies only
             when the suspect “ha[s] expressed” his wish for the
             particular sort of lawyerly assistance that is the subject of
             Miranda. Edwards, supra, 451 U.S., at 484, 101 S.Ct., at
             1884 (emphasis added). It requires, at a minimum, some
             statement that can reasonably be construed to be an
             expression of a desire for the assistance of an attorney in
             dealing with custodial interrogation by the police. Requesting
             the assistance of an attorney at a bail hearing does not bear
             that construction.
McNeil, 501 U.S. at 177- 78 (emphasis and alterations original).

      Consequently, the actual controlling legal holding of McNeil, by which our Court

is bound, is quite narrow — namely, in order for the clear protections of the Fifth

Amendment right to counsel spelled out in the Miranda-Edwards line of cases to apply,

an individual who desires “the assistance of an attorney in dealing with custodial



                            [J-66-2014] [MO: Saylor, J.] - 13
interrogation by the police,” McNeil, 501 U.S. at 178, must express that desire

affirmatively. There is no question in the case at bar, as acknowledged by the Majority,

that Appellee’s written assertion of his Miranda rights constituted “a very clear putative

invocation of the Miranda-based right to counsel.” Majority Opinion at 2.

       Yet, the Majority herein disavows the validity of that invocation based on

language in footnote 3 of the McNeil opinion, which, in my view, is non-precedential. In

this footnote, the McNeil majority responded to conjecture by the dissent that the failure

to treat an invocation of the Sixth Amendment right to counsel as equivalent to a

general request for the assistance of counsel in dealing with police in all matters, a la

Edwards, would, in the future, result in attorneys for an accused, or their clients at their

direction, placing a statement on the record at a preliminary hearing “that will obviate

the consequences of today’s holding.” McNeil, 501 U.S. at 184. Although the dissent

did not elaborate on the nature of such an “obviating” statement, the majority interpreted

it to be an invocation of Miranda rights and responded:

              We have in fact never held that a person can invoke his
              Miranda rights anticipatorily, in a context other than
              “custodial interrogation” — which a preliminary hearing will
              not always, or even usually, involve cf. Pennsylvania v.
              Muniz, 496 U.S. 582, 601-602, 110 S.Ct. 2638, 2650-2651,
              110 L.Ed.2d. 528 (1990) (plurality opinion); Rhode Island v.
              Innis, 446 U.S. 291, 298–303, 100 S.Ct. 1682, 1688–1691,
              64 L.Ed.2d 297 (1980). If the Miranda right to counsel can
              be invoked at a preliminary hearing, it could be argued, there
              is no logical reason why it could not be invoked by a letter
              prior to arrest, or indeed even prior to identification as a
              suspect. Most rights must be asserted when the government
              seeks to take the action they protect against. The fact that
              we have allowed the Miranda right to counsel, once
              asserted, to be effective with respect to future custodial
              interrogation does not necessarily mean that we will allow it
              to be asserted initially outside the context of custodial
              interrogation, with similar future effect. Assuming, however,



                             [J-66-2014] [MO: Saylor, J.] - 14
              that an assertion at arraignment would be effective, and
              would be routinely made, the mere fact that adherence to the
              principle of our decisions will not have substantial
              consequences is no reason to abandon that principle. It
              would remain intolerable that a person in custody who had
              expressed no objection to being questioned would be
              unapproachable.
Id. at 182 n.3 (emphasis original).

       In my view, this footnote is nonbinding dicta as it addresses a legal question

which was not before the Court, or central to its holding. See, e.g., Seminole Tribe of

Florida v. Florida, 517 U.S. 44, 67 (1996) (only the holding of a prior opinion of the

United States Supreme Court, and “those portions of the opinion necessary to that

result,” are binding); Jama v. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, 543 U.S. 335, 351

n.12 (2005) (“Dictum settles nothing, even in the court that utters it.”). Moreover, from

my perspective, this footnote, when it is considered in conjunction with the opinion’s

overall view of the Miranda-Edwards line of cases,8 constitutes nothing more than a

reiteration by the high Court that the prospect of the loss of Fifth Amendment rights,

which, as discussed above, is the central concern of the Miranda-Edwards line of cases,

is simply not implicated in situations where an individual is not in custody and, thus, will

not be subjected to its coercive effects during interrogation.

       This interpretation is further bolstered by the fact that the high Court, in this

footnote, explicitly chose as two of its three illustrative examples non-custodial

situations, such as an individual’s assertion of Miranda rights by letter whenever he or

she has not been arrested by police, or whenever he or she has not even been

identified as a suspect. Its third example — invocation of Miranda rights at a preliminary


8
  See McNeil, 501 U.S. at 178 (“[T]he particular sort of lawyerly assistance that is the
subject of Miranda . . . [is] the assistance of an attorney in dealing with custodial
interrogation by the police.” (emphasis original)).



                             [J-66-2014] [MO: Saylor, J.] - 15
hearing, which is conducted post-arrest — frequently involves non-custodial situations

where the individual invoking such rights has been released on bail or his or her own

recognizance at the time of the hearing. In any event, all of these examples are most

unlike the factual circumstances of this case, where an individual who was indisputably

in custody on a murder charge expressly requested the assistance of counsel and

indicated that he did not wish to be questioned without counsel being present. In sum,

this footnote does not control the question of whether this type of request for the

assistance of counsel, made by an individual in custody, and for the purpose of “dealing

with custodial interrogation,” McNeil, 501 U.S. at 178, can be made only after an

interrogation has begun, or in close temporal proximity to its commencement, in order

for police to be obligated to honor it. Moreover, I regard the footnote to offer only

equivocal guidance as to how the high Court might rule if squarely confronted with this

question. See id. at 182 n.3 (“The fact that we have allowed the Miranda right to

counsel, once asserted, to be effective with respect to future custodial interrogation

does not necessarily mean that we will allow it to be asserted initially outside the context

of custodial interrogation, with similar future effect.” (emphasis added)).      Therefore,

inasmuch as the high Court has recently re-affirmed that the Miranda-Edwards-Minnick

line of cases is “not in doubt,” see Montejo, 556 U.S. at 794, I would find that they

govern the disposition of this question, and that Appellee’s request was sufficient to

have triggered the protections of those cases because it was made while he was in

custody, and it was done with the express purpose of securing counsel’s assistance for

any interrogation to which he would be subjected.9

9
   I acknowledge that some states’ supreme courts and some federal circuit courts have
interpreted this footnote from McNeil in a similar fashion as the Majority, and,
correspondingly, have held that certain types of anticipatory invocations of Miranda
rights did not require suppression of statements made during subsequent uncounseled
(continuedN)


                             [J-66-2014] [MO: Saylor, J.] - 16
(Ncontinued)
interrogations. See, e.g., People v. Villalobos, 737 N.E.2d 639 (Ill. 2000) (signing of
form at bond hearing on marijuana charge, demanding a preliminary hearing, and which
also contained a section entitled “notice of representation” purporting to bar the
defendant’s participation in questioning on any other case without the presence of
counsel was not a valid invocation of Miranda rights); United States v. Lagrone, 43 F.3d
332, 339 (7th Cir. 1994) (store owner’s unsuccessful attempt to contact attorney while
handcuffed to ask about whether he should give consent to search did not constitute
valid invocation of Miranda right to counsel since “[he] did not request an attorney
immediately before, in response to, or during custodial interrogation”) (emphasis
omitted). However, as the parties have recited in their briefs, and as referenced by the
Majority, there is a distinct split of authority on this question, which, from my
perspective, indicates no clear governing legal consensus. Thus, in the absence of
binding precedent from the United States Supreme Court to the contrary, I favor aligning
with the high courts of our sister jurisdictions, and other federal circuits, that do not
consider the McNeil footnote as a deviation by the high Court from its Miranda-
Edwards-Minnick line of decisions. See, e.g., State v. Rose, 604 A.2d 24, 27 (Me.
1992) (holding that defendant’s act of circling a preprinted request for the assistance of
counsel on a detainer form involving criminal charges lodged in Maine, while he was a
prisoner in Arizona, was sufficient to invoke the protections of Miranda and Edwards;
“[g]iven the fact that he was in custody and subject to interrogation, no rational purpose
would be served by distinguishing between a request for counsel made before a
Miranda warning and one made after such a warning.”); State v. Chew, 695 A.2d 1301
(N.J. 1997) (holding that defendant’s request to mother to call his attorney as he was
being arrested at his home was a valid invocation of Miranda rights, such that statement
given in an uncounseled interrogation later at the police station must be suppressed,
and rejecting argument that questioning must be imminent in order for Edwards to
apply); State v. Torres 412 S.E.2d 20, 26 (N.C. 1992) (holding that, where defendant
was in custody at the sheriff's department but not yet interrogated, her request for
counsel to the sheriff was, under Miranda, a valid invocation of her Fifth Amendment
rights: “[i]t would make little sense to require a defendant already in custody to wait until
the onset of questioning or the recitation of her Miranda rights before being permitted to
invoke her right to counsel.”), overruled in part on other grounds, State v. Buchanan,
543 S.E.2d 823 (N.C. 2001); Walker v. State, 795 P.2d 1064, 1067 (Okl. Ct. Crim. App.
1990) (holding that Edwards applied to bar confession of a defendant who requested to
speak with his attorney prior to being moved to a different county, even though the
request was not made during any interrogation, due to the fact that defendant was
questioned without counsel the next day after having been moved), and followed in
Marquez v. State, 890 P.2d 980 (Okl. Ct. Crim. App. 1995) (continuing to regard a pre-
interrogation request for the assistance of counsel as governed by Edwards); State v.
Hambly, 745 N.W.2d 48, 61 (Wis. 2008) (defendant’s request for an attorney
(continuedN)


                             [J-66-2014] [MO: Saylor, J.] - 17
       As the Majority acknowledges, bright-line rules have value in furnishing clear

guidance to law enforcement, which is precisely what the Miranda-Edwards-Minnick line

of cases provides in these situations.10 From my perspective, because this bright-line


(Ncontinued)
immediately upon being arrested and handcuffed by detectives investigating drug
activity was an effective invocation of his Fifth Amendment right to counsel, since it was
made while the defendant was in custody); U.S. v. Kelsey, 951 F.2d 1196 (10th Cir.
1991) (holding that defendant’s request for an attorney made while he was in custody
as his house was being searched was a valid invocation of his Fifth Amendment right to
counsel under Miranda and Edwards, even though he was not being interrogated by the
police when he made the request, nor given Miranda warnings, noting the coercive
effects of the circumstances of his detention and the passage of time before he was
interrogated — three hours — during which his request for counsel was unfulfilled).
10
    Unlike the Majority, I do not view application of the bright line rule articulated in the
Miranda-Edwards-Minnick line of decisions in situations such as the instant matter to be
an impediment to effective law enforcement. As the high Court has observed: “[n]o
system [of criminal justice] worth preserving should have to fear that if an accused is
permitted to consult with a lawyer, he will become aware of, and exercise,
[constitutional] rights.” Escobedo v. Illinois, 378 U.S. 478, 490 (1964). Indeed, the
Court has emphasized the vital role which the right to consult with an attorney regarding
police interrogation serves under our Constitution in ensuring the proper functioning of
our system of criminal justice:
                An attorney may advise his client not to talk to police until he
                has had an opportunity to investigate the case, or he may
                wish to be present with his client during any police
                questioning. In doing so an attorney is merely exercising the
                good professional judgment he has been taught. This is not
                cause for considering the attorney a menace to law
                enforcement. He is merely carrying out what he is sworn to
                do under his oath — to protect to the extent of his ability the
                rights of his client.
Miranda, 384 U.S. at 480-81. See also Fare v. Michael C., 442 U.S. 707, 719 (1979)
(“Whether it is a minor or an adult who stands accused, the lawyer is the one person to
whom society as a whole looks as the protector of the legal rights of that person in his
dealings with the police and the courts. For this reason, the Court fashioned in Miranda
the rigid rule that an accused's request for an attorney is per se an invocation of his Fifth
Amendment rights, requiring that all interrogation cease.”).
        Application of the Miranda-Edwards-Minnick rule in cases such as the matter at
bar, is, thus, eminently consistent with the high Court’s objective of protecting the basic
(continuedN)


                             [J-66-2014] [MO: Saylor, J.] - 18
rule requires that police honor the request of an individual in custody for the assistance

of counsel to deal with interrogation, made at any time while the individual is in custody,

before commencing questioning of the individual, the lower courts properly applied it to

exclude Appellee’s confession, since he was not provided the assistance of counsel

prior to and during interrogation, as he clearly and unequivocally requested, and which

was his federal and state constitutional right.



(Ncontinued)
constitutional right of every person to consult with an attorney prior to and during police
interrogation, but it does not thwart the ability of the police to solve a crime. Although
questioning individuals taken into custody remains a vital tool in solving crime, it is by no
means the only means to do so, especially in light of substantial advances in modern
forensic science. See, e.g., Professor Marcy Strauss, “The Sounds of Silence:
Reconsidering the Invocation of the Right to Remain Silent Under Miranda,” 17 Wm. &
Mary Bill Rts. J. 773, 829 n.164 (2009) (observing that the increasing utilization of
scientific technology such as DNA evidence has diminished the need for confessions
and that “[t]he growth in scientific technology may render it less essential for law
enforcement agencies to center an investigation on information ‘cajoled’ from a suspect,
especially in the most serious of crimes like murder and rape.”). Notably, application of
the Miranda-Edwards rule in these circumstances does not in any way preclude law
enforcement from pursuing any and all other means of investigation at their disposal
after an individual in custody has made a request for counsel to deal with any
interrogation to which he or she may be subjected. See Miranda, 384 U.S. at 477
(“When an individual is in custody on probable cause, the police may, of course, seek
out evidence in the field to be used at trial against him.”). Moreover, an individual who
has requested the assistance of counsel to deal with interrogation may still, at any time,
reconsider that request and approach police to discuss the case with them even if
counsel has not been provided. See Edwards, 451 U.S. at 484-85. Furthermore, and
importantly, once counsel has been provided, police are free to renew their request to
speak with the individual, and he or she may, after consultation with that attorney, agree
to speak with police with the attorney present. Assuring access to counsel requested by
an individual in custody merely serves to confirm that any statements given during a
subsequent custodial interrogation are, in actuality, the product of a free and voluntary
choice. See Miranda, 384 U.S. at 470 (“If the accused decides to talk to his
interrogators, the assistance of counsel can mitigate the dangers of
untrustworthiness.”).




                             [J-66-2014] [MO: Saylor, J.] - 19
I, therefore, dissent.




                         [J-66-2014] [MO: Saylor, J.] - 20
