(9) After release from custody
The Supreme Court has often said that the rules applicable to police reinitiation of questioning continue to apply "assuming there has been no break in custody." (McNeil v. Wisconsin) Lower courts have generally taken this to mean that if a suspect who has invoked Miranda is subsequently released from custody, the invocation ceases to be operative. Police would then be free under Miranda to question the suspect in a non-custodial setting without warnings, or to re-Mirandize him after a re-arrest to seek a waiver. (If the suspect has been indicted or made his first court appearance on a prosecution and asserted his right to counsel, the Sixth Amendment Massiah rule would make statements inadmissible on the charged case. Michigan v. Jackson)
Writing and reading the Miranda "history"
Obviously, a second or follow-up officer must know whether a custodial suspect he or she intends to interrogate has already been Mirandized and if so, whether he waived or invoked, and if he invoked, whether he asserted only his right to silence or his right to counsel. This means that every officer who gives warnings, takes waivers, or faces an invocation must make a clear and accurate record of what happened, and every subsequent interrogator must read the reports that show the suspect's Miranda "history."
When officers in Arizona v. Roberson argued that they should not be held accountable for earlier invocations of which they were unaware, the Supreme Court said that it is incumbent on police departments to create and then read reports of what has previously happened, so that each new investigator will know whether questioning can be resumed, and as to what crimes: