Under questioning from a defense attorney Tuesday, a Minneapolis police investigator admitted that he used "deception" to lure an alleged accomplice to police headquarters, where she was questioned and arrested in the 2019 New Year's Eve killing of Monique Baugh.
Attorney Christa Groshek argued that police misled her client, Shante Davis, into appearing at headquarters two times this year under the guise that she could possibly retrieve her cellphone and laptop, which they had confiscated as evidence.
Groshek filed motions to suppress statements Davis made at the meetings.
"We believe that she was tricked down to the police station," Groshek said after a hearing the on matter. "She insisted several times she didn't want to talk to them."
Video recordings of Davis' Jan. 5 and Feb. 4 interviews with police were played in court Tuesday, showing that they never read her the Miranda warning outlining her right to remain silent or to consult an attorney.
The videos also showed that Davis said multiple times that she wanted to talk about her belongings and not the case, and that at least once she noted the absence of legal representation for herself.
Both times two homicide investigators and an FBI agent continued questioning Davis despite her statements.
Davis, 38, was charged Feb. 6 with one count of aiding an offender. She is the wife of one suspect charged in the case, Cedric Berry, and the sister of another suspect, Berry Davis.