Former Mexican police officer would not believe he was in custody although handcuffed [?!]

N.D. Ill. decides that a former Mexican police officer had to know that he was not in custody when he made admissions to the police and consented to the search of his house. United States v. Gonzalez-Villa, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 39394 (N.D. Ill. May 31, 2007):

The officers’ use of a protective pat-down and handcuffs were reasonably necessary to assure both the officers’ and Gonzalez-Villa’s safety, and did not amount to a custodial arrest. Once Agent Vargas arrived, he immediately questioned Gonzalez-Villa in a language that Gonzalez-Villa understood, a few car-lengths away from his vehicle. Neither of the two officers in Gonzalez-Villa’s immediate vicinity had their weapons drawn. At the time, Gonzalez-Villa was thirty-six years of age, and a former Mexican police officer. In examining the totality of the circumstances, a reasonable thirty-six year old former Mexican police officer would have understood his situation to not have equated to being in custody before or during Agent Vargas’s questioning. Therefore, the statements Gonzalez-Villa made to Agent Vargas were not given in violation of his Fifth Amendment rights.

. . .

Gonzalez-Villa argues that his statements should be suppressed as involuntary. As noted above, although Gonzalez-Villa was handcuffed, he was not in such an inherently coercive environment as to be considered in custody.

. . .

Further, Gonzalez-Villa gave the police consent to search his residence approximately twenty minutes after the investigatory stop took place, and only minutes into the conversation between Agent Vargas and Gonzalez-Villa. In addition, the consent form that Gonzalez-Villa signed was written in Spanish, and stated that Gonzalez-Villa gave his consent to search his residence “freely” and that he had “not been threatened nor forced in any way” to give his consent. (T. 28-29).

Comment: What is the cultural belief of a former Mexican police officer about U.S. constitutional rights? I personally find that fact irrelevant. The only time I was in Mexico as an adult, and it was only in February, there were drug roadblocks within miles of the border, and they weren’t stopping Anglos. What a former Mexican police officer thinks is relevant to what he or she understands is a lack of an ability to object to a request for consent. There is not one word in the opinion about cultural beliefs and understandings of the defendant, a Mexican national, who would have a completely different understanding of law, police officer or not. Consent now gets total deference to the police and government.

For those interested in cultural issues in criminal defense, including suppression issues, see Linda Friedman Ramirez, Cultural Issues in Criminal Defense (2d ed. 2007).

This entry was posted in Uncategorized. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.