Last updated: May 2026. This article includes analysis of People v. Eugene, a 2024 Colorado Supreme Court decision addressing custody under Miranda.
Custody under Miranda does not always mean a person has been formally arrested. Instead, courts usually ask whether a reasonable person in the same situation would believe their freedom had been restrained to the degree associated with a formal arrest.
This question matters because Miranda warnings are generally required only when a person is both in custody and being interrogated. Therefore, if police question someone before custody begins, the statements may still be admissible.
For the full overview, visit our Miranda rights Colorado guide.
Custody under Miranda means more than ordinary police contact. A person is typically in custody when the circumstances show a restraint on freedom similar to formal arrest.
However, the analysis depends on the facts. Police may stop someone, ask questions, or conduct a brief investigation without creating Miranda custody. On the other hand, an encounter can become custodial even before officers formally say, “You are under arrest.”
The Miranda custody test usually asks whether a reasonable person in the suspect’s position would believe their freedom had been restrained to the degree associated with formal arrest.
Courts generally look at the totality of the circumstances. As a result, no single fact automatically decides the issue. Instead, judges consider the entire police encounter.
For constitutional background, you can review Miranda v. Arizona and the Fifth Amendment through Cornell’s Legal Information Institute.
In People v. Eugene, the Colorado Supreme Court addressed what counts as custody under Miranda. The Court held that the defendant was not in custody even though officers questioned him outside his apartment, briefly frisked him, accused him of lying, and kept him outside during an encounter that lasted approximately 27 minutes.
You can review the case here: People v. Eugene, 2024 CO 59.
The Court emphasized several facts that weighed against custody:
The decision confirms that Miranda custody depends on the totality of the circumstances. Even when police use accusatory questioning, a court may still conclude that a reasonable person would not have felt restrained to the degree associated with formal arrest.
Because People v. Eugene is a recent Colorado Supreme Court decision, it is now an important authority for deciding whether statements should be suppressed in Colorado criminal cases.
Courts may consider many facts when deciding whether someone was in custody for Miranda purposes. Common factors include:
Because these factors can point in different directions, Miranda custody often becomes a contested issue in suppression hearings.
Real-world Miranda cases often turn on small factual differences. The following examples show how custody analysis may change depending on the circumstances.
Most ordinary traffic stops do not begin as Miranda custody. Therefore, police often ask questions during traffic stops without reading Miranda warnings first.
However, a traffic stop can become custodial if officers significantly restrain the person’s freedom. For example, handcuffs, placement in a patrol car, prolonged detention, or aggressive questioning may change the analysis.
For related DUI issues, visit our Miranda rights DUI Colorado page.
Patrol car questioning can create important Miranda issues. If officers place someone in the back of a patrol car and ask investigative questions, a court may need to decide whether the person was effectively in custody.
Still, not every patrol car conversation is custodial. For example, officers may temporarily place someone in a patrol car for safety or investigation. Therefore, the defense must examine the reason, duration, and tone of the encounter.
Questioning at home may feel less custodial than questioning at a police station. However, the home setting does not automatically eliminate custody.
If multiple officers enter the home, control movement, block exits, or use forceful questioning, the encounter may become custodial. As a result, home interviews can still raise Miranda issues.
A voluntary interview at a police station does not automatically count as custody. If the person agrees to come in, remains free to leave, and is not restrained, Miranda may not apply.
However, the situation may change if detectives control the person’s movement, lock the interview room, use accusatory tactics, or make clear that the person cannot leave.
If police questioned someone during custodial interrogation without Miranda warnings, the defense may ask the court to suppress the statements.
Suppression does not always dismiss the entire case. However, excluding statements can significantly weaken the prosecution’s evidence, especially when the statement is central to the case.
For more information, visit our motion to suppress statements in Colorado page and our page on what happens if police do not read Miranda rights.
A lawyer can evaluate whether a person was in custody before police asked incriminating questions. That review may include body camera footage, interrogation recordings, patrol car video, dispatch records, police reports, and witness testimony.
In addition, a lawyer can file a motion to suppress statements when police violated Miranda. Because custody analysis is fact-specific, early review of the evidence can make a meaningful difference.
Schedule a confidential consultation today to discuss your case.
No. Formal arrest is strong evidence of custody, but custody can begin before police officially announce an arrest.
Handcuffs are an important factor, but courts still consider the full circumstances of the encounter.
Usually, ordinary traffic stops are not custody at the beginning. However, a stop may become custodial depending on police conduct.
Yes, if the interview is truly voluntary and you are not in custody. However, station interviews may become custodial depending on the circumstances.
In People v. Eugene, the Colorado Supreme Court held that the defendant was not in custody during outdoor questioning near his apartment because the total circumstances did not resemble formal arrest.
If police interrogated you while you were in custody without proper Miranda warnings, your lawyer may seek suppression of the statements.
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