Court Opinion

ID: 2949887
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-09-16 06:17:34.767096+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:46:17.159360
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
                        OF TEXAS
                                        NO. PD-0195-13

                            ROBERT RUBALCADO, Appellant

                                                 v.

                                   THE STATE OF TEXAS

         ON APPELLANT’S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW
               FROM THE ELEVENTH COURT OF APPEALS
                           ECTOR COUNTY

           K ELLER, P.J., delivered the opinion of the Court in which P RICE,
W OMACK, K EASLER, H ERVEY, C OCHRAN and A LCALA, JJ., joined. J OHNSON , J.,
concurred. M EYERS, J., did not participate.

       Appellant, arrested pursuant to an Ector County complaint, made bail and was released from

incarceration. Afterwards, at the behest of Midland County law enforcement, the complaining

witness in the Ector County case contacted appellant and elicited incriminating statements from him.

The question before us is whether appellant’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel was violated when

these statements were later used as primary evidence of guilt in the Ector County case. We conclude

that appellant’s right to counsel was violated with respect to the Ector County prosecution, and we

reverse the judgment of the court of appeals.
                                                                                 RUBALCADO — 2

                                         I. BACKGROUND

                                               A. Facts

        In 2002, appellant began a romantic relationship with J.S.’s mother and moved into her home

in Midland, in Midland County. In 2004, the family moved to Odessa, in Ector County. J.S.

subsequently accused appellant of sexually abusing her, and on March 12, 2009,1 a complaint was

filed in Ector County that accused appellant of aggravated sexual assault of a child.2 The next day,

appellant was arrested pursuant to a warrant,3 and soon thereafter he was released on bail. A

criminal investigation also began in Midland County, and Midland police officers subsequently

asked J.S. to make pretextual phone calls to appellant in an effort to induce appellant to confess to

committing crimes against J.S.4

       1
        J.S. was seventeen years old at the time the complaint was filed and almost nineteen years
old when she testified at trial.
       2
          The complaint stated that appellant did “intentionally and knowingly cause the penetration
of the vagina of J.S. with his penis without the effective consent of J.S. a child younger than 17 years
of age.”
       3
         The probable-cause affidavit for the warrant recited that the abuse began with appellant
touching J.S.’s “privates” and that this conduct eventually progressed to appellant having sex with
J.S.
        4
            The following was elicited from J.S. during voir dire questioning by defense counsel:

        Q. The police officer asked you to call Robert?

        A. They asked me if I would like to. They didn’t tell me I had to.

        Q. Okay. But they asked you to call him; right?

        A. Yes.

        Q. And you acted on that question. You did call him; correct?
                                                                                 RUBALCADO — 3

        J.S. agreed to make the phone calls. The Midland police department supplied recording

equipment that J.S. could connect to her cell phone and operate. J.S. connected the equipment

herself and called appellant on three different days: September 10th, 23rd, and 29th of 2009. At least

one Midland police officer was with J.S. during each call, but the police did not tell J.S. what to say.

        In all three phone calls, J.S. and appellant engaged in innocuous banter about how they were

doing and about their activities. Often, J.S. would just respond “yeah,” “right,” or “okay” to

comments made by appellant, but there were some occasions in which J.S. made comments that were

designed, or possibly designed, to elicit incriminating responses.

        In the first phone call, J.S. said, “I miss you,” and appellant responded, “I miss you too,

        A. Yes.

                                                 ***

        Q. But you did call – you do admit that you called him at their request?

        A. Yes.

        Q. And the purpose of that call was to get some sort of confession?

        A. Yes.

                                                 ***

        Q. And you made the call again at their request?

        A. Yes.

        Q. Okay. And the purpose of the call was to seek a confession?

        A. Yes.
                                                                                  RUBALCADO — 4

baby.” J.S. followed with “I miss being with you,” and appellant responded, “I know. I miss you

being here too.” Later in the conversation, J.S. stated, “I want to go home already.” Appellant

responded, “Hmm?” J.S. repeated her statement, and appellant replied, “I know, baby. My phone

battery is low. You can call me back later on or tomorrow, okay?”

        In the second phone call, J.S. again said, “I miss you.” Appellant responded that he missed

her too, and he talked about God and asked J.S. to keep appellant in her prayers. J.S. responded, “I

really want to come home already.” Appellant responded that he would love to be around her,

especially when she graduates, that he missed her, and that he would help her any way he could. J.S.

asked, “Do you think I will be able to come home?” Appellant responded that a few steps would

have to be taken. J.S. replied, “What have I got to do?” Appellant told her that she needed to talk

to his lawyer. J.S. then asked, “What am I having to do when I get there?” Appellant asked, “Is

anybody around you?” J.S. responded negatively, and appellant launched into a long discussion that

included topics such as the need for J.S. to talk to his lawyer, various topics relating to God, and that

appellant and J.S. would work things out. This discussion included statements by appellant that,

“That thing that happened, nothing happened, I was mad,” “I will try my best, my very best to make

a house for you,” and “I want to make you your own room. I am going to fix it the way it should be

fixed for a girl. And I guarantee you, I will break my back for you to get what you want and need.”

Appellant also said that he missed her, loved her, wanted her to be around, and wanted to take care

of her like a father would. Near the end of this discussion, appellant also mentioned J.S. “dropping

the charges” so that she could come home.

        In the third phone call, after appellant had said he was “changing” and God was working on

him, J.S. said, “Also, you want me to talk to a lawyer.” Appellant responded that he wanted her to
                                                                                 RUBALCADO — 5

if she were comfortable with it, “not because anybody is forcing you.” At some point, J.S. asked,

“So if I go back home, it will be different?” Appellant responded affirmatively and asked her to tell

him how different she would like it to be. After some further explanations from appellant, J.S.

repeated, “So things are going to be different if I go home?” Appellant responded, “Yes.”

       After some more discussion from appellant, J.S. asked, “Can I ask you a question?”

Appellant responded, “Sure.” J.S. then asked, “Can I ask why you were doing those things to me?”

Appellant responded, “Do what? What things?” J.S. replied, “The way you were touching me and

stuff like that.” Appellant responded that appellant, J.S., and J.S.’s mother would have to get

together and “see what is going on.” Then J.S. reiterated, “And if I go back home, everything is

going to be different?” Appellant responded that things would be different and that “we” had

“realized what our bad attitudes are” and that everyone—including appellant and J.S.’s mother and

brothers—needed to change. Then J.S. asked, “Can I ask you something else?” Appellant responded

affirmatively, and J.S. asked, “Why did you have sex with me?” Appellant responded evasively:

“We will get with your mom and see [inaudible] because I already got this thing over. If you don’t

want to do it - - I mean, if you want to come, I mean.” J.S. replied, “I do, but I want everything to

be different.” Appellant responded, “It is going to be different.”

       The discussion continued along that vein until J.S. said, “So what do I have to do to go talk

to a lawyer?” Appellant responded that she would have to talk to the district attorney and could try

to drop the charges, but appellant said that the district attorney might not drop the charges even if

J.S. wanted to. Appellant suggested that J.S. could tell the district attorney why she wanted to drop

the charges, but he said that he was not telling her what to do or say and that she should not do it if

she did not feel comfortable doing so.
                                                                               RUBALCADO — 6

       Further in the conversation, J.S. asked, “So it is going to be different, you have changed and

everything?” Appellant responded, “Yes.” J.S. then asked, “So then you won’t be doing anything

any more.” Appellant responded, “I am not going to do nothing but pray to God, like I done when

I was younger and everything.” Appellant then talked further about his relationship with God. At

some point, J.S. interjected, “I just wanted to make sure everything was going to be different, that

you change and won’t be touching or sex with me or anything like that.” Appellant responded, “We

all change. We all change. And we still have work to do, we still have God working on us, we still

have to pray for each other.”

       J.S. then engaged in the following colloquy in an attempt to elicit appellant’s agreement with

her allegations:

       J.S.: Do you agree with me?”

       APPELLANT: Agree with you?

       J.S.: I said, do you agree with that, what I said?

       APPELLANT: About what?

       J.S.: Do you agree that we have to change, that you can’t - -

       APPELLANT: Oh, yes.

       J.S.: - - have sex or no more touching?

       APPELLANT: Change. You are supposed to change. I mean, we all have to change.
       I mean, your mom has to change. Your mom has changed a whole lot, believe me.
       I feel it. [One of your brothers] has changed a little bit. You know, he still
       [inaudible], stuff like that.

Appellant then launched into a long discussion about God, talking to a lawyer, and people’s hearts.

This discussion included the statement, “And I can tell you from my part that I am sure on my
                                                                               RUBALCADO — 7

brother’s heart, you have nothing to be afraid of.”

       On November 16, 2009, appellant was indicted in Ector County for various sex offenses

against a child.5 During J.S.’s testimony in its case-in-chief, the State offered the three recorded

phone conversations.6 Defense counsel objected that the recordings violated the right to counsel.

Defense counsel stated that “the officer”7 was informed in February of 2009 that appellant had an

attorney. Defense counsel also stated that, at the time of the recordings, appellant had been charged

by complaint and had made bail. Defense counsel also contended that J.S. acted as an agent of law

enforcement when she made the calls and law enforcement “couldn’t do it so she can’t do it for

them.” The prosecutor responded that the phone calls were orchestrated by the Midland Police

Department, not the Odessa Police Department, and that the Midland Police Department was “not

aware of counsel at that time.”8 The trial judge overruled appellant’s objection, and the recordings

       5
          Appellant was indicted for various forms of indecency with a child by contact, sexual
assault, and aggravated sexual assault. See TEX . PENAL CODE §§ 21.11(a)(1), (c), 22.011(a)(2),
22.021(a)(1)(B), (2)(B) (West 2014).
       6
         The court of appeals’s opinion erroneously states that the recordings were introduced
during the testimony of Midland Police Detective Kay Therwanger. See Rubalcado v. State,
2013 Tex. App. LEXIS 916, *10-11 (Tex. App.–Eastland January 31, 2013, pet. granted) (not
designated for publication).
       7
         At the time this statement was made, the record was unclear about which officer defense
counsel was talking about. Later testimony indicates that defense counsel was referring to Detective
Shelly Stanford of the Odessa Police Department.
       8
            The court of appeals’s opinion includes additional facts derived from Detective
Therwanger’s testimony. See id. at *27-28. This included her testimony that she knew that there
was an Odessa case but did not know whether appellant had an attorney. Id. at *28. We also
observe that Detective Therwanger testified that she and J.S. talked about what J.S. might say and
wrote some things down—just to prepare her. Detective Therwanger said that she told J.S. that
appellant might be suspicious, so J.S. needed to get appellant comfortable and slowly lead into what
happened between them. We note that Detective Therwanger had not yet testified at the time the
trial court made its ruling on the admissibility of the recorded phone conversations. When the
                                                                               RUBALCADO — 8

were played to the jury.

                                       B. Court of Appeals

       Appellant urged his right-to-counsel claim on appeal. He argued that, notwithstanding her

denial at trial, Detective Therwanger must have known that appellant had an attorney at the time of

the recordings. The detective must have known, appellant reasoned, because she was aware of the

pending Ector County case and, given her thirty years of law-enforcement experience, she should

have realized that he had an attorney in that case, even if she did not know who the attorney was.

Given the circumstances, appellant argued, the detective must have also known that appellant was

on bond and therefore had a lawyer. Appellant also pointed out that he referred to his attorney in the

second recording, so Detective Therwanger must have known that he had an attorney by the time of

the third recording. In further support of his contention that Detective Therwanger must have known

that he had an attorney, appellant noted that Midland and Ector Counties are contiguous jurisdictions

and that the criminal investigations in those counties involved the same alleged victim and

perpetrator.

       In the alternative, appellant argued that the Odessa Police Department’s actual knowledge

that he had an attorney should be imputed to the Midland Police Department. In support of this

contention, he cited Herron v. State.9 Appellant further argued that J.S. was an agent of both the

question is whether evidence was improperly admitted, an appellate court may consider only
evidence that was before the trial court at the time of its ruling unless the issue was consensually
relitigated at a later point in time. Black v. State, 362 S.W.3d 626, 631 (Tex. Crim. App. 2012);
Rangel v. State, 250 S.W.3d 96, 98 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008). However, we need not address whether
consensual relitigation occurred during Detective Therwanger’s testimony because her testimony
would not affect our holding in this case.
       9
           86 S.W.3d 621 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002).
                                                                                 RUBALCADO — 9

Odessa and Midland police departments and that the recorded phone calls made by her were in

violation of his right to counsel.

        The court of appeals rejected appellant’s right-to-counsel claim.10 The court first rejected

appellant’s alternative argument that it should impute the knowledge of law enforcement in Ector

County to law enforcement in Midland County.11 The court of appeals observed that Herron was

a Fifth Amendment right-to-counsel case, that the Supreme Court’s decision in Michigan v.

Jackson12 is what had extended the Edwards13 initiation rule from the Fifth Amendment context to

the Sixth Amendment context, and that Michigan v. Jackson had subsequently been overruled.14 The

court concluded that the broad rule of imputation found in the Fifth Amendment context did not

apply outside the context of custodial interrogation because the danger of police badgering would

not be present.15

        The court of appeals also concluded that the rule advocated by appellant would unduly

burden law enforcement because it “would mean that separate law enforcement entities would have

to incur the burden of continuously checking with every other law-enforcement entity in every

investigation to see if a suspect has been arrested in another jurisdiction and, if so, on what charges,

        10
             Rubalcado, 2013 Tex. App. LEXIS 916 at *25-36.
        11
             Id. at *29-36.
        12
             475 U.S. 625 (1986).
        13
             Edwards v. Arizona, 451 U.S. 477, 101 S. Ct. 1880, 68 L. Ed. 2d 378 (1981).
        14
             Rubalcado, 2013 Tex. App. LEXIS 916 at *29-35.
        15
             Id. at *35.
                                                                             RUBALCADO — 10

and then ascertain whether he or she is represented by an attorney.”16 Finally, the court concluded

that there was no evidence that the two police departments were coordinating their investigations.17

                                     C. Discretionary Review

       Appellant contends that the present case is governed by Massiah v. United States.18 He

further argues that the knowledge of law enforcement in Ector County should be imputed to law

enforcement in Midland County. And he contends that this case is governed by Thompson v. State,19

because the present case is an Ector County prosecution, to which his right to counsel had attached,

not a Midland County prosecution.

       The State contends that the phone calls were part of a Midland County investigation,

unrelated to the Odessa charges, and therefore the right to counsel had not attached. The State

further contends that Massiah is distinguishable because Massiah had been indicted at the time of

the incriminating statements while appellant had not been indicted in either Ector County or Midland

County at the time of the phone conversations. And the State contends that “the federal agencies that

initially investigated and charged Massiah and the ones that eavesdropped on his later incriminating

statements were one and the same” while the entity that charged appellant (Odessa law enforcement)

differs from the entity that eavesdropped on him (Midland law enforcement). The State also

contends that appellant’s position invites the courts to “open a Pandora’s box of claims from

defendants charged with similar crimes in different jurisdictions.”

       16
            Id.
       17
            Id. at *36.
       18
            377 U.S. 201 (1964).
       19
            93 S.W.3d 16 (Tex. Crim. App. 2001).
                                                                                RUBALCADO — 11

                                           II. ANALYSIS

                                             A. Massiah

        In Massiah v. United States, a co-defendant agreed to cooperate with the police in obtaining

information from Massiah after Massiah had been released on bail.20 Massiah was unaware of this

cooperation.21 The police installed a radio transmitter under the front seat of the co-defendant’s car

and secretly listened while the co-defendant elicited incriminating statements from Massiah.22 The

Supreme Court held that Massiah was denied the basic protections of his Sixth Amendment right to

counsel “when there was used against him at his trial evidence of his own incriminating words,

which federal agents had deliberately elicited from him after he had been indicted and in the absence

of his counsel.”23 That the interrogation was “indirect and surreptitious,” instead of being conducted

at the jailhouse, did not preclude the application of the Sixth Amendment.24 In fact, Massiah was

more seriously imposed upon . . . because he did not even know that he was under interrogation by

a government agent.”25

        Maine v. Moulton26 involved similar facts. Moulton and his co-defendant were on bail, the

co-defendant was secretly cooperating with the government, law-enforcement personnel secretly

        20
377 U.S. at 202.
        21
             Id.
        22
             Id. at 202-03.
        23
             Id. at 206.
        24
             Id.
       25
           Id. (quoting United States v. Massiah, 307 F.2d 62, 72 (2d Cir. 1962) (Hays, J., dissenting))
(ellipsis in Supreme Court’s opinion).
        26
             474 U.S. 159 (1985)
                                                                             RUBALCADO — 12

recorded telephone conversations and an in-person meeting between the two, and the co-defendant

deliberately elicited incriminating statements from Moulton.27 The State argued that Massiah was

distinguishable because government agents set up the encounter in that case while Moulton initiated

the telephone calls and requested the in-person meeting.28 The Court rejected that argument, holding

that the identity of the party who instigated the meeting at which the incriminating statements were

obtained was not decisive or even important to its decision in Massiah.29 The Court observed that

the Sixth Amendment guarantees the accused, after the initiation of formal charges, the right to rely

on counsel as a “medium” between him and the State.30 The State has an affirmative obligation not

to act in a manner that circumvents this protection, and the knowing exploitation of an opportunity

to confront the accused without counsel is as much a breach of this obligation as the intentional

creation of the opportunity.31 “Accordingly, the Sixth Amendment is violated when the State obtains

incriminating statements by knowingly circumventing the accused’s right to have counsel present

in a confrontation between the accused and a state agent.”32

       In an amicus brief, the Solicitor General contended that Moulton’s case was distinguishable

from Massiah because the Maine police had other, legitimate reasons for listening to Moulton’s

       27
            Id. at 163-66.
       28
         Id. at 174. The State was also attempting to distinguish United States v. Henry, 447 U.S.
264 (1980), one of Massiah’s progeny. Moulton, 474 U.S. at 174.
       29
            Moulton, 474 U.S. at 174-75.
       30
            Id. at 176.
       31
            Id.
       32
            Id.
                                                                               RUBALCADO — 13

conversations with his co-defendant, namely, to investigate a possible plan to kill a witness.33 The

Supreme Court recognized the legitimate interest the State has in investigating new crimes but held

that such an interest was not sufficient to justify admitting incriminating statements relating to the

pending charges at the trial of those charges:

       To allow the admission of evidence obtained from the accused in violation of his
       Sixth Amendment rights whenever the police assert an alternative, legitimate reason
       for their surveillance invites abuse by law enforcement personnel in the form of
       fabricated investigations and risks the evisceration of the Sixth Amendment right
       recognized in Massiah. On the other hand, to exclude evidence pertaining to charges
       as to which the Sixth Amendment right to counsel had not attached at the time the
       evidence was obtained, simply because other charges were pending at that time,
       would unnecessarily frustrate the public’s interest in the investigation of criminal
       activities. Consequently, incriminating statements pertaining to pending charges are
       inadmissible at the trial of those charges, notwithstanding the fact that the police
       were also investigating other crimes, if, in obtaining this evidence, the State violated
       the Sixth Amendment by knowingly circumventing the accused’s right to the
       assistance of counsel.34

But the State was free to introduce incriminating statements pertaining to other crimes—those to

which the Sixth Amendment right had not yet attached—at the trial of those other crimes.35

       From this discussion, we conclude that the Massiah inquiry is whether, after the Sixth

Amendment right to counsel has attached, the government has knowingly circumvented the

defendant’s right to counsel by using an undisclosed government agent to deliberately elicit

incriminating information. We turn to the various Massiah issues implicated in the present case.

                                          B. Attachment

                                   1. Attached in Ector County

       33
            Id. at 178.
       34
            Id. at 180.
       35
            Id. at 180 n.16.
                                                                              RUBALCADO — 14

       The Sixth Amendment right to counsel does not apply until it has attached, and it attaches

when the prosecution has commenced.36 The prosecution commences for Sixth Amendment right-to-

counsel purposes “at the first appearance before a judicial officer at which the defendant is told of

the formal accusation against him and restrictions are imposed on his liberty.”37 Under this test for

attachment, appellant’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel with respect to the Ector County charges

had attached before the recorded phone conversations took place.

                           2. Not Attached to Midland County Offenses

       But the Sixth Amendment right to counsel is “offense specific.” It attaches only to an offense

for which a prosecution has been initiated.38 This offense-specific rule of attachment applies in the

Massiah context.39 The question, then, is whether the recorded conversations in this case involved

offenses that were separate from the Ector County charges, and if so, to what extent.

       In determining what constitutes an “offense” for Sixth Amendment right-to-counsel purposes,

and consequently, whether separate offenses are involved, the Supreme Court has resorted to double-

jeopardy law.40 The Court has explained that this means that offenses are considered separate for

       36
            Rothgery v. Gillespie County, 554 U.S. 191, 198 (2008).
       37
            Id. at 194.
       38
            Texas v. Cobb, 532 U.S. 162, 167-68 (2001).
       39
         Moulton, 474 U.S. at 179-80 & n.16. See also United States v. Holness, 706 F.3d 579,
589-91 (4 Cir. 2013); Henderson v. Quarterman, 460 F.3d 654, 664 (5th Cir. 2006).
            th

       40
           Cobb, 532 U.S. at 172-73 (“[W]e have recognized in other contexts that the definition
of an ‘offense’ is not necessarily limited to the four corners of a charging instrument . . . . We see
no constitutional difference between the meaning of the term ‘offense’ in the contexts of double
jeopardy and of the right to counsel.”).
                                                                                RUBALCADO — 15

right-to-counsel purposes if they would be considered separate under the Blockburger41 same-

elements test, i.e. each statutory provision proscribing the respective charges requires proof of a fact

that the other does not.42

        The Blockburger same-elements test is not the only tool for evaluating whether offenses are

separate for double-jeopardy purposes, and it is legitimate for right-to-counsel purposes to examine

whether the offenses at issue would be considered separate under other double-jeopardy doctrines.43

Offenses that have the same elements under the Blockburger test are nevertheless separate if they

involve separate allowable units of prosecution.44 Separate instances of sexual assault are separate

offenses.45 The same is true of the offense of indecency with a child by contact.46 To the extent that

multiple incidents conform to the charges, however, they are subsumed by the charges for double-

jeopardy purposes until and unless the State timely elects what specific offense is being charged.47

        41
             Blockburger v. United States, 284 U.S. 299 (1932).
        42
             Cobb, 532 U.S. at 173. See also Blockburger, 284 U.S. at 304.
        43
          See Holness, 706 F.3d at 590 (observing, in Massiah context, that “federal and state crimes
are not the same offense, no matter how identical the conduct they proscribe”).
        44
           Blockburger, 284 U.S. at 302-03 (second illegal drug sale “was not the result of the
original impulse, but of a fresh one—that is to say, of a new bargain”); Sanabria v. United States,
437 U.S. 54, 69-70 (1978) (discussing concept of “allowable unit of prosecution”); Ex parte
Hawkins, 6 S.W.3d 554, 556-57 & n.8 (Tex. Crim. App. 1999) (for a double-jeopardy violation
to occur, offenses must be the same both in law and in fact, the latter being an allowable-unit-of-
prosecution inquiry).
        45
             Ex parte Goodbread, 967 S.W.2d 859, 861 (Tex. Crim. App. 1998).
        46
          See Pizzo v. State, 235 S.W.3d 711, 719 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007) (holding the offense
of indecency with a child by contact is a conduct-oriented offense and analyzing it in the same
way as the offense of sexual assault).
        47
          Dixon v. State, 201 S.W.3d 731, 735 (Tex. Crim. App. 2006); Goodbread, 967 S.W.2d
at 861 & n.3.
                                                                             RUBALCADO — 16

So, multiple incidents in Ector County would be included in the Ector County complaint and arrest

warrant, but any sexual offenses committed solely48 in Midland County would be separate, for

double-jeopardy purposes, from the sexual offenses that were the subject of prosecution in Ector

County. No one contends that a prosecution was pending in Midland County at the time of the

recorded phone conversations. The Sixth Amendment right to counsel, therefore, had not attached

to any offenses committed solely in Midland County.

                                   3. Ector County Prosecution

         But the present case involves an Ector County prosecution, not a Midland County

prosecution. We held in Thompson that the right to counsel may be violated by the elicitation of

evidence of extraneous offenses if that evidence is used in the prosecution for which charges had

been pending. In Thompson, the defendant had been charged with capital murder when law

enforcement learned that he might be attempting to solicit the murder of one of the witnesses against

him.49 An investigator for the District Attorney’s office posed as a hit-man and engaged in

discussions with the defendant that were secretly recorded.50 The investigator was aware that

appellant was represented by counsel in connection with the capital-murder charge.51 At the

punishment phase of the defendant’s capital-murder trial, the State introduced the recording, which

       48
          We do not address the offense of continuous sexual abuse of a young child, in which it is
possible for some of the elements to be committed in more than one county. See TEX . PENAL CODE
§ 21.02.
       49
93 S.W.3d at 22.
       50
            Id. at 22-23.
       51
            Id. at 23.
                                                                             RUBALCADO — 17

contained statements about the extraneous crime of solicitation of murder.52 We explained that a

Sixth Amendment violation occurs if an undercover police agent interrogates the defendant, without

counsel, on matters that the police knew or should have known would elicit incriminating evidence

pertaining to the pending charges.53 We concluded that the defendant’s right to counsel was violated

because, though the defendant’s incriminating statements related solely to an extraneous offense,

they were used against him at the capital murder trial:

        The information was elicited by an agent of the State, without notifying appellant’s
        counsel, and was then used at appellant’s capital murder trial to help the State
        establish that appellant posed a continuing threat to society. The State knew the
        capital murder charges were pending against appellant at the time, and that any
        evidence incriminating appellant in another offense would probably be used against
        him in the capital punishment phase. We hold appellant’s Sixth Amendment right to
        counsel was violated by the State’s actions in soliciting the tape recorded
        conversation between appellant and Johnson and using it against appellant in the
        punishment phase of his capital murder trial, the charges of which were pending at
        the time of the conversation.54

Under this reasoning, even if the Midland County offenses are separate offenses from the Ector

County offenses, the recorded statements could not be used against appellant in the Ector County

case.

        However, our holding in Thompson may have been called into question by the later Supreme

Court decision in Kansas v. Ventris,55 which articulated views similar to those held by the dissents

in Thompson. The dissent on original submission in Thompson argued that the Court had

        52
             Id.
        53
             Id. at 25.
        54
             Id. at 27.
        55
             556 U.S. 586
                                                                                 RUBALCADO — 18

expansively interpreted the Sixth Amendment right to counsel at odds with the Supreme Court’s

decision in Cobb.56 The dissent contended that whether “the extraneous offense [had] probative

value in a prosecution for the charged offense is immaterial because it is still an extraneous offense”

to which the “right to counsel had not attached.”57 In a dissent to the refusal to grant rehearing,

Judge Keasler contended that any “Sixth Amendment violation occurs at the moment that the

statements are obtained.”58 “If such a violation occurs,” Judge Keasler maintained, “the statements

are inadmissible at trial—at any trial—of the accused for any offense.”59 “Conversely,” Judge

Keasler continued, “if the statements are legally obtained, they are admissible, if relevant, at any trial

of the accused for any offense.”60

        In Ventris, the Supreme Court acknowledged that Massiah had been equivocal about whether

the right to counsel was violated at the moment of questioning or only when the evidence was used

against the accused at trial.61 When, exactly, the violation occurred was not important to the decision

in Massiah.62 When confronted with that question in Ventris, the Supreme Court concluded that “the

Massiah right is a right to be free of uncounseled interrogation, and is infringed at the time of

interrogation”:

        56
             Thompson, 93 S.W.3d at 30-31 (Keller, P.J., dissenting).
        57
             Id. at 31.
        58
           Thompson v. State, 108 S.W.3d 269, 270 (Tex. Crim. App. 2003) (Keasler, J., dissenting
to refusal to grant rehearing)
        59
             Id.
        60
             Id. at 270.
        61
556 U.S. at 591-92.
        62
             Id. at 592.
                                                                                  RUBALCADO — 19

       It is illogical to say that the right is not violated until trial counsel’s task of opposing
       conviction has been undermined by the statement’s admission into evidence . . . . We
       have never said . . . that officers may badger counseled defendants about charged
       crimes so long as they do not use information they gain. The constitutional violation
       occurs when the uncounseled interrogation is conducted.63

But even if Ventris undermines this Court’s holding in Thompson, the present case is different from

Thompson in a way that is adverse to the State.

                                        4. Dual-Use Evidence

       In her questions on the recording, J.S. made no attempt to distinguish between the offenses

that occurred in Midland and those that occurred in Odessa. She was simply trying to get appellant

to admit that he had committed sexual offenses against her. Appellant’s evasive answers also failed

to provide any distinction between Midland and Odessa offenses. Just as the Moulton decision

recognized that some criminal investigations have “dual purposes,”64 relating to both charged and

uncharged crimes, we recognize that evidence elicited in criminal investigations can sometimes have

dual uses, being evidence of both charged and uncharged crimes. Judge Keasler recognized such a

possibility in his dissent in Thompson:

       Of course, if a statement incriminates a defendant with regard to two separate
       offenses simultaneously, one a charged offense and one an uncharged offense, then
       that particular statement could be inadmissible at one trial and admissible at the
       other.65

Judge Keasler’s hypothetical is exactly what occurred here. Consequently, appellant’s Sixth

       63
            Id.
       64
         474 U.S. at 179 n.15 (“We take what we feel is a more realistic view of police
investigations, and instead accept that dual purposes may exist whenever police have more than
one reason to investigate someone.”).
       65
            Thompson, 108 S.W.3d at 270 (Keasler, J., dissenting to refusal to grant rehearing).
                                                                              RUBALCADO — 20

Amendment right to counsel had attached with respect to the recordings insofar as they were relevant

to the Ector County prosecutions.

                                      C. Knowing Circumvention

       In Moulton, the Supreme Court indicated that a Massiah violation occurs only if the State

“knowingly circumvented” the right to counsel.66 The court of appeals’s opinion suggests that a

knowing circumvention did not occur because Midland law enforcement was unaware that appellant

had counsel. Appellant’s position is that the knowledge of Ector County law enforcement should

be imputed to Midland County law enforcement.

       Appellant has the better of the argument. In Michigan v. Jackson, the Supreme Court held

that the State is responsible, in the Sixth Amendment context, for the knowledge of all of its actors:

       Sixth Amendment principles require that we impute the State’s knowledge from one
       state actor to another. For the Sixth Amendment concerns the confrontation between
       the State and the individual. One set of state actors (the police) may not claim
       ignorance of defendants’ unequivocal request for counsel to another state actor (the
       court).67

In so concluding, the Supreme Court cited and quoted from Moulton, a Massiah case.68 It is true

that, in Montejo v. Louisiana,69 the Supreme Court overruled Jackson insofar as it imposed a

prophylactic rule forbidding interrogation once the accused has requested counsel.70 But the Montejo

decision expressly stated that it was not concerned with the substantive scope of the Sixth

       66
            See this opinion, ante.
       67
475 U.S. at 634.
       68
            Jackson, 475 U.S. at 634 n.8.
       69
            556 U.S. 778 (2009).
       70
            Montejo, 556 U.S. at 780-81, 797, 799.
                                                                              RUBALCADO — 21

Amendment right to counsel, and in so saying it cited both Moulton and Massiah.71 We do not agree

with the court of appeals that the Supreme Court’s decision to overrule Jackson constituted an

abandonment of the rule of imputing knowledge to the State.72

                                      D. Government Agent

       Having determined that the right to counsel had attached with respect to the recordings and

that knowledge of that attachment, and that appellant had counsel, must be imputed to Midland law

enforcement, we now address whether J.S. was a government agent. The rule in Massiah applies

       71
          Id. at 791 (“Montejo contends that our decisions support his interpretation of the Jackson
rule. We think not. Many of the cases he cites concern the substantive scope of the Sixth
Amendment—e.g., whether a particular interaction with the State constitutes a ‘critical’ stage at
which counsel is entitled to be present—not the validity of a Sixth Amendment waiver. Since
everyone agrees that absent a valid waiver, Montejo was entitled to a lawyer during the interrogation,
those cases do not advance his argument.”) (citations omitted).
       72
            A different result may occur if the agent at issue worked for a different sovereign than
the one who conducts the prosecution—such as a different state or the federal government. See
Holness, 706 F.3d at 590. See also Ex parte Doan, 369 S.W.3d 205, 215-16 (Tex. Crim. App.
2012) (Keller, P.J., dissenting) (observing that the federal government, the various states, and
Indian tribes are separate sovereigns for double-jeopardy purposes, but cities are not separate
sovereigns). We do not have that situation here.
         The court of appeals and the State express concern that this rule will place an undue
burden on law enforcement in one county to know what other counties are doing, but we find
such a concern to be unpersuasive. Nothing in this opinion prevents a county from using
undisclosed agents to investigate uncharged crimes committed within that county and then using
such evidence in a later prosecution conducted by that county. The State’s suggestion that a
“Pandora’s box” of claims would be opened is misplaced. Defendants will not be able to lodge
successful Sixth-Amendment claims simply because they have been charged with similar crimes
in different jurisdictions. The Sixth Amendment was implicated here because the right to
counsel had attached in Ector County and because the statements on the recordings incriminated
appellant with regard to the Midland and Ector County offenses simultaneously. And even in
that situation, we are simply holding that the recordings would be inadmissible in Ector County.
Nothing in our opinion today prevents the State from admitting the recordings in a prosecution
for offenses occurring in Midland County.
                                                                                RUBALCADO — 22

only if the person who elicited statements from the defendant was a government agent.73

        In Manns v. State, we observed that there were some differences in the approaches of various

jurisdictions regarding this issue, but the jurisdictions were unified by at least one common principle:

“to qualify as a government agent, the informant must at least have some sort of agreement with, or

act under instructions from, a government official.”74 We were not required to specify in greater

detail what makes someone a government agent for Massiah purposes because the informant in

Manns had acted entirely on his own volition, without any promises, encouragement, or instructions

from the government, and was therefore not a government agent.75 We must now explore in more

detail the issue of what makes someone a government agent.

        As we observed in Manns, some of the federal circuits espouse a bright-line test that an

informant becomes a government agent “when the informant has been instructed by the police to get

information about a particular defendant.”76 The Supreme Court of California has suggested that an

informant becomes a government agent if he acts “under the direction of the government pursuant

to a preexisting arrangement, with the expectation of some resulting benefit or advantage.”77 The

Fifth Circuit held that the informant in one case was not a government agent because the evidence

       73
             Manns v. State, 122 S.W.3d 171, 178-89 (Tex. Crim. App. 2003).
        74
             Id. at 183.
       75
         Id. at 188 (The informant “was an entrepreneur who exploited [the defendant] for his own
gain. The government did nothing to encourage [his] behavior but merely accepted the
information.”).
        76
             Id. at 183.
        77
             People v. Dement, 53 Cal. 4th 1, 33, 264 P.3d 292, 318 (2011).
                                                                              RUBALCADO — 23

failed to show a quid pro quo and it failed to show instruction or control by the State.78 Because the

defendant had shown neither, the Fifth Circuit did not address whether both of those elements must

be shown in order to establish an agency relationship.79 Other jurisdictions have said that someone

was not a government agent if he was not instructed by the police or not promised something of

value for the information.80

       Citing Manns as a case that “surveyed the approaches of various jurisdictions,” the Supreme

Court of Kentucky concluded that the existence of an agency relationship depends upon the existence

of an agreement between the government and the informant at the time the information was

obtained.81 However, the Kentucky court rejected the notion that a quid pro quo must also underlie

the relationship.82 Similarly, the Ninth Circuit has held that an agreement to compensate the

informant for his services was not required.83 It is enough, the court held, that “the State made a

conscious decision to obtain [the informant’s] cooperation and that [the informant] consciously

decided to provide that cooperation.”84

       We conclude that J.S. was a government agent. The Midland police encouraged J.S. to call

appellant for the purpose of eliciting a confession. They also supplied J.S. with the recording

       78
            Creel v. Johnson, 162 F.3d 385, 394 (5th Cir. 1998)
       79
            Id.
       80
        See State v. Krause, 64 Haw. 522, 526, 644 P.2d 964, 968 (1982) (citing State v. Olson,
274 N.W.2d 190 (N.D. 1978)).
       81
            McBeath v. Commonwealth, 244 S.W.3d 22, 32 (Ky. 2007).
       82
            Id. at 33.
       83
            Randolph v. California, 380 F.3d 1133, 1144 (9th Cir. 2004)
       84
            Id.
                                                                               RUBALCADO — 24

equipment, and an officer was present during the calls. We do not attempt at this time to establish

a comprehensive rule for what makes an individual a government agent for Massiah purposes. We

hold simply that J.S. was a government agent under the facts of this case.

                                       E. Deliberately Elicit

       The next question is whether J.S. “deliberately elicited” incriminating statements from

appellant. In State v. Maldonado, we surveyed the Supreme Court’s cases regarding the meaning

of the Sixth Amendment’s “deliberately elicited” requirement and concluded that it encompassed

a broader range of activity than the Fifth Amendment concept of interrogation.85 Interrogation would

certainly qualify as deliberate elicitation for Massiah purposes, but it is not required.86 “Deliberate

elicitation” simply involves “some conduct designed to obtain incriminating statements.”87 Such

conduct has not occurred if the informant is merely a passive “listening post” who relates any

statements the defendant makes of his own volition.88 In Maldonado, we further concluded that a

police officer’s act of introducing himself was not sufficient to constitute deliberate elicitation.89

       There were times on the recording when J.S. engaged in explicit interrogation, such as when

she asked appellant why he had touched her and why he had sex with her. At other times, J.S. made

statements that fell short of interrogation but were nevertheless designed to invoke incriminating

responses. After all, the purpose of the calls was to elicit incriminating evidence. Although some

       85
            259 S.W.3d 184, 189-90 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008).
       86
            Id. at 190.
       87
            Id.
       88
            Id. at 191.
       89
            Id.
                                                                                RUBALCADO — 25

of the statements made by J.S. on the recordings were entirely innocuous, the incriminating relevance

of the recordings flowed from J.S.’s attempts to elicit incriminating admissions. We readily

conclude that deliberate elicitation has been shown.

                                              E. Waiver

        The State cites Montejo and Pecina v. State90 for the proposition that a defendant who

invokes his right to counsel by requesting an appointed attorney from a magistrate can still waive

his right to counsel and talk to police during custodial interrogations. The State then points out that

appellant’s conversations with J.S. did not even amount to custodial interrogation, and the State

claims that appellant’s “conversations with J.S. were purely voluntary on his part and he would

certainly have been free to decline to speak to her at all.” In saying that appellant was free to decline

to speak to J.S., the State implicitly suggests that appellant waived his right to counsel by choosing

to speak to her.

        The Supreme Court, however, has indicated that waiver does not apply in the Massiah

context:

        [T]he concept of a knowing and voluntary waiver of Sixth Amendment rights does
        not apply in the context of communications with an undisclosed undercover
        informant acting for the Government. In that setting, [the defendant], being unaware
        that [the informant] was a Government agent expressly commissioned to secure
        evidence, cannot be held to have waived his right to the assistance of counsel.91

        Nevertheless, some courts have held or suggested that a waiver can occur when the informant

is the complaining witness. In Jenkins v. Leonardo, the Second Circuit held that the defendant

        90
             361 S.W.3d 68 (Tex. Crim. App. 2012).
        91
             Henry, 447 U.S. at 273.
                                                                               RUBALCADO — 26

waived his right to counsel when he called the complaining witness.92 The court acknowledged that

“a criminal defendant will not ordinarily be held to have assumed the risk that those to whom he

speaks (after his right to counsel has attached) are state agents.”93 But the court found that the

confluence of several factors showed that the defendant had effectively waived his right to counsel

in its case.94 First, the defendant had been given Miranda warnings, though the court gave this fact

little weight because the warnings had been administered several months before the conversation at

issue.95 Second, and more importantly, it was the defendant who initiated the phone call to the

complaining witness.96 The appellate court held that this was important, in part, because the

complaining witness’s status as a government agent was not undisclosed—because the defendant

knew that the complaining witness was cooperating with the government.97 In connection with this

point, the court also observed that appellant did not simply initiate contact, “he aggressively pursued

it, making repeated calls.”98 Thus, the defendant “brazenly made harassing phone calls to his rape

victim, fully aware that she had cooperated with the police in the past.”99 Third, the court found that

it was “absurd to suppose that [the defendant] wanted counsel to be present at—or even aware

       92
            991 F.3d 1033, 1037-39 (2d Cir. 1993).
       93
            Id. at 1037.
       94
            Id. at 1038.
       95
            Id.
       96
            Id.
       97
            Id. at 1037 & n.2, 1038. The appellate court observed that the trial court had made a
specific finding as to this fact. Id. at 1037.
       98
            Id. at 1039.
       99
            Id.
                                                                              RUBALCADO — 27

of—his conversations with [the complaining witness] because the purpose of [his] call was to scare

or bribe [the complaining witness] into changing her story.”100 Finally, the Second Circuit observed

that the defendant was “no stranger to the criminal justice system,” as he had been convicted of

several prior crimes.101

       In People v. Wojtkowski, a California appellate court held Massiah to be inapplicable where

the defendant called the complaining witness, his wife.102 The court explained that “no one twisted

[the defendant’s] arm to place telephone calls to his wife.”103 The defendant “knew that his wife was

a prosecution witness, and the very purpose of his call was to dissuade her from proceeding with the

prosecution.”104 Moreover, the complaining witness’s few references to the crime were in response

to the defendant’s suggestion that she discourage prosecution of the offense.105 The court concluded

that the wife “was not an agent provocateur.”106

       In State v. Berry, a Missouri court of appeals held Massiah to be inapplicable to statements

made to the complaining witness, though he occupied a cell adjacent to the defendant’s at the time.107

The court explained that (1) the complaining witness was neither a paid informant nor an agent for

       100
             Id.
       101
             Id.
       102
             167 Cal. App. 3d 1077, 1081-83, 213 Cal. Rptr. 846, 849-50 (1985).
       103
             Id. at 1082, 213 Cal. Rptr. at 849.
       104
             Id. at 1082, 213 Cal. Rptr. at 850.
       105
             Id. at 1082, 213 Cal. Rptr. at 849.
       106
             Id. at 1083, 213 Cal. Rptr. at 850.
       107
             658 S.W.2d 476, 478 (Mo. App. 1983).
                                                                              RUBALCADO — 28

the State, (2) the defendant and the complaining witness did not share a common plight, given that

the complaining witness was a victim of the defendant’s acts, and (3) the placement of the

complaining witness in an adjacent cell was inadvertent and the complaining witness was moved

within three to five minutes after the placement was realized.108 The court observed that the

defendant “was obviously aware that the witness . . . had a relationship with the prosecution that

made it certain that that witness would report anything that defendant said to [the] prosecution.”109

       We recognize that most cases involving alleged Massiah violations involve co-defendants

or jailhouse informants and do not involve an informant so obviously adverse to the defendant as the

complaining witness usually is. Only a few cases have addressed the application of Massiah to

statements that a complaining witness elicits from the defendant. But the few cases that have done

so, and found no Massiah violation, are readily distinguishable from the present case. Unlike the

defendants in Jenkins and Wojtkowski, appellant did not initiate the calls to the complaining witness.

The complaining witness initiated the calls, and she made statements during the calls that were

designed to lull appellant into believing that she was not adverse to him. And unlike the authorities

in Berry, the Midland police encouraged J.S. to contact appellant for the purpose of eliciting a

confession, and they provided recording equipment to her to memorialize any incriminating

statements. We conclude that appellant did not waive his right to counsel.

                                        III. DISPOSITION

       The recordings were made in violation of appellant’s right to counsel with respect to the

Ector County prosecution. We reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and remand the case to

       108
             Id.
       109
             Id.
                                                                   RUBALCADO — 29

that court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

Delivered: March 19, 2014
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