State v. Josue Morillo

Date Filed2022-12-16
Docket20-4
Cited0 times
StatusPublished

Syllabus

The State of Rhode Island appealed from a Superior Court order granting a motion to suppress statements made to detectives by the defendant, Josue Morillo. The state argued that the trial justice erred in finding that (1) the defendant was in custody when he voluntarily accompanied the detectives in an unmarked police vehicle (2) the defendant did not knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily waive his Miranda rights when he made the third statement to detectives and (3) a fourth statement given after additional Miranda warnings was inadmissible under Missouri v. Seibert, 542 U.S. 600 (2004).<br><br>The Court concluded that the trial justice did not properly perform his fact-finding function in considering whether the defendant's admission within his third statement was knowing and intelligent. The Supreme Court also concluded that the trial justice's reliance on Seibert, which involved a deliberate question-first, Mirandize-later tactic, was erroneous and that the defendant's fourth statement was admissible.<br><br>Accordingly, the Supreme Court vacated the order of the Superior Court holding that the fourth statement was admissible, and remanded the record to the Superior Court for limited factual findings and conclusions of law concerning whether the defendant made a knowing and intelligent waiver of his rights with respect to the third statement.

Full Opinion (html_with_citations)

Case ID: 9343502 • Docket ID: 66655059