Alfredo Leyva Pecina v. State ( 2010 )


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  •                           COURT OF APPEALS
    SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS
    FORT WORTH
    NO. 2-05-456-CR
    ALFREDO LEYVA PECINA                                                     APPELLANT
    V.
    THE STATE OF TEXAS                                                             STATE
    ------------
    FROM CRIMINAL DISTRICT COURT NO. 2 OF TARRANT COUNTY
    ------------
    OPINION ON REMAND
    ------------
    Appellant Alfredo Leyva Pecina was found guilty by a jury of murder and
    sentenced to life in prison. Upon reconsideration on remand from the Texas Court
    of Criminal Appeals, we reverse and remand.
    I. Procedural Background
    Following his jury trial, Pecina appealed his conviction to this court and raised
    four issues, including complaints that the trial court erred by denying his motion to
    suppress statements he made to police in violation of his right to counsel under the
    Fifth and Sixth (and Fourteenth) Amendments. This court affirmed the trial court’s
    judgment, and as relevant here, held that Pecina—after being warned of his Miranda
    rights 1 by a magistrate the police brought with them to question him in the
    hospital—either did not clearly invoke his right to counsel under the Fifth
    Amendment, or, alternatively, waived his right to counsel by reinitiating contact with
    the police.2 W e further held that, although Pecina’s Sixth Amendment right to
    counsel attached when he was warned by the magistrate and requested counsel,
    Pecina reinitiated contact with the police and waived his right to have counsel
    present during the interrogation. 3
    The court of criminal appeals reversed this court, holding that Pecina had
    invoked his right to counsel and that the police reinitiated contact with Pecina;
    therefore, under the rule in Michigan v. Jackson, 4 Pecina’s waiver of his Sixth
    Amendment right to counsel was invalid, and his statements given to the detectives
    should have been suppressed. 5
    1
     See Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
    , 
    86 S. Ct. 1602
    (1966).
    2
     Pecina v. State, No. 2-05-00456-CR, 2007 W L 1299263, at *8 (Tex.
    App.—Fort W orth May 3, 2007) (not designated for publication) (“Pecina I”), rev’d,
    268 S.W .3d 564 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008) (“Pecina II”).
    3
     
    Id. 4 
    475 U.S. 625
    , 635, 
    106 S. Ct. 1404
    , 1410 (1986), overruled by Montejo v.
    Louisiana, 
    129 S. Ct. 2079
    , 2091 (2009).
    5
     Pecina II, 268 S.W .3d at 569.
    2
    Although Pecina contended in his petition for discretionary review to the court
    of criminal appeals that any waiver of his right to counsel was also invalid under the
    Fifth Amendment, the court of criminal appeals did not reach or address Pecina’s
    Fifth Amendment argument. The court remanded the cause to this court to conduct
    a harm analysis as to the violation of his Sixth Amendment right. 6
    II. Scope of Review on Remand
    After remand, the United States Supreme Court, in Montejo v. Louisiana, 7
    overruled its decision in Jackson. Subsequently, the court of criminal appeals
    handed down an opinion in a case similar to this one, holding that “[a]fter Montejo,
    the Sixth Amendment does not bar police-initiated interrogation of an accused who
    has previously asserted his right to counsel.” 8     Because of these intervening
    decisions, we will reconsider Pecina’s contentions that his statements should have
    been suppressed under both the Fifth and Sixth Amendments. 9
    III. Factual Background
    6
     
    Id. 7 
    129 S. Ct. at 2085–92.
    8
     Hughen v. State, 297 S.W .3d 330, 335 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009).
    9
     See Carroll v. State, 101 S.W .3d 454, 456–59 (Tex. Crim. App. 2003)
    (holding that on remand a court of appeals may reconsider an issue and decide it on
    grounds not expressly contemplated by the court of criminal appeals’s order);
    Williams v. State, 145 S.W .3d 737, 740 (Tex. App.—Fort W orth 2004, no pet.).
    3
    Pecina and his wife, Michelle, lived with Michelle’s father and her sister,
    Gabriela. On the evening of January 30, 2004, Gabriela came home from work and
    found both Pecina and Michelle lying on the floor of their bedroom, bleeding from
    stab wounds. W hen she picked up the phone to call 911, Pecina stood up and came
    toward her. Gabriela ran from the apartment to borrow a phone. A neighbor called
    911 and went with Gabriela back to the apartment. The neighbor saw blood all over
    the apartment. He told the 911 operator that a female lying on the bedroom floor
    appeared dead; a male who was also lying on the floor was still alive but appeared
    to be bleeding.
    W hen paramedics and police arrived, they found an “extremely bloody” scene.
    Blood was on the walls and most of the furniture. Pools of blood were on the floor.
    A large amount of blood was around both victims. The female was cool to the touch
    with no pulse and multiple injuries to her upper torso and neck. Having determined
    that they could not resuscitate Michelle, the paramedics concentrated their attention
    on Pecina, who also had stab wounds, at least one of which appeared serious.
    Pecina moaned but was not able to talk. They placed Pecina on an IV for fluids and
    established an airway by intubating him. Pecina was then transported to Dallas
    Methodist Hospital.
    Michelle was pronounced dead at the scene; it was later determined that she
    had been stabbed fifty-five times.       A serrated kitchen knife, with a blade
    approximately seven inches in length, lay on the floor by the bathroom sink counter.
    4
    Officer Harris of the Arlington Police Department responded to the dispatch call and
    arrived at the scene within two minutes.       She saw the knife on the floor and
    “secured” it until the crime scene investigators arrived.
    Police found no evidence of forced entry or tampering with doors or windows.
    A crime scene investigator took blood samples from around the room and found a
    palm print on the bathroom mirror as well as latent prints near the front door handle.
    Another investigator went to the hospital the next day to document Pecina’s stab
    wounds and to obtain fingerprints. He examined Pecina, who was still unconscious
    at that time. The investigator found no defensive wounds and found a number of
    small wounds that, in his opinion, appeared self-inflicted with many “hesitation”
    marks around the larger wounds.        B ecause the police b elieved P ecina had
    murdered his wife and had attempted to kill himself, detectives prepared a warrant
    for his arrest. On the afternoon of February 5, 2004, Detective Nutt, the Arlington
    police officer in charge of the investigation, took a Spanish-speaking magistrate,
    Arlington Municipal Judge Maddock, and Detective Frias, who was also fluent in
    Spanish, with him to the hospital. According to the detectives, the purpose of taking
    the magistrate with them was to have Pecina arraigned before they interviewed him.
    Pecina was in a room, being guarded by a Dallas County deputy sheriff.         T h e
    detectives entered Pecina’s hospital room with the magistrate and introduced
    themselves to Pecina and the Dallas County deputy. The magistrate went to the left
    side of Pecina’s hospital bed with the deputy on the right side. She pointed to the
    5
    officers and said, “They are here. They would like to speak to you.” She testified that
    Pecina “nodded his head or said ‘yes.’ I can’t remember, but there was an
    acknowledgment.” She advised Pecina that he had been charged with murder. She
    then read Pecina his Miranda rights in Spanish, including the right to hire a lawyer
    or to have a lawyer appointed to represent him if he could not afford one, the right
    to have the lawyer present prior to and during any interview and questioning by
    peace officers, the right to remain silent, and the right to stop any interviewing or
    questioning at any time. Judge Maddock testified at the suppression hearing that
    following her reading of those warnings, she asked Pecina if he wanted a court-
    appointed lawyer, and he “said he did.” 10
    The magistrate also explained to Pecina that, in the event he wanted an
    attorney appointed for him, he would be asked to complete a written form about his
    financial resources and provided with forms and assistance, if necessary, to
    complete the forms. She had Pecina sign the warnings form. The magistrate wrote
    on the bottom of the waiver of counsel form that she was requesting appointment of
    counsel on her own motion without requiring the forms.           W ithout waiting for
    appointment of counsel, the magistrate then asked Pecina, “Do you still want to talk
    to the officers?” and he said, “Yes.”
    10
     The magistrate’s verbal warnings and Pecina’s responses were either not
    recorded or transcribed; we rely on testimony of the magistrate at the suppression
    hearing prior to trial as to what was said at that preliminary hearing.
    6
    The detectives waited in the hall while Judge Maddock administered the
    warnings; they re-entered the room when she advised them to come back in. As she
    handed the documents to the detectives, Judge Maddock advised them that Pecina
    had requested a lawyer, but told them that Pecina said he also wanted to talk to
    them.    Detective Nutt recalled that Judge Maddock said Pecina had initially
    requested a lawyer but then told her that he wanted to talk to the detectives.
    Detective Frias then read Pecina the Miranda warnings in Spanish a second
    and third time—once before they started recording the interview and again after
    turning on the recording device. At some point in the interview, Pecina signed a
    printed waiver of counsel form. At the conclusion of their interview, Detective Frias
    wrote out a statement in Spanish that Pecina signed, which included a waiver of the
    right to counsel. Detective Frias wrote in Spanish in the margin of the waiver of
    counsel form, “I asked for a lawyer, but I also wanted to speak with the Arlington
    police.” The officers then transported Judge Maddock back to her office.
    In his taped confession to the police, Pecina said that he did not remember
    much that happened that day, that he had not used drugs or alcohol, that he and his
    wife had argued about her not wanting to be with him, he became angry, and they
    began to fight. W hen asked if he had cut Michelle, he said, “[Y]es.” Pecina said that
    no one else was present when these events occurred and that he had no memory
    of cutting himself. In Pecina’s written statement, he stated that he picked up the
    7
    knife from the kitchen and cut his wife. He did not remember how many times he cut
    her.
    Upon returning to her office, Judge Maddock faxed the forms for Pecina’s
    request for counsel to the office of attorney appointments in Arlington for processing,
    as “we do not have at our disposal right there the court appointed attorneys to
    immediately come up and speak to them.” Counsel was not appointed to represent
    Pecina until the next morning, February 6, 2004.
    IV. Motion to Suppress
    Pecina filed a motion to suppress both his oral and written statements,
    claiming that the statements were not voluntarily given and were obtained in violation
    of his Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, and Fourteenth Amendment rights. At the suppression
    hearing, in addition to the testimony related above, the State, on redirect
    examination of the magistrate, sought to confirm that Pecina indicated to her that
    he wanted to talk to the officers. She responded, “He said he still—I said, I asked
    them—him, ‘do you still want to talk to them?’ And he said, ‘Yes.’ He never said to
    me that he wanted to talk to them.”
    The trial court denied the motion to suppress and found that Pecina was fully
    informed of his rights and “indicated that although he did want a lawyer, that he
    wished to also talk with detectives from Arlington, meaning that he basically was
    waiving his rights at that time.” The trial court further found that Pecina also signed
    various waivers of counsel and was not under the influence of drugs or alcohol when
    8
    he gave the statements that were recorded and put in writing. Based on those
    findings, the trial court concluded that the statements were taken “voluntarily” and
    were admissible. The jury found Pecina guilty of murder and sentenced him to life
    in prison.
    V. First Appeal
    On Pecina’s original appeal to this court, we addressed Pecina’s issues
    regarding the right to counsel under both the Fifth and Sixth Amendments and held
    that the trial court did not err by finding that Pecina had voluntarily waived his
    rights.11 W e reasoned that Pecina had waived his Fifth Amendment right to counsel
    “either by failing to invoke it . . . or because he reinitiated the contact by answering
    ‘yes’ when asked” by the magistrate if he still wanted to speak with the detectives
    and by telling the detectives that he wanted to speak to them because nothing in the
    record clearly showed that Pecina had indicated to Judge Maddock or the detectives
    at the time of the interview that he wanted to speak to an attorney about the
    questioning or to have one present during the questioning. 12
    This court also concluded that Pecina’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel had
    attached when he was administered his Miranda warnings by the magistrate and
    11
     Pecina I, 2007 W L 1299263, at *7.
    12
     
    Id. at *8.
    9
    requested a court-appointed attorney. 13 W e further determined that Pecina invoked
    his Sixth Amendment right to counsel. But we determined that he then waived his
    Sixth Amendment right to counsel when he said, “I asked for a lawyer, but also I
    wanted to speak with the Arlington police.” 14 W e held that Pecina also waived his
    right to counsel when he was advised of his Miranda rights multiple times by the
    detectives prior to the interview, initialed the written warnings, and answered on the
    recording that he understood each right as it was read to him. 15 This court affirmed
    Pecina’s conviction, deferring to the trial court’s findings of fact and rejecting
    Pecina’s arguments that his Fifth and Sixth Amendment rights were violated. 16
    The court of criminal appeals reversed this court’s decision, holding that
    Pecina invoked his right to counsel when he was arraigned by the magistrate and
    that Pecina did not initiate contact with the police by answering “Yes” to Judge
    Maddock’s subsequent question as to whether he still wanted to talk to police;
    rather, the police, acting through Judge Maddock, initiated the contact with Pecina. 17
    The court thus held that, in violation of the Sixth Amendment and based on Jackson,
    the police, themselves, effectively initiated police interrogation “after [Pecina’s]
    13
     
    Id. 14 
    Id.
    15
     
    Id.
    16
     
    Id.
    17
     
    Pecina II, 268 S.W .3d at 569–70.
    10
    assertion, at an arraignment or similar proceeding, of his right to counsel[, and] any
    waiver of [Pecina’s] right to counsel for that police-initiated interrogation [was]
    invalid.” 18 The court of criminal appeals remanded the case to this court, instructing
    us to conduct a harm analysis. 19
    VI. Discussion
    A. Pecina’s Sixth Amendment Issue on Remand
    The first question now facing this court is whether we are to conduct the harm
    analysis as instructed by the court of criminal appeals or re-evaluate Pecina’s Sixth
    Amendment claim under Montejo. W e have received supplemental briefing from the
    State and Pecina’s counsel. The State argues that we should reconsider Pecina’s
    Sixth Amendment claim on the merits and hold that, under Montejo, his rights were
    not violated when he freely and voluntarily gave his statement without counsel
    present, having been twice warned of his rights after invoking his right to counsel.
    Pecina counters that, unlike the defendant in Montejo, who stood silent at his
    arraignment, Pecina affirmatively invoked his right to counsel before the police took
    his statement. Thus, Pecina argues any waiver by him is invalid even after Montejo,
    and this court should now proceed to conduct the harm analysis as instructed by the
    18
     
    Id. (quoting Jackson,
    475 U.S. at 
    636, 106 S. Ct. at 1404
    ).
    19
     
    Id. at 569.
    11
    court of criminal appeals, hold that there was harm, and remand this case to the trial
    court for a new trial.
    1. Jackson no longer applies.
    The Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides that “[i]n all
    criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right . . . to have the Assistance
    of Counsel for his defence.” 20 The Sixth Amendment right to counsel is fundamental
    and essential to a fair trial and, therefore, applies to the States by virtue of the
    Fourteenth Amendment. 21 Once the adversarial process has been initiated, the
    Sixth Amendment right to counsel thereafter guarantees an accused the right to
    have counsel present at all “critical” stages of the prosecution. 22
    The warnings that the magistrate read to Pecina before his interrogation were
    those required to be administered by a magistrate by article 15.17 of the Texas Code
    of Criminal Procedure. 23 The arresting officer must take the person arrested before
    20
     U.S. Const. amend. VI.
    21
     Gideon v. Wainwright, 
    372 U.S. 335
    , 343–44, 
    83 S. Ct. 792
    , 795 (1963)
    (holding “fundamental nature” of right to counsel makes it obligatory on the States
    by the “due process” clause of the Fourteenth Amendment).
    22
     United States v. Wade, 
    388 U.S. 218
    , 227–28, 
    87 S. Ct. 1926
    , 1932–33
    (1967).
    23
     Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 15.17 (a) (Vernon Supp. 2009) (placing duty
    on arresting officer and magistrate to administer warnings there listed). Article
    15.17(a) also requires the magistrate to advise the person arrested that “he is not
    required to make a statement and that any statement made by him may be used
    against him.” 
    Id. 12 a
    magistrate “without unnecessary delay” but not later than forty-eight hours after his
    arrest to have those warnings given, probable cause for his arrest determined, and
    bail set. 24 If the person is indigent and requests appointment of counsel, the
    magistrate must appoint counsel, if empowered to do so by law, or forward the forms
    for appointment of counsel to the court within twenty-four hours of the request. 25
    An Article 15.17 warnings hearing, like a formal arraignment, has been held
    sufficient to mark the initiation of adversarial proceedings against an accused and
    to signal attachment of the Sixth Amendment right to counsel. 26 Efforts to elicit
    information from the accused after charges have been brought, including in-custody
    interrogations by police, are “critical stages” of a criminal proceeding. 27 In Jackson,
    the Supreme Court held that, if police initiate custodial interrogation after a
    defendant has asserted his right to counsel at an arraignment or similar proceeding,
    24
     
    Id. (The record
    shows that the magistrate set bond at $1,000,000 in this
    instance, but there is no indication that the magistrate made a probable cause
    determination).
    25
     
    Id. 26 
    Rothgery v. Gillespie County, Tex., 554 U. S 191, 
    128 S. Ct. 2578
    ,
    2591–92 (2008) (holding right to counsel “attaches” at an article 15.17 hearing, with
    the consequent obligation to appoint counsel); see Brewer v. Williams, 
    430 U.S. 387
    ,
    388–89, 
    97 S. Ct. 1232
    , 1239–40 (1977) (holding right to counsel attaches at the
    initial appearance of an accused before a judicial officer).
    27
     
    Brewer, 430 U.S. at 388
    –89, 97 S. Ct. at 1239–40; Massiah v. United
    States, 
    377 U.S. 201
    , 204–05, 
    84 S. Ct. 1199
    , 1201–02 (1964).
    13
    any waiver of the defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel for that police-
    initiated interrogation is invalid. 28
    The court of criminal appeals’s holding that Pecina’s Sixth Amendment right
    to counsel was violated and its instruction to us to conduct a harm analysis were
    predicated squarely on Jackson; the court concluded that the police initiated
    interrogation after Pecina asserted his right to counsel at his article 15.17 hearing
    and, therefore, “waiver of [his] right to counsel for that police-initiated interrogation
    is invalid.” 29 Montejo, however, changed the legal landscape regarding the effect of
    a defendant’s waiver of the Sixth Amendment right to counsel after an arraignment
    or similar proceeding. 30 In Montejo, the Court overruled Jackson, in part based upon
    its reasoning that the right to counsel during custodial interrogation, whether the
    interrogation occurs before or after formal adversarial proceedings are initiated, is
    sufficiently protected by “three layers of prophylaxis” already provided by the
    Miranda, Edwards, and Minnick Fifth Amendment line of cases. 31
    2. Miranda v. Arizona
    28
    
    475 U.S. at 636
    , 106 S. Ct. at 1411.
    29
     Pecina II, 268 S.W .3d at 568 (quoting 
    Jackson, 475 U.S. at 636
    , 106 S.
    Ct. at 1411).
    30
     
    Montejo, 129 S. Ct. at 2090
    .
    31
     
    Id. at 2081
    (citing Minnick v. Mississippi, 
    498 U.S. 146
    , 153, 
    111 S. Ct. 486
    , 491 (1990); Edwards v. Arizona, 
    451 U.S. 477
    , 484, 
    101 S. Ct. 1880
    , 1884–85
    (1981); 
    Miranda, 384 U.S. at 479
    , 86 S. Ct. at 1630).
    14
    In Miranda, the Supreme Court held that the Fifth Amendment prohibition
    against compelled self-incrimination—that [n]o person . . . shall be compelled in any
    criminal case to be a witness against himself”—requires that a suspect subject to
    “custodial interrogation” has the right to remain silent; to further ensure that right is
    protected, he has the right to consult with counsel and to have counsel present
    during questioning, and the police must explain these rights to the accused prior to
    any questioning. 32     In the Miranda context, “custodial interrogation” means
    questioning initiated by law enforcement officers after a person has been taken into
    custody or otherwise deprived of his freedom in any significant way. 33 Significantly,
    the Court in Miranda held that if the accused indicates he wishes to remain silent,
    “the interrogation must cease.” 34     And if the accused requests counsel, “the
    interrogation must cease until an attorney is present.” 35 Miranda thus declared that
    32
     
    Miranda, 384 U.S. at 479
    , 86 S. Ct. at 1630; 
    Edwards, 451 U.S. at 482
    ,
    101 S. Ct. at 1883; see Davis v. United States, 
    512 U.S. 452
    , 457, 
    114 S. Ct. 2350
    ,
    2354 (1994) (reaffirming right to assistance of counsel under Miranda when accused
    is subject to “custodial interrogation,” which right must be explained to him before
    questioning begins); see also Malloy v. Hogan, 
    378 U.S. 1
    , 6, 
    84 S. Ct. 1489
    ,
    1492–93 (1964) (holding that the Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination
    applies to the States through the Fourteenth Amendment).
    33
     
    Miranda, 384 U.S. at 479
    , 86 S. Ct. at 1630; see 
    Davis, 512 U.S. at 459
    ,
    
    114 S. Ct. 2350
    (suspect must, at a minimum, make some statement that can
    reasonably be construed to be an expression of a desire for the assistance of an
    attorney”).
    34
     
    Miranda, 384 U.S. at 479
    , 86 S. Ct. at 1630.
    35
     
    Id. at 474,
    86 S. Ct. at 1627 (emphasis added).
    15
    the accused has a Fifth (and Fourteenth) Amendment right to have counsel present
    during custodial interrogation. 36
    In Miranda, the Court further concluded that, “[i]f the interrogation continues
    without the presence of an attorney and a statement is taken, a heavy burden rests
    on the government to demonstrate that the defendant knowingly and intelligently
    waived his privilege against self-incrimination and his right to retained or appointed
    counsel.” 37
    3. Edwards v. Arizona
    In Edwards, the Court determined that traditional standards of waiver are not
    sufficient to protect the Miranda rights, and that “additional safeguards” are
    necessary at a subsequent interrogation if an accused has previously requested
    counsel.38 Accordingly, the Court reaffirmed Miranda’s absolute statement that once
    the accused exercises his right to counsel, “the interrogation must cease until an
    attorney is present.” 39 Confirming that it is inconsistent with Miranda for authorities
    36
     
    Id. at 474,
    86 S. Ct. at 1627, see 
    Edwards, 451 U.S. at 482
    , 101 S. Ct. at
    1883; see also Dickerson v. United States, 
    530 U.S. 428
    , 438, 
    120 S. Ct. 2326
    , 2332
    (2000) (holding that the Miranda protections are “constitutionally required”).
    37
     
    Miranda, 384 U.S. at 475
    , 86 S. Ct. at 1628 (invoking “high standards” of
    proof for waiver of constitutional rights enunciated in Johnson v. Zerbst, 
    304 U.S. 458
    , 
    58 S. Ct. 1019
    (1938) that waiver must be knowing, intelligent, and voluntary).
    38
    
    451 U.S. at 484
    , 101 S. Ct. at 1884–85.
    39
     
    Id. at 486,
    101 S. Ct. at 1885 (quoting Miranda, 384 U.S. at 
    474, 86 S. Ct. at 1627
    ).
    16
    “at their instance,” to interrogate an accused in custody if he has clearly asserted his
    right to counsel, and as a corollary to Miranda, the Court in Edwards established a
    rigid, “bright-line” rule that an accused in custody who has “expressed his desire to
    deal with the police through counsel is not subject to further interrogation until
    counsel has been made available to him unless the accused, himself, initiates further
    communications, exchanges, or conversations with the police.” 40            If the police
    nevertheless subsequently initiate an encounter in the absence of counsel, the
    suspect’s statements are presumed involuntary and are inadmissible in evidence
    against him even if he executes a waiver and even if the waiver would be considered
    voluntary under traditional standards. 41 The Edwards rule is “designed to prevent
    police from badgering a defendant into waiving his previously asserted Miranda
    rights.”42 Thereafter, in Minnick, the Court held that the protection of a suspect’s Fifth
    Amendment right to counsel by Edwards does not end for police-initiated
    40
     
    Id. at 484–85,
    101 S. Ct. at 1884–85; see Solem v. Stumes, 
    465 U.S. 638
    ,
    641, 
    104 S. Ct. 1338
    , 1340 (1984) (characterizing Edwards as establishing a bright-
    line rule and reaffirming that once a suspect has invoked the right to counsel, any
    subsequent interrogation must be initiated by him).
    41
     See Maryland v. Shatzer, 
    130 S. Ct. 1213
    , 1221–22 (2010) (reaffirming
    Edwards’s “conclusive presumption” of invalidity of waiver of Fifth Amendment right
    to counsel but holding presumption did not continue following break in custody of
    more than fourteen days after return of accused to general prison population);
    Edwards, 451 U.S. at 
    484–85, 101 S. Ct. at 1884
    –85 (waiver presumed involuntary
    if counsel not present unless accused, himself, reinitiates communication).
    42
     
    Davis, 512 U.S. at 458
    , 114 S. Ct. at 2355 (citing Michigan v. Harvey, 
    494 U.S. 344
    , 350, 
    110 S. Ct. 1176
    , 1180 (1990)).
    17
    interrogation merely because an accused has once consulted an attorney; the
    attorney must be present at the interrogation. 43
    However, an accused may still waive his right to counsel after he has invoked
    it. In Oregon v. Bradshaw, the Supreme Court clarified Edwards by establishing a
    two-step procedure to determine whether a suspect has waived his previously
    invoked Fifth Amendment right to counsel. 44        The first step requires proof, as
    mandated by Edwards, that the suspect himself initiated further communication with
    the officers after invoking his right to counsel; the second step requires proof that
    after the suspect reinitiated contact, he voluntarily, knowingly, and intelligently
    waived the right to counsel. 45 If this two-step waiver requirement is shown, the
    Edwards rule is fully satisfied. 46
    4. Michigan v. Jackson
    In Jackson, the Court created a presumption that any waiver of the Sixth
    Amendment right to counsel is likewise invalid if police initiate interrogation once a
    defendant has invoked his right to counsel at an arraignment or formal preliminary
    hearing initiating criminal proceedings, analogizing to the similar prophylactic rule
    43
    
    498 U.S. at 156
    , 111 S. Ct. at 492.
    44
     
    462 U.S. 1039
    , 1044–46, 
    103 S. Ct. 2830
    , 2834–35 (1983); see Cross v.
    State, 144 S.W .3d 521, 526–27 (Tex. Crim. App. 2004).
    45
     Cross, 144 S.W .3d at 527 (citing and following Bradshaw, 
    462 U.S. 1044
    –46, 103 S. Ct. at 2834–35).
    46
     
    Id. 18 established
    in Edwards for protection of the Fifth Amendment-based Miranda right
    to have counsel present at any custodial interrogation. 47 Because doubts must be
    resolved in favor of protecting constitutional rights, the Court held in Jackson, citing
    Edwards, that in the Sixth Amendment context, any waiver under traditional
    voluntariness standards subsequent to the invocation of counsel would, as in
    Edwards, be likewise presumed insufficient to waive the right to counsel in the
    context of police-initiated interrogation. 48
    5. Montejo v. Louisiana
    The right to counsel under the Fifth Amendment must be affirmatively invoked
    by the accused by a clear and unequivocal request for counsel prior to or during
    questioning. 49 The Sixth Amendment right attaches “automatically” at the initiation
    of adversary criminal proceedings. 50 Both of the defendants in the consolidated
    cases in Jackson had requested appointed counsel at preliminary hearings before
    being interrogated by police. 51 In Montejo, the defendant did not request counsel but
    stood mute at his preliminary hearing required by Louisiana law, at which the court
    47
    
    475 U.S. at 636
    , 106 S. Ct. at 1411.
    48
     
    Id. at 635–36,
    106 S. Ct. at 1410–11.
    49
     
    Davis, 512 U.S. at 456
    –57, 114 S. Ct. at 2355–56; 
    Miranda, 384 U.S. at 473
    –74, 86 S. Ct. at 1627.
    50
     
    Davis, 512 U.S. at 456
    –57, 114 S. Ct. at 2355–56.
    51
     
    Jackson, 475 U.S. at 626
    –28, 106 S. Ct. at 1406–07.
    19
    nevertheless ordered counsel appointed under its state procedural rules. 52 Three
    hours later, and before Montejo could meet with counsel, detectives visited him in
    prison and read him his Miranda rights, after which he accompanied them on an
    excursion to locate the murder weapon and wrote an inculpatory letter of apology to
    the victim.53          Montejo sought to suppress the letter of apology as evidence at
    trial by extending Jackson to his situation—in which counsel had been appointed
    even though not expressly requested. 54 The Louisiana Supreme Court held that an
    actual request for counsel or other assertion of the Sixth Amendment was required
    to trigger the Jackson rule presuming invalidity of any waiver of the Sixth
    Amendment right to counsel. 55 The United States Supreme Court considered that
    approach of limiting Jackson to cases in which the defendant actually requests
    counsel at his first preliminary hearing, but the Court noted its unfairness in over half
    of the states in which counsel is automatically appointed at preliminary hearings
    such that defendants in those states have no opportunity to invoke the right to
    counsel themselves. 56 But the Court also refused to extend Jackson’s presumption
    52
     See 
    Montejo, 129 S. Ct. at 2082
    .
    53
     
    id. 54 
    Id. at 2083–84.
    
           55
     See 
    id. at 2083.
           56
     
    Id. at 2084.
    20
    to cases in which no request is made but counsel has been appointed or the
    defendant is otherwise represented. 57
    Refusing to accept either approach, the Court instead sua sponte re-evaluated
    Jackson and concluded that Jackson’s extension of the Edwards bright-line rule to
    the Sixth Amendment right to counsel is “unworkable.” 58 Significantly, the Court
    based its decision, in large part, on its conclusion that the Sixth Amendment right to
    counsel is adequately protected by the existing guarantees of the Fifth Amendment
    by virtue of Miranda and Edwards, and because, under a cost-benefit analysis, the
    “substantial costs” of adding the exclusionary rule of Jackson on top of those in
    Miranda and Edwards far outweigh any “marginal benefits.” 59 Accordingly, the
    Montejo Court held: “Michigan v. Jackson should be and now is overruled.” 60
    6. Hughen v. State
    After the court of criminal appeals remanded this case to us, and after the
    Supreme Court issued Montejo, the court of criminal appeals handed down its
    opinion in Hughen. 61 In Hughen, the court analyzed the effect of Montejo on a
    defendant’s right to have counsel present during interrogation after the Sixth
    57
     
    Id. 58 
    Id. at 2082.
    
          59
     
    Id. at 2091.
          60
     
    Id. 61 
    See 297 S.W .3d at 330.
    21
    Amendment right to counsel has attached under circumstances similar to this case. 62
    In Hughen, after the defendant was arrested and taken to the county jail, police took
    him before a magistrate pursuant to article 15.17. 63 The magistrate explained the
    charges and informed him of his Miranda rights. 64 Hughen acknowledged that he
    understood his rights and asked that counsel be appointed to represent him. 65 Three
    hours later, without waiting for the appointment of Hughen’s counsel, officers took
    Hughen from his jail cell and placed him in an interview room. 66 One of the officers
    explained to Hughen his Miranda rights again, and then asked three questions:
    (1) “Do you understand your rights, [Hughen]?” Hughen nodded in the
    affirmative. (2) “And understanding these rights, do you need to have
    a lawyer present before any questioning?” He answered, “I guess not
    right now, no.” (3) “Having these rights in mind, will you talk to me
    now?” Hughen answered, “Okay.” 67
    Before signing the waiver form, Hughen asked the officers, “This ain’t waiving my
    right for an attorney, is it?” 68 An officer responded, “No, sir. This is just talking with
    62
     
    Id. at 334–35.
           63
     
    Id. at 331.
           64
     
    Id. 65 
    Id. at 331–32.
    
           66
     
    Id. 67 
    Id. at 332.
    
           68
     
    Id. 22 us
    about what happened and what was going on and all that good stuff.” 69 Hughen
    then signed a waiver, and the officers interrogated Hughen immediately after he
    signed.70 The court of criminal appeals held that Hughen could no longer rely upon
    Jackson, since it has been overruled by Montejo, that the Sixth Amendment thus
    does not bar police-initiated interrogation after an accused has previously asserted
    his right to counsel, that Hughen’s subsequent waiver of counsel was valid, and that
    Hughen’s statement to police was properly admissible against him at trial. 71
    Hughen is analogous to this case with respect to Pecina’s Sixth Amendment
    right to counsel.     Officers brought the magistrate to the hospital to administer
    warnings to Pecina pursuant to Article 15.17 of the Texas Code of Criminal
    Procedure. The magistrate read him his rights in Spanish and asked him if he
    wanted a court-appointed attorney. He said that he did. But without waiting for the
    appointment of counsel, the magistrate then asked Pecina if he wanted to speak to
    the detectives, and he said, “Yes.” Before speaking with the officers, Pecina signed
    the “Adult W arning Form,” which informed him that he had the right to counsel and
    the right to remain silent, that he did not have to speak to the police, that he was not
    required to make a statement, and that he had the right to stop any interview or
    questioning at any time. The officers then read Pecina the Miranda warnings twice
    69
     
    Id. 70 
    Id.
    71
     
    Id. at 335.
    
    23
    more in Spanish, once before they started recording the interview and again after
    turning on the recording device, and Pecina signed a waiver of counsel.
    Like the defendant in Hughen, Pecina can no longer rely on Jackson’s rule
    that “if police initiate interrogation after a defendant’s assertion, at an arraignment
    or similar proceeding, of his right to counsel, any waiver of the defendant’s right to
    counsel for that police-initiated interrogation is invalid.” 72 Thus, we come to the
    same issue addressed by our original decision: whether Pecina’s statements to the
    detectives in the hospital were made after a voluntary, knowing, and intelligent
    waiver of his Sixth Amendment right to counsel. 73
    B. Sixth Amendment Right to Counsel
    After Montejo, under the Sixth Amendment, police may reinitiate a custodial
    interrogation after a defendant’s right to counsel has attached and been invoked by
    him; the Sixth Amendment right to counsel is no longer presumed invalid in that
    circumstance but may be waived, so long as relinquishment of the right is voluntarily,
    knowingly, and intelligently given. 74   As held by the majority in Montejo, the
    defendant may now waive the Sixth Amendment right whether or not he is already
    72
     
    Jackson, 475 U.S. at 636
    , 106 S. Ct. at 1411.
    73
     See Pecina I, 2007 W L 1299263, at *7.
    74
     See Patterson v. Illinois, 
    487 U.S. 285
    , 292 n.4, 
    108 S. Ct. 2389
    , 2393 n.4
    (1988); 
    Brewer, 430 U.S. at 404
    , 97 S. Ct. at 1236 (same); 
    Johnson, 304 U.S. at 464
    , 58 S. Ct. at 1022 (same).
    24
    represented by counsel; the decision to waive need not itself be counseled. 75 And
    when a defendant is read his Miranda rights (which include the right to have counsel
    present during interrogation) and agrees to waive those Fifth Amendment rights, that
    usually “does the trick” to also waive the Sixth Amendment right to counsel, even
    though the Miranda rights do not refer to the Sixth Amendment right to counsel and
    have their source in the Fifth Amendment. 76
    Giving due deference to the trial court’s findings of fact, we note that the trial
    court’s finding that Pecina requested to have the detectives speak to him is incorrect
    because it is contrary to the undisputed record. W e also note that the trial court’s
    conclusion that the statement was “voluntary” is not sufficient to establish waiver of
    Pecina’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel. The waiver must be “knowing and
    intelligent” as well as voluntary. 77 However, we need not determine the issue of
    waiver of Pecina’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel because, even if we held that
    75
     
    Montejo, 129 S. Ct. at 208
    (citing 
    Harvey, 494 U.S. at 352
    –53, 110 S. Ct.
    at 1180).
    76
     
    Id., 129 S. Ct.
    at 2085; see also 
    Patterson, 487 U.S. at 296
    , 108 S. Ct. at
    2397 (“As a general matter . . . an accused who is admonished with the warnings
    prescribed . . . in Miranda . . . has been sufficiently apprised of the nature of his Sixth
    Amendment rights, and of the consequences of abandoning those rights, so that his
    waiver on this basis will be considered a knowing and intelligent one.”).
    77
     
    Patterson, 487 U.S. at 292
    , 108 S. Ct. at 2394 (finding “knowing and
    intelligent” and voluntary waiver of defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel at
    post-indictment questioning valid where defendant was given his Miranda warnings
    and informed of the benefits of what counsel could do for him and the consequences
    of a decision to waive his rights, without claiming his right to silence or to counsel,
    and executed a written waiver).
    25
    waiver of the Sixth Amendment right was established, we are still faced with the
    issue of Pecina’s Fifth Amendment right to counsel, which is, as addressed below,
    dispositive.
    C. Fifth Amendment Right to Counsel
    In overruling Jackson, the majority in Montejo reasoned that Jackson’s
    purpose was being adequately served by other means, namely, the protection
    provided by the “Miranda - Edwards - Minnick line of cases,” which the Court said,
    “is not in doubt,” and under which a defendant in custody who does not want to
    speak to the police without counsel “need only say as much when he is first
    approached and given the Miranda warnings.” 78 At that point, the Court said, not
    only must the immediate contact end,
    but “badgering” by later requests is prohibited. If that regime suffices
    to protect the integrity of “a suspect’s voluntary choice not to speak
    outside his lawyer’s presence” before his arraignment, [] it is hard to
    see why it would not also suffice to protect that same choice after
    arraignment, when Sixth Amendment rights have attached. And if so,
    then Jackson is simply superfluous. 79
    In other words, the Court explained, although Miranda and Edwards protect
    the Fifth Amendment, not Sixth Amendment, rights, “that is irrelevant. W hat matters
    is that these cases, like Jackson, protect the right to have counsel during custodial
    78
     
    Montejo, 129 S. Ct. at 2090
    .
    79
     
    Id. (emphasis added)
    (citing Texas v. Cobb, 
    532 U.S. 162
    , 175, 
    121 S. Ct. 1335
    , 1344 (2001) (Kennedy, J., concurring)).
    26
    interrogation—which right happens to be guaranteed (once the adversary process
    has begun) by two sources of law.” 80 Assuming the defendant is in custody, “the
    doctrines ensuring voluntariness of the Fifth Amendment waiver simultaneously
    ensure the voluntariness of the Sixth Amendment waiver.” 81 Concluding, the Court
    reiterated that its overruling of Jackson was based “in part on the protections already
    provided by Edwards.” 82
    Subsequently, in Hughen, the court of criminal appeals observed that, after
    Montejo, while the Sixth Amendment does not bar police-initiated interrogation of an
    accused who has previously asserted his right to counsel, “the Fifth Amendment
    does bar police-initiated interrogation of an accused who, in the context of custodial
    interrogation, has previously asserted his right to counsel unless the accused’s
    counsel is actually present.” 83 Because Hughen had raised only the issue of his
    Sixth Amendment right to counsel in the court of criminal appeals, not his Fifth
    Amendment right, the court of criminal appeals noted in its opinion in Hughen that
    it did not grant review to consider that complaint. 84
    80
     
    Id. 81 
    Id.
    82
     
    Id.
    83
     
    297 S.W .3d at 335 (citing 
    Minnick, 498 U.S. at 153
    , 111 S. Ct. at 491 and
    
    Edwards, 451 U.S. at 484
    –85, 101 S. Ct. at 1885).
    84
     
    Id. at 334
    n.3.
    27
    In contrast, Pecina did raise his Fifth Amendment right to counsel in the trial
    court, in this court, and in his petition for discretionary review. The court of criminal
    appeals did not reach the Fifth Amendment issue in this case, not because Pecina
    failed to raise it, but because it granted relief to Pecina on his Sixth Amendment
    issue, reversing this court’s decision based on Pecina’s Sixth Amendment right
    under Jackson.
    W hile Jackson no longer stands, the underlying basis for the court of criminal
    appeals’s reversal does. In reversing this court’s decision that Pecina, himself,
    reinitiated contact with the police, the court of criminal appeals stated, “[A]nswering
    ‘yes’ when asked if he wanted to speak to detectives does not indicate that [Pecina]
    initiated the contact . . . .” 85 To the contrary, the court said, “[i]n no way does this
    indicate that [Pecina] himself initiated contact or opened the dialog with the
    authorities.” 86 Thus, the court held, “there was no initiation of contact with the police
    by [Pecina]. Just as in Edwards, the State showed only that [Pecina] responded to
    further police-initiated questioning.” 87        These holdings by the court of criminal
    appeals, while addressing Pecina’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel, rely on
    Edwards, a Fifth Amendment case. The same holdings apply to the same facts in
    the context of the Fifth Amendment, as confirmed by the Supreme Court in
    85
     Pecina II, 268 S.W .3d at 568.
    86
     
    Id. 87 
    Id.
    28
    Montejo.88 
    Thus, they apply equally to Pecina’s complaint that he was denied his
    Fifth Amendment right to counsel and compel us to re-examine our holding on that
    issue.89 That is, the court of criminal appeals’s holding that Pecina did not initiate
    contact with the police by answering “yes” to Judge Maddock’s question is controlling
    in a Fifth Amendment analysis as well as in the Sixth Amendment context.
    The Miranda-Edwards-Minnick Fifth Amendment regime was not abolished or
    modified, nor was it in any other way affected by Montejo. The Court in Montejo
    assures us that the Miranda-Edwards-Minnick regime is “not in doubt.” 90 Miranda
    and Edwards are still the law for suspects in custody subjected to police
    interrogation, regardless of the overruling of Jackson, which had merely added
    another protective layer for protection via the Sixth Amendment right. To protect the
    Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination, the police still may not initiate
    custodial interrogation of a suspect who has previously requested assistance of
    88
     “The ‘law of the case’ doctrine is as applicable to the appeals of criminal
    cases as it is to appeals of civil cases.” Ware v. State, 736 S.W .2d 700, 701 (Tex.
    Crim. App. 1987). “The legal principle or doctrine of ‘the law of the case’ in its most
    basic form provides that an appellate court’s resolution of a question of law in a
    previous appeal of the same case will govern the disposition of the same issue
    should there be another appeal.” 
    Id. 89 
    See Carroll, 101 S.W .3d at 460 (“If the court of appeals has authority to
    decide a particular point of error on a different, but appropriate, legal basis despite
    a narrow remand order, a fortiori, it should not be precluded from reconsidering the
    original legal basis for its decision.”); Williams, 145 S.W .3d at 740 (re-examining
    issue not addressed by court of criminal appeals on remand for harm analysis as to
    different issue).
    90
    
    129 S. Ct. at 2090
    .
    29
    counsel. “Once a suspect has invoked the right of counsel during questioning by
    police, the Fifth Amendment right to counsel has been invoked and all interrogation
    by the police must cease until counsel is provided or the suspect reinitiates
    conversation.” 91 The Miranda-Edwards-Minnick rule “does not take into account the
    good intentions of the individual police officer, the lack of official coercion or
    badgering in the particular case, or the actual voluntariness of a person’s custodial
    statement.”92 Edwards still “represents a bright and firm constitutional rule.” 93 W hen
    Pecina requested appointment of counsel, which is undisputed, he invoked his Fifth
    Amendment right to consult with and have counsel present, as the magistrate
    explained that right to him, at any police questioning. The police were waiting in the
    hall to question him at that moment.
    The dissent astonishingly asserts that what occurred in this case was
    somehow only a “noninterrogative interaction” between Pecina and the State, as to
    which the Miranda-Edwards line of cases is not invoked. Dissenting op. at 1. If
    there was no interrogation, where did the confessions by Pecina come from? Not
    only does this assertion ignore the record but, if the dissent is referring to the article
    91
     McCarthy v. State, 65 S.W .3d 47, 51 (Tex. Crim. App. 2001) (emphasis
    added) (citing 
    Edwards, 451 U.S. at 484
    –85, 101 S. Ct. at 1880; 
    Miranda, 384 U.S. at 474
    , 86 S. Ct. at 1602; Dinkins v. State, 894 S.W .2d 330, 350–51 (Tex. Crim.
    App. 1995)).
    92
     
    Id. at 52.
          93
     
    Id. 30 15.17
    hearing, it ignores the very purpose of such a procedure, which is required
    under Texas law to advise a suspect who has been arrested of his Fifth Amendment
    rights, including his right to counsel and, if indigent, to appointment of counsel under
    Miranda. 94 As pointed out in a similar case, an article 15.17 proceeding “is an
    integral stage in a defendant’s invocation of the Fifth Amendment right to counsel to
    protect him against self-incrimination.” 95
    Moreover, in further answer to the dissent, we are not “re-import[ing] Miranda-
    Edwards protections” into the Sixth Amendment by our holding that the admission
    into evidence of Pecina’s statements violated the Fifth Amendment, for the simple
    94
     Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 15.17(a); see Hughen, 297 S.W .3d at 331
    (noting defendant received article 15.17 warnings consistent with Miranda). The
    dissent’s argument would turn the intent of the legislature in requiring an article
    15.17 hearing—to protect an accused’s Miranda rights— upside down, making it
    impossible for a suspect to invoke those very rights of which he has just been
    advised. See Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 38.22(2) and (3) (Vernon 2002); Oursbourn
    v. State, 259 S.W .3d 159, 171–72 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008) (custodial interrogation
    statement not admissible unless, prior to making statement, accused received
    warnings provided in article 15.17 as required by article 38.22, sec. 2(a) or 3(a)
    (incorporating the requirements of Miranda)); Garcia v. State, 919 S.W .2d 370,
    406–07 (Tex. Crim. App. 1994) (tracing history of amendments in response to
    Miranda to section 2 of article 38.22, which requires the article 15.17 warnings to be
    given by a magistrate or the person taking a statement for it to be admissible in
    evidence).
    95
     Higginbotham v. State, 769 S.W .2d 265, 269 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th
    Dist.] 1989) (emphasis added), rev’d on other grounds, 807 S.W .2d 732 (Tex. Crim.
    App. 1991) (holding defendant invoked his Fifth Amendment right to counsel when
    he said, “I would like an attorney but I cannot afford one” in magistrate’s article 15.17
    hearing held after he was taken into custody; magistrate told him he would get an
    attorney in twenty-four hours; but officers violated defendant’s Fifth Amendment right
    by then taking defendant back to interview room and proceeding to interrogate him
    after asking him if he still wanted to talk to them).
    31
    reason that we are applying those protections to this defendant’s rights under the
    Fifth Amendment, not under the Sixth. See Dissenting op. at 2. In response to the
    dissent’s insinuation that Montejo held that a defendant cannot invoke his right to
    counsel at a preliminary hearing under the Fifth Amendment, Montejo made no such
    holding.96 See Dissenting op. at 1–2. In Montejo, the accused stood silent; he did
    not request counsel at his preliminary hearing. 97 The sole issue was waiver of
    Montejo’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel. 98 Montejo did not involve the Fifth
    Amendment right to counsel. And, as previously noted, Montejo reaffirms that the
    Miranda-Edwards line of cases still applies to preserve the Fifth Amendment
    privilege against self-incrimination and a defendant’s correlative right to counsel to
    protect that right.99 As explained above, it is partly because of the overlapping
    protections afforded for the Fifth Amendment right to counsel that Montejo overruled
    Jackson. 100
    W e also disagree with the dissent’s assertion that whatever occurred at the
    article 15.17 hearing did not implicate Edwards because Pecina had somehow “not
    yet been approached for interrogation.” Dissenting op. at 4. The record belies any
    96
     
    See 129 S. Ct. at 2082
    –92.
    97
     
    Id. at 2082,
    2086–87.
    98
     
    Id. at 2085–91.
          99
     
    Id. at 2085–86.
          100
     
    Id. at 2090.
    32
    such interpretation. 101 The detectives did not just happen to show up at Pecina’s
    hospital room. They went to the hospital to arrest Pecina and to interrogate him and
    brought with them the magistrate to administer his Miranda warnings; they walked
    into his room with the magistrate; the magistrate explained to Pecina that the
    detectives wanted to talk to him; and they waited in the hall while she administered
    the warnings. After he had invoked his right to counsel, they proceeded to re-enter
    the room and conduct their interrogation after reading Pecina his Miranda rights a
    second and third time. As the court of criminal appeals held, the magistrate was
    acting on behalf of the officers in initiating the interrogation. 102             The
    detectives—acting through the magistrate—initiated interrogation by asking Pecina
    if he still wanted to talk to them. 103
    101
     Nor did Pecina invoke his Fifth Amendment right to counsel
    “anticipatorily,” as the dissent asserts, using a term referenced in dictum by the
    majority opinion in Montejo. See 
    Montejo, 129 S. Ct. at 2091
    ; see also McNeil v.
    Wisconsin, 
    501 U.S. 171
    , 182 n.3, 
    111 S. Ct. 2204
    , 2211 n.3 (1991) (stating “we
    have in fact never held that a person can invoke his Miranda rights anticipatorily”).
    Pecina asked for appointed counsel in response to being advised that he was
    entitled to counsel during any questioning and while the police waited to do just that.
    His request was precisely for the sort of assistance of counsel that is the subject of
    Miranda. See 
    Montejo, 129 S. Ct. at 2091
    (stating “what matters for Miranda and
    Edwards is what happens when the defendant is approached for interrogation”
    (emphasis added)); 
    Miranda, 384 U.S. at 470
    , 86 S. Ct. at 1626 (stating “a pre-
    interrogation request for a lawyer . . . affirmatively secures [the] right to have
    [counsel]” (emphasis added)).
    102
     Pecina II, 268 S.W .3d at 568 n.1.
    103
     Nor does Pecina’s response that he still wanted to talk to the detectives
    after requesting counsel create an ambiguity in Pecina’s invocation of counsel.
    There is nothing inconsistent about requesting counsel and agreeing to talk to the
    33
    The dissent complains that, if our interpretations of the Montejo and Hughen
    opinions are correct, the police will need to “cross their fingers” that a defendant only
    raises a complaint of the Sixth Amendment and not the Fifth Amendment regarding
    validity of a statement after invocation of counsel as in this case. Dissenting op. at
    6. But if the dissent’s arguments are correct, the police need only take a magistrate
    with them to conduct any custodial interrogation and “cross their fingers” behind their
    backs while letting the magistrate first administer the Miranda warnings, and then
    they may ignore with impunity any attempt by the defendant to request appointment
    of counsel from the magistrate, making a mockery of Miranda.
    Finally, the dissent urges that Pecina’s confession must be admissible
    because he is guilty of the crime. Dissenting op. at 11–12. The short answer to that
    amazing argument is that, in this country’s justice system based on the rule of law,
    the test for whether a confession is admissible is not based on a subjective belief by
    judges that the defendant is guilty.
    Because Pecina did not initiate the questioning by the police after asserting
    his right to counsel (as held by the court of criminal appeals in reversing this court’s
    authorities once counsel has been appointed. Moreover, an accused’s expression
    of willingness to talk to police may not be used to create doubt retrospectively as to
    his initial request for counsel. Smith v. Illinois, 
    469 U.S. 91
    , 93, 96–97, 
    105 S. Ct. 490
    , 492–93 (1984) (an accused’s post-request responses to further interrogation
    may not be used retrospectively to cast doubt on his initial request for counsel); see
    State v. Martinez, No. 08-08-00098-CR, 2010 W L 705930, at *8 (Tex. App.—El
    Paso, Mar. 2, 2010, no pet. h.) (not designated for publication) (holding agreement
    to make recorded statement, when accused had not initiated the continued
    discussion, did not undermine his previous invocation of right to counsel).
    34
    prior decision) and the police moved forward with more Miranda warnings and then
    their interrogation, any subsequent waiver of Pecina’s right to counsel is presumed
    invalid, and we do not proceed to the second step under Bradshaw of determining
    whether his subsequent waiver was made voluntarily, knowingly and intelligently. 104
    Because “waiver” of his right to counsel based upon the Fifth Amendment must be
    presumed invalid under Edwards, 105 the trial court abused its discretion in admitting
    Pecina’s statements taken thereafter in violation of the Fifth Amendment.
    D. Harm Analysis
    A trial court’s erroneous admission of a defendant’s statement in violation of
    the Fifth Amendment is federal constitutional error subject to a harm analysis under
    Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 44.2(a). 106          W here the record reveals
    constitutional error, reversal is required unless we determine beyond a reasonable
    doubt that the error did not contribute to the conviction or punishment. 107 Error in
    admitting a defendant’s statement is not harmless beyond a reasonable doubt if
    104
     To a suspect who has requested counsel in the context of the pressures
    of custodial interrogation, further examination “will surely exacerbate whatever
    compulsion to speak the suspect may have been feeling;“ ”fresh sets” of Miranda
    warnings given over and over when counsel has not been provided do nothing to
    reassure a suspect who continues to be denied the counsel he clearly requested.
    Arizona v. Roberson, 
    486 U.S. 675
    , 686, 
    108 S. Ct. 2093
    , 2100 (1988).
    105
    
    451 U.S. at 484
    –85, 101 S. Ct. at 1884–85.
    106
     Tex. R. App. P. 44.2(a); see Jones v. State, 119 S.W .3d 766, 777 (Tex.
    Crim. App. 2003); McCarthy, 65 S.W .3d at 55.
    107
     Tex. R. App. P. 44.2(a); McCarthy, 65 S.W .3d at 55.
    35
    there is a reasonable likelihood that the error materially affected the jury’s
    deliberations. 108 W e should “calculate, as nearly as practicable, the probable impact
    of the error on the jury in light of the other evidence.” 109 However, and despite the
    dissent’s cry that Pecina is a “guilty and possibly dangerous criminal,” whether
    admission of an inculpatory statement by a defendant was harmful is not determined
    solely on the basis of whether there was sufficient evidence, independent of the
    defendant’s statement, to support the verdict. 110 The applicable harmless error
    analysis      asks   whether   admission     of   the   statement   contributed   to   the
    verdict—regardless of whether there is independent evidence sufficient to sustain
    the verdict of guilt.111
    A defendant’s statement implicating himself in the commission of the offense
    is unlike any other evidence that can be admitted against the defendant. 112 “A
    defendant’s confession is probably the most damaging evidence that can be
    admitted against him. . . . Certainly, confessions have profound impact on the jury,
    so much so that we may justifiably doubt its ability to put them out of mind even if
    108
     Jones, 119 S.W .3d at 777 (citing McCarthy, 65 S.W .3d at 55).
    109
     McCarthy, 65 S.W .3d at 55.
    110
     
    Id. (citing Satterwhite
    v. Texas, 
    486 U.S. 249
    , 258–59, 
    108 S. Ct. 1792
    ,
    1798 (1988)).
    111
     
    Id. 112 
    Id. (citing Arizona 
    v. Fulminante, 
    499 U.S. 279
    , 296, 
    111 S. Ct. 1246
    ,
    1257 (1991)).
    36
    told to do so.” 113 Moreover, “[i]f the jury believes that a defendant has admitted the
    crime, it will doubtless be tempted to rest its decision on that evidence alone, without
    careful consideration of the other evidence in the case.” 114        Mindful of these
    admonitions, we do not focus on the propriety of the outcome but on the integrity of
    the process that led to conviction and punishment. 115
    The theory of the defense was that the State failed to prove its case beyond
    a reasonable doubt because the palm print on the knife was not that of Pecina, and
    DNA from a third contributor was on the mirror. The defense argued that a third
    person may have been the perpetrator and attacked both Pecina and his wife from
    behind and that the prosecution’s investigation was inadequate and incomplete in
    failing to obtain sufficient DNA samples from the room and the knife to prove
    Pecina’s guilt. There were no eye-witnesses. Pecina and his wife were last seen
    some four hours before her sister, Gabriela, discovered the bloody scene in the
    bedroom.
    The State agrees that its case was circumstantial but argues that it was a
    “very strong circumstantial evidence case” even without Pecina’s statements.
    Gabriela’s testimony was conflicting as to whether the front door was locked when
    113
     
    Fulminante, 499 U.S. at 296
    , 111 S. Ct. at 1257 (quoting Bruton v. United
    States, 
    391 U.S. 123
    , 139–40, 
    88 S. Ct. 1620
    , 1630 (1968) (W hite, J., dissenting)).
    114
     
    Id. at 313,
    111 S. Ct. at 1266 (Kennedy, J., concurring).
    115
     Harris v. State, 790 S.W .2d 568, 587 (Tex. Crim. App. 1989).
    37
    she arrived. The State argues that the defense produced no evidence that anyone
    entered or left the apartment during that four-hour period; but it was not the
    defense’s burden to do so.
    The neighbor who called 911 said that Pecina opened his eyes, which the
    neighbor thought seemed threatening. Gabriela testified that Pecina stood up and
    came at her with his hands, which she thought was “like angry,” before he fell. But
    it was undisputed that both the deceased and Pecina had suffered serious stab
    wounds and that Pecina required life-saving measures. The medical examiner
    testified that Pecina appeared to have both cuts and stab wounds that could be
    consistent with having been attacked from behind. And, although the crime scene
    investigator who inspected Pecina’s wounds shortly after the occurrence believed
    some to have been “hesitation” cuts consistent with someone injuring himself, he
    admitted that he had no way of knowing if the wounds suffered by Pecina were self-
    inflicted.
    The latent palm print on the mirror matched that of Pecina, but he lived at the
    apartment and was bleeding from his own injuries. The knife used in the stabbing
    was from the apartment’s kitchen. But the crime scene investigator testified that the
    latent palm print in blood found on the knife, which he had only compared with
    Pecina’s palm print the week before trial, was not a “match” for Pecina or anyone
    else who was known to have been present that evening. Samples of blood collected
    from the bedroom revealed DNA of a third contributor, and the senior DNA analyst
    38
    in the medical examiner’s office testified that the medical examiner’s office was
    never asked to exclude specific individuals as the source. No DNA sample was
    taken from the mirror, and the knife was never tested for DNA.
    The defense called as its expert witness Dr. Robert Benjamin, a molecular
    biologist specializing for over forty years in genetics and DNA, who was recognized
    as such by the expert for the prosecution and who had often been consulted by law
    enforcement and district attorneys’ offices. Dr. Benjamin was critical of the lack of
    completeness and lack of documentation of the DNA samples collected from the
    scene, particularly in light of two samples that came from another contributor, which
    he found significant; and he opined that the fact that no sample was taken from the
    murder weapon was surprising as well as significant. He characterized the lack of
    a “match” with Pecina for the palm print from the knife as a red flag that would have
    called for more testing.
    The State’s theory, supported by the testimony of the neighbor, the neighbor’s
    daughter, and the deceased’s sister, Gabriela, was that the deceased, who had
    previously come to the United States to work with her father and sister, was unhappy
    that Pecina had come from Mexico to join her; she wanted a divorce but he did not.
    She had planned to attend a concert that night with Gabriela and Pecina after they
    got off work. The State argued that Pecina’s anger at his wife when she arrived
    home escalated in the apartment and led to the stabbing.
    39
    W e agree with the State that ample circumstantial evidence supported its
    theory. Nevertheless, in the presentation of its case to establish Pecina’s guilt, the
    State relied extensively on Pecina’s statements taken from him at the hospital to
    show: that there was no third person present at the scene when the stabbing
    occurred, that Pecina was consumed with anger that the deceased did not want him,
    and that he used the knife to cut her. The State showcased Pecina’s statements by
    presenting, in full, the testimony of the magistrate and the two investigators who took
    Pecina’s recorded and written statements. The testimony of those three witnesses
    regarding the magistrate’s conducting of the bedside warnings and the following
    interrogation, coupled with the reading of both Pecina’s written statement and a
    transcript of his recorded statement to the jury, consume some sixty-five pages of
    the three-volume record of the testimony.
    In closing argument in rebuttal, the State repeatedly focused the jury’s
    attention on Pecina’s statements as being all the jury needed to consider, and as
    rendering any gaps in its circumstantial evidence immaterial. The State argues on
    remand that the confession merely “confirmed” independent evidence that the jury
    already had. But at trial, the State argued the converse, that all of its other evidence
    merely corroborated the confession, stating,
    The piece of evidence that you should be looking at that the Defendant
    has conveniently not talked about a whole lot, is the confession. Why
    should we be worried about the DNA when . . . the Defendant has
    confessed to killing his wife. And is this an incomplete investigation?
    There’s over 70 pieces of evidence here in front of you.
    40
    Ladies and gentlemen, if you want to know the straight scoop, if you
    want to know what really happened, the best way to do it is to get it
    straight from the horse’s mouth.
    From the Defendant’s mouth we heard this. They were arguing that
    she was unhappy with him and did not want to be with him anymore.
    That she had told him that she was going out dancing without him that
    night and that he became irate. He became angry. He got a knife. He
    started struggling with the victim. And when he was asked point blank
    by Detective Danny Nutt and David Frias, did you cut Michelle with a
    knife, the answer was, yes, he did.
    There’s no third party here, ladies and gentlemen. They even asked
    him point blank, was there anybody else present in the room during the
    time of this offense? He said no. If there was a chance that he could
    have [been] snuck up from behind . . . why didn’t he tell that to the
    detectives? He had his chance. It’s a red herring. It’s a Defense tactic
    to keep you from looking at the confession that there might have been
    someone else in the apartment. . . . Anything is possible on TV, but this
    is reality. And that is not a reasonable doubt, and that is the burden
    here. The evidence is overwhelming. . . . He even admits to you that
    he did it.
    . . . [W ]e know he’s telling the truth, that he wasn’t coerced into giving
    that statement. You’ve heard from the testimony of the judge who
    magistrated him that he was not coerced and that he was cooperative.
    . . . [Emphasis added].
    The State used Pecina’s statements as the only direct evidence the jury
    needed of his guilt and motive as well as to negate any shred of the defense’s
    arguments that the State might not have carried its burden. The dissent even claims
    that Pecina’s statements are essential for his conviction and that, without them, his
    crime will go unpunished. These arguments only strengthen our conclusion — it is
    impossible to say there is no “reasonable possibility” that the erroneously admitted
    41
    statements could have contributed to Pecina’s conviction. W e therefore cannot with
    confidence conclude that admission of his statements was harmless beyond a
    reasonable doubt.
    VII. Conclusion
    W e sustain Pecina’s first point as to the violation of his Fifth Amendment
    rights. W e reverse the judgment of the trial court and remand this cause to that
    court for a new trial.
    ANNE GARDNER
    JUSTICE
    PANEL: GARDNER and W ALKER, JJ.; and DIXON W . HOLMAN (Senior Justice,
    Retired, Sitting by Assignment).
    HOLMAN, J., filed a dissenting opinion.
    PUBLISH
    DELIVERED: July 15, 2010
    42
    COURT OF APPEALS
    SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS
    FORT WORTH
    NO. 2-05-456-CR
    ALFREDO LEYVA PECINA                                                    APPELLANT
    V.
    THE STATE OF TEXAS                                                            STATE
    ------------
    FROM CRIMINAL DISTRICT COURT NO. 2 OF TARRANT COUNTY
    ------------
    DISSENTING OPINION ON REMAND
    ------------
    Because the United States Supreme Court’s decision in Montejo and the court
    of criminal appeals’ decision in Hughen stand for the proposition that the “Miranda-
    Edwards regime” does not apply to “noninterrogative types of interaction between
    the defendant and the State,” and because that is the type of interaction that I
    believe occurred in this case, I respectfully dissent from the majority’s holding that
    Pecina invoked his Fifth Amendment rights when he requested the appointment of
    counsel while being arraigned. See Montejo v. Louisiana, 
    129 S. Ct. 2079
    , 2091
    (2009) (reasoning that the Miranda-Edwards line of cases is not necessarily invoked
    during a preliminary hearing); Hughen v. State, 297 S.W .3d 330, 335 (Tex. Crim.
    App. 2010) (reasoning that the Fifth Amendment bar on police-initiated interrogation
    is applicable only “in the context of custodial interrogation”). But more than that, the
    majority’s holding today basically re-imports Miranda-Edwards protections into an
    “arraignment or similar proceeding,” effectively reviving Jackson—a holding that I
    disagree with and feel obliged to address. See Michigan v. Jackson, 
    475 U.S. 625
    ,
    635, 
    106 S. Ct. 1404
    , 1411 (1986) (holding that if police initiate interrogation after
    defendant’s assertion, at arraignment or similar proceeding, of his right to counsel,
    any waiver of defendant’s right to counsel for that police-initiated interrogation is
    invalid), overruled by 
    Montejo, 129 S. Ct. at 2091
    .
    It is apparent to me that Montejo and Hughen changed the legal landscape
    concerning what police are free to do after a defendant is appointed counsel at an
    arraignment or similar proceeding. 
    Montejo, 129 S. Ct. at 2091
    ; Hughen, 297
    S.W .3d at 335. Under Jackson, once a defendant’s Sixth Amendment rights had
    attached during an arraignment, police were forbidden from initiating interrogation.
    
    Jackson, 475 U.S. at 635
    , 106 S. Ct. at 1411.           This is so because Jackson
    represented a “wholesale importation of the Edwards rule into the Sixth
    Amendment.” 
    Montejo, 129 S. Ct. at 208
    6 (citing Texas v. Cobb, 
    532 U.S. 162
    , 175,
    
    121 S. Ct. 1335
    , 1342 (2001)). Under Edwards, once a defendant invokes his right
    to have counsel present during custodial interrogation, valid waiver of that right
    cannot be established by showing only that he responded to police-initiated
    interrogation after being again advised of his rights. 
    Edwards, 451 U.S. at 485
    , 
    101 41 S. Ct. at 1885
    . As the majority points out, Edwards is still in full effect. But after
    Montejo, the Miranda-Edwards regime of cases does not apply in the context of an
    arraignment or preliminary hearing any longer. 
    Montejo, 129 S. Ct. at 2091
    . The
    Montejo court specifically expressed that “[w]hat matters for Miranda and Edwards
    is what happens when the defendant is approached for interrogation, and (if he
    consents) what happens during the interrogation—not what happened at any
    preliminary hearing.” 
    Id. (emphasis added)
    . Thus, now that the Montejo court has
    overruled Jackson, neither a defendant’s request for counsel at arraignment or
    similar proceeding nor appointment of counsel by a court gives rise to a presumption
    that any subsequent waiver by a defendant to police-initiated interrogation is invalid.
    
    Id. The Hughen
    court recognized this by stating that “[a]fter Montejo, the Sixth
    Amendment does not bar police-initiated interrogation of an accused who has
    previously asserted his right to counsel.” Hughen, 297 S.W .3d at 335.
    In this case, pursuant to articles 15.17 and 26.04 of the Texas Code of
    Criminal Procedure, police brought a magistrate to the hospital for the purpose of
    arraigning Pecina. This was nothing more than a “preliminary hearing.” 
    Montejo, 129 S. Ct. at 2091
    . Indeed, the court of criminal appeals in Hughen referred to this
    procedure as an “initial appearance.”     Hughen, 297 S.W .3d at 332. Therefore,
    whatever occurred at that preliminary hearing did not even implicate Edwards
    because Pecina had not yet been approached for interrogation nor had he ever
    unambiguously expressed his desire to deal with the police only through his attorney.
    
    Montejo, 129 S. Ct. at 2091
    . I believe that the majority’s Fifth Amendment analysis
    42
    is unnecessary, especially considering that this court expressly held in our first
    opinion that Pecina had never invoked his right to counsel. Pecina v. State, No. 2-
    05-00456-CR, 2007 W L 1299263, at *7 (Tex. App.—Fort W orth, May 3, 2007) (not
    designated for publication) (“Pecina I”).
    The court of criminal appeals overruled this court’s initial opinion because we
    had failed to apply Jackson—a purely Sixth Amendment issue. Pecina v. State, 268
    S.W .3d 564, 569 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008) (“Pecina II”). The majority’s holding in this
    present judicial orbit of Pecina’s case hangs in part upon the court of criminal
    appeals’ statement in its remand that “[j]ust as in Edwards, the State showed only
    that [Pecina] responded to further police-initiated questioning.” Majority op. at 31–32
    (citing Pecina II, 268 S.W .3d at 572). That statement by the court of criminal
    appeals should not be interpreted to mean anything other than if Jackson was still
    good law, then the imported rule of Edwards would have prevented police from
    initiating interrogation after Pecina had been arraigned. Jackson, however, no
    longer applies; thus, the court of criminal appeals’ use of Edwards-based language
    is equally inapplicable. In fact, the Hughen court acknowledged that, after Montejo,
    Edwards no longer prevents police from questioning an accused who has previously
    asserted his Sixth Amendment right to counsel. Hughen, 297 S.W .3d at 335.
    The majority seems to suggest that the Hughen court impliedly alluded that
    it would have decided that case differently had Hughen preserved a Fifth
    Amendment claim. Majority op. at 31. I do not read the Hughen court as hinting that
    a Fifth Amendment claim would have fared any better than Hughen’s Sixth
    43
    Amendment claim. I read just the contrary. In dicta, because Hughen is a purely
    Sixth Amendment case, the Hughen court stated that invocation of a person’s Fifth
    Amendment right requires a specific type of State and defendant interaction: “the
    Fifth Amendment does bar police-initiated interrogation of an accused who, in the
    context of custodial interrogation, has previously asserted his right to counsel during
    such interrogation, unless the accused’s counsel is actually present.” 
    Id. (emphasis added)
    . In other words, after an arraignment or similar proceeding, police are free
    to initiate interrogation of an accused who has “previously asserted his right to
    counsel” during that preliminary hearing. 
    Id. And if
    the accused then asserts his
    Fifth Amendment right to counsel, interrogation must cease. 
    Id. at 335,
    n.5. If the
    only distinguishable difference between Hughen’s case (or other cases like his) and
    this case is that Pecina was savvy enough to preserve his Fifth Amendment claim
    for our review, then all police are really free to do is cross their fingers and hope that
    once they approach a defendant after arraignment and the defendant voluntarily
    submits to an interrogation, he only contends that his Sixth Amendment rights were
    violated.
    The majority takes issue with my reasoning on this point, contending that
    somehow my position is making a “mockery of Miranda.” Majority op. at 38. As the
    majority puts it, if my point is correct, “the police need only take a magistrate with
    them to conduct any custodial interrogation . . . and then they may ignore with
    impunity any attempt by the defendant to request appointment of counsel from the
    magistrate.” Majority op. at 38.
    44
    First and foremost, my rebut to this stance by the majority is that I do not have
    such a harsh view of our law enforcement.         I read the record in this case as
    demonstrating that the officers were doing everything that they could to inform
    Pecina of his rights. They complied with the mandates of article 15.17 of the Texas
    Code of Criminal Procedure by taking a magistrate to him, and before they
    questioned him, they twice read to him his Miranda rights. Pecina II, 268 S.W .3d at
    567. To expect any more of law enforcement would invite the very evil that the
    Montejo court was concerned with in overruling Jackson—deterring “law
    enforcement officers from even trying to obtain voluntary confessions.” 
    Montejo, 129 S. Ct. at 2091
    .     In fact, it speaks heavily to the voluntary nature of Pecina’s
    statement that he had been warned numerous times concerning his rights to have
    counsel present when the officers interviewed him, and yet he still chose to confess
    to his crime.
    Furthermore, Miranda cannot be mocked if it is not at issue. As the court of
    criminal appeals noted in its remand, Judge Maddock testified that Pecina “did not
    indicate that he wanted counsel present before he talked to the detectives.” Pecina
    II, 268 S.W .3d at 565. Despite this important fact, the majority summarily concludes
    that Pecina invoked his right to have counsel present with him during interrogation.
    In an attempt to transform Pecina’s request for the appointment of counsel into
    an invocation of counsel for Miranda purposes, the majority insists that Judge
    Maddock’s       question—after   Pecina   had    requested    the    appointment     of
    45
    counsel—concerning whether he still wanted to talk to the officers was an action “on
    behalf of the officers in initiating the interrogation.” Majority op. at 37. The majority
    even ascribes its view to the court of criminal appeals. W hat the court of criminal
    appeals actually held was that Judge Maddock’s involvement in this case marked
    “the initiation of adversary judicial proceedings that trigger attachment of the Sixth
    Amendment right to counsel.” Pecina II, 268 S.W .3d at 568 (emphasis added). That
    statement says nothing to whether Pecina was being subjected to custodial
    interrogation when Judge Maddock asked her question. See Roquemore v. State,
    60 S.W .3d 862, 867 (Tex. Crim. App. 2001) (reasoning that actions that normally
    attend an arrest and custody, such as informing a defendant of his Miranda rights,
    do not necessarily constitute a custodial interrogation); see also 
    Montejo, 129 S. Ct. at 2091
    (stating that the Supreme Court has never held that a suspect can invoke
    Miranda rights in a context other than custodial interrogation).
    But even if Judge Maddock’s question to Pecina whether he wanted to speak
    to the detectives was part of a conspired interrogation between Judge Maddock and
    the officers, the majority’s position is still fatally flawed because Pecina never
    indicated that he wanted counsel present during interrogation. Pecina II, 268 S.W .3d
    at 565 (“[Judge Maddock] said that [Pecina] did not indicate that he wanted counsel
    present before he talked to the detectives.”). The majority completely ignores firmly
    established law that in order to invoke counsel for Miranda purposes, a suspect’s
    desire to have counsel present during questioning must be unequivocal and
    2
    unambiguous; otherwise, police officers are not even required to seek clarification,
    much less halt their interrogation. See State v. Gobert, 275 S.W .3d 888, 891 (Tex.
    Crim. App. 2009) (reasoning that a clear invocation of the right to counsel is an
    objective inquiry whereby a suspect must articulate his desire to have counsel
    present sufficiently clearly that a reasonable police officer in the circumstances
    would understand the statement to be a clear invocation of the right to counsel
    present during interrogation)(citing Davis v. United States, 
    512 U.S. 452
    , 461–62,
    
    114 S. Ct. 2350
    , 2371 (1994)); see also Dalton v. State, 248 S.W .3d 866, 869 (Tex.
    App.—Austin, 2008 pet. ref’d), cert. denied, 
    130 S. Ct. 555
    (2009) (reasoning that
    a suspect’s statement to officers must be a direct and unequivocal assertion of the
    right to have counsel present during interrogation before officers are required to halt
    any further questioning).
    W hat the majority does today is effectively revive Jackson and hold that any
    defendant who is arraigned pursuant to articles 15.17 and 26.04 of the Texas Code
    of Criminal Procedure can never be approached by police and asked whether the
    defendant wants to voluntarily confess to the crime for which he stands accused.
    
    Jackson, 475 U.S. at 635
    , 106 S. Ct. at 1411. This holding is contrary to both
    Montejo and Hughen. See 
    Montejo, 129 S. Ct. at 2091
    ; Hughen, 297 S.W .3d at
    335.
    The majority applies the Miranda-Edwards regime to this preliminary hearing
    whereby Pecina affirmatively stated that he wanted a court-appointed attorney. The
    3
    majority builds its premise on the notion that the “Court in Montejo assures us that
    the Miranda-Edwards-Minnick regime is ‘not in doubt.’” Majority op. at 32–33 (citing
    
    Montejo, 129 S. Ct. at 2090
    ). I agree that the Miranda-Edwards regime is not in
    doubt. But there is a distinction between whether that regime is in doubt and
    whether it applies to a certain set of facts. As the Montejo court stated, although the
    Miranda-Edwards regime is not in doubt, those protections are “narrower than
    Jackson.” 
    Montejo, 129 S. Ct. at 2090
    .
    The majority treats the Montejo decision as a simple exercise in eliminating
    redundant case law and as if Jackson and the Miranda-Edwards regime provided the
    same exact protections. W hile it is true that the Montejo court reasoned that an
    individual’s rights were adequately protected by the Miranda-Edwards regime, the
    Supreme Court had far more negative things to say about Jackson than that it was
    simply superfluous or redundant to the Miranda-Edwards regime. The Montejo court
    was concerned that Jackson was thwarting “society’s compelling interest in finding,
    convicting, and punishing those who violate the law.” 
    Id. at 2089
    (quoting Moran v.
    Burbine, 
    475 U.S. 412
    , 425–426, 
    106 S. Ct. 1135
    , 1144 (1986)). The Montejo court
    reasoned that at best, Jackson was simply adding a protection already existing by
    way of the Miranda-Edwards regime, but at its worst, Jackson was operating to
    eliminate “confession[s] given by the free choice of suspects who have received
    proper advice of their Miranda rights but waived them nonetheless.” 
    Montejo, 129 S. Ct. at 208
    9. The iniquity of this paradigm is that without voluntary confessions,
    4
    “crimes go unsolved and criminals unpunished [and] these are not negligible costs.”
    
    Id. at 2090
    (citing 
    Cobb, 532 U.S. at 175
    , 121 S. Ct. at 1335 (Kennedy, J.,
    concurring)). Not only did Jackson result in the exclusion of voluntary confessions,
    thereby “letting guilty and possibly dangerous criminals go free,” but it also “deter[ed]
    law enforcement officers from even trying to obtain voluntary confessions.” 
    Montejo, 129 S. Ct. at 208
    6. Voluntary confessions, as the Montejo court pointed out, are “not
    an evil, but an unmitigated good.” 
    Id. at 2090
    (quoting McNeil v. Wisconsin, 
    501 U.S. 171
    , 177, 
    111 S. Ct. 2204
    , 2212 (1991).
    There is no better example than Pecina’s case to show why the Montejo court
    overruled Jackson. Pecina is a “guilty and possibly dangerous criminal” who fatally
    stabbed his very own wife over fifty times. He acknowledged to the magistrate at his
    arraignment that he was willing to talk to the police and he later admitted to the
    police, voluntarily, that he had argued with his wife about her wanting to leave him;
    that he had become angry; that he had cut her; and that no one else was present but
    the two of them when he had done so. W ithout this voluntary confession, this
    heinous crime could have possibly gone unsolved and Pecina could have gone
    unpunished. That is not a negligible cost, considering that Pecina never indicated
    that he did not wish to speak to police when they approached him for interrogation.
    Yet again, the majority takes issue with my position in this regard. The
    majority casts my position as a simple equation: Pecina is guilty; thus, he should be
    5
    punished. Majority op. at 38. That of course is not my position and the majority fails
    to address my point in its entirety. It is not simply that Pecina is guilty; rather, he is
    a guilty criminal who voluntarily confessed to his crime. As the Montejo court stated,
    eliminating voluntary confessions obtained without coercion and deterring law
    enforcement from even trying to obtain them “are not negligible costs.” 
    Montejo, 129 S. Ct. at 2090
    .
    W hat the majority ultimately has done is apply the Miranda-Edwards regime
    to this case based on what Pecina said at his arraignment. To be sure, the Montejo
    court was not concerned with what “statements [were] made at [a] preliminary
    hearing.” 
    Id. at 2091.
    That is because, as the Montejo court stated, they “have in
    fact never held that a person can invoke his Miranda rights anticipatorily, in a context
    other than ‘custodial interrogation’ . . . .” 
    Id. (quoting McNeil,
    501 U.S. at 182, 
    n.3, 111 S. Ct. at 2212
    , n.3).
    I would hold that when Pecina acknowledged that he wanted court-appointed
    counsel as the magistrate arraigned him at the hospital he had not invoked his Fifth
    Amendment rights under Miranda-Edwards, the police were entitled to approach him
    for interrogation, and he made a voluntary statement that was properly admitted by
    the trial court. Therefore, I dissent.
    DIXON W . HOLMAN
    JUSTICE
    6
    PUBLISH
    DELIVERED: July 15, 2010
    7