State v. Pry ( 2019 )


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  • A
    JFWE
    IN CLKRK* orPICE
    This opinion was
    filed for record
    •iraE coum;81XIE OF WASHIKt^
    S'ftA.on       oL /j    ^
    I DATE            2 j fill                                                         -(l-o^—
    Susan L. Carlson
    CHIEFjusnce
    1                                      Supreme Court Clerk
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,
    Petitioner,                                   No. 96599-4
    V.
    En Banc
    ROBERT LEE PRY, ROBERT LAVALLE
    DAVIS, and ARNOLD MAFNAS CRUZ,
    Filed      MOV M ?ni!l
    Respondents.
    WIGGINS, J.—At issue in this case is whether the information charging Arnold
    Cruz'' with rendering criminal assistance is constitutionally sufficient—specifically,
    whether the charging document must include additional statutory elements from
    RCW 9A.76.050. We hold that because section .050 provides essential elements for
    rendering criminal assistance and Cruz's information lacked those elements, the
    information is constitutionally deficient. Accordingly, we affirm the Court of Appeals,
    dismiss the charge of rendering criminal assistance without prejudice, and remand
    Cruz's case to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    ^ Although the caption for this case names multiple appellants, we are concerned only with
    the lower court's ruling for Arnold Cruz. The procedural history of the case is explained below.
    state V. Pry(Robert Lee), Davis(Robert Lavalle), & Cruz(Arnold Mafnas), No. 96599-4
    BACKGROUND
    On a December day in 2015, two men severely beat and killed 89-year-old
    Robert Archie Hood. The two men—Robert Pry and Robert Davis—forced their way
    into Hood's home, tied him up, and beat and robbed him. Worried that law
    enforcement would discover Hood's body. Pry and Davis contacted Cruz for
    assistance. Cruz was not involved in the murder or robbery of Hood's home. He
    became involved only after these events occurred.
    Sometime later. Hood's caretaker visited Hood's home and, after noticing that.
    Hood was gone and someone had rifled through the house, alerted the police. Hood's
    body was eventually discovered stuffed in a blue plastic barrel. The police released
    Cruz's name to the press as a person of interest, and Cruz surrendered himself to law
    enforcement.
    The State charged Cruz by Information. Originally, Cruz was charged only with
    first degree rendering criminal assistance (count 1). Months later, the State filed an
    amended information adding a second count: concealing a deceased body (count 2).
    For count 1, the amended information specified:
    On or about or between December 17, 2015 and December 30,
    2015, in the County of Kitsap, State of Washington, the above-named
    Defendant, rendered criminal assistance to a person who had committed
    or was being sought for any class A felony; contrary to the Revised Code
    of Washington 9A.76.070(1).
    (Maximum Penalty—Ten (10) years imprisonment and/or a $20,000 fine
    pursuant to RCW 9A.76.070(2)(a) and RCW 9A.20.021(1)(b), plus
    restitution and assessments.)
    state V. Pry(Robert Lee), Davis (Robert Lavalle), & Cruz(Arnold Mafnas), No. 96599-4
    Special Allegation—Aggravating Circumstance—Lack of Remorse
    And Furthermore, the Defendant demonstrated or displayed an
    egregious lack of remorse, contrary to ROW 9.94A.535(3)(q).
    Special Allegation—Aggravating Circumstance—Impact on Persons
    Other than Victim
    And Furthermore, the offense involved a destructive and
    foreseeable impact on persons other than the victim, contrary to RCW
    9.94A.535(3)(r).
    Clerk's Papers(CP)at 578-79. For count 2, the Information stated:
    On or about or between December 17, 2015 and December 30,
    2015, in the County of Kitsap, State of Washington, the above-named
    Defendant, not having been authorized by the Kitsap County Coroner or
    his or her deputies, did remove the body of a deceased person (1) not
    claimed by a relative or friend; and/or (2) who came to his or her death
    by reason of violence or from unnatural causes; and/or (3) where there
    existed reasonable grounds for the belief that such death had been
    caused by unlawful means at the hands of another; and/or (4) to any
    undertaking rooms or elsewhere; and/or (5) and direct, aid or abet such
    taking; and/or(6)and in any way conceal the body of a deceased person
    for the purpose of taking the same to any undertaking rooms or
    elsewhere; contrary to Revised Code of Washington 68.50.050.
    (Maximum PENALTV-Three hundred sixty-four (364) days in jail or $1,000
    fine, or both, pursuant to RCW 68.50.050, plus restitution, assessments
    and court costs.)
    CP at 579. Cruz was convicted of both count 1 and count 2; the jury found him not
    guilty of any aggravating circumstance.^ Cruz pleaded guilty to drug possession and
    bail jumping in another case. The State asked the court to run these earlier offenses
    2 The State tried Pry, Davis, and Cruz together. Pry was convicted of felony murder,
    kidnapping, robbery, identity theft, possession of stolen property, and witness tampering.
    Davis was found guilty of second degree identity theft. The State's case initially included a
    fourth defendant, Joshua Rodgers-Jones, but his case was severed. Rodgers-Jones is not
    involved in Cruz's current appeal.
    state V. Pry (RobertLee), Davis (Robertiavaile), & Cruz (Arnold Mafnas), No. 96599-4
    and his convictions related to Hood consecutively, making the sentences exceptional.
    The court agreed, sentencing Cruz to a total of 151 months in prison.
    On appeal, Cruz argued for the first time that the State's charging document
    was constitutionally deficient for failing to set forth all the essential elements of
    rendering criminal assistance. State v. Pry, No. 77930-3-1, slip op. at 3, 43(Wash. Ct.
    App.      Nov.   13,   2018) (unpublished),       http://www.courts.wa.qov/opinion/pdf/
    779303.PDF.^ The Court of Appeals agreed. 
    Id. In an
    unpublished opinion, the court
    reversed Cruz's conviction and remanded the case for dismissal without prejudice.
    
    Id. at 43.
    The court declined to address Cruz's argument concerning the 151-month
    exceptional sentence. 
    Id. The State
    sought limited review of the court's decision
    reversing Cruz's conviction. We granted the petition. State v. Davis, 
    192 Wash. 2d 1022
    (2019).
    ANALYSIS
    Cruz argues that the Court of Appeals properly reversed his conviction because
    the information omitted essential elements of the crime of rendering criminal
    assistance. Cruz contends that RCW 9A.76.050 contains the required essential
    elements and their lack of inclusion in his charging document renders it constitutionally
    deficient. The State counters that section .050 is merely definitional and need not be
    included in the information. Furthermore, the State contends, even if the information
    3 Pry, Davis, and Cruz appealed together. Pry, No. 77930-3-1, slip op. at 1. Division One
    resolved their consolidated appeals, reversing Cruz's conviction and upholding those of Pry
    and Davis. 
    Id. at 3,
    22, 34. Pry sought review from this court, and the State moved to
    consolidate his appeal with Cruz. We denied Pry's petition and the State's motion. State v.
    Davis, 
    192 Wash. 2d 1022
    (2019). Despite the inclusion of Pry and Davis in the caption of this
    case, we granted review only of Cruz's appeal.
    state V. Pry(Robert Lee), Davis (Robert Lavalle), & Cruz(Arnold Mafnas), No. 96599-4
    listed "vague" elements of the crime, Cruz was not prejudiced because the probable
    cause statement included with the information gave him adequate notice of the
    charges. For the following reasons, we agree with Cruz.
    I.     An information must include all essential elements of the crime to be
    constitutionally sufficient
    Accused persons have the constitutional right to know the charges against
    them. U.S. Const, amend. Vl; Wash. Const, art. I, § 22. "Pursuant to this right, '[t]he
    accused . . . has a constitutional right to be apprised of the nature and cause of the
    accusation against him. . . . This doctrine is elementary and of universal application,
    and is founded on the plainest principle of justice.'" State v. Gehrke, 
    193 Wash. 2d 1
    , 6,
    
    434 P.3d 522
    (2019) (lead opinion) (first and third alterations in original) (quoting
    State V. Ackles, 
    8 Wash. 462
    , 464-65, 
    36 P. 597
    (1894)). The State gives notice of
    charges by information, which "shall be a plain, concise and definite written statement
    of the essential facts constituting the offense charged." CrR 2.1(a)(1). An offense is
    not properly charged unless the information sets forth every essential statutory and
    nonstatutory element of the crime. State v. Kjorsvik, 
    117 Wash. 2d 93
    , 97, 
    812 P.2d 86
    (1991); State v. Vangerpen, 
    125 Wash. 2d 782
    , 787, 
    888 P.2d 1177
    (1995).
    An "essential element is one whose specification is necessary to establish the
    very illegality of the behavior" charged. State v. Johnson, 
    119 Wash. 2d 143
    , 147, 
    829 P.2d 1078
    (1992)(citing United States v. Cina, 
    699 F.2d 853
    , 859 (7th Cir. 1983)).
    The primary purpose of the essential element rule is "to apprise the accused of the
    charges against him or her and to allow the defendant to prepare a
    defense." 
    Vangerpen, 125 Wash. 2d at 787
    . While the information need not restate the
    state V. Pry(Robert Lee), Davis (Robert Lavalle), & Cruz(Arnold Mafnas), No. 96599-4
    precise language of the essential elements of a crime, the information must do more
    than merely name the offense and list the elements—it must allege the particular facts
    supporting them. State v. Nonog, 
    169 Wash. 2d 220
    , 226, 
    237 P.3d 250
    (2010)(citing
    State V. Leach, 
    113 Wash. 2d 679
    , 688, 
    782 P.2d 552
    (1989)); see also State v. Royse,
    
    66 Wash. 2d 552
    , 557, 403 P.2d 838(1965). We may look to other counts charged when
    assessing whether the information appropriately gave the defendant notice. 
    Nonog, 169 Wash. 2d at 227-28
    . Failure to allege each element means the information is
    insufficient to charge a crime and must be dismissed. 
    Vangerpen, 125 Wash. 2d at 788
    .
    A charging document is not required to define essential elements. State v. Johnson,
    
    180 Wash. 2d 295
    , 302, 
    325 P.3d 135
    (2014).
    When, as in this case, a charging document is challenged for the first time on
    appeal, we construe it liberally. State v. McCarty, 
    140 Wash. 2d 420
    , 425, 
    998 P.2d 296
    (2000). But, "'[i]f the document cannot be construed to give notice of or to contain in
    some manner the essential elements of a crime, the most liberal reading cannot cure
    it.'" 
    Id. at 425
    (alteration in original)(internal quotation marks omitted)(quoting State
    V. Moavenzadeh, 
    135 Wash. 2d 359
    , 363, 
    956 P.2d 1097
    (1998)).
    Reviewing courts use a two-pronged test to resolve challenges to the
    sufficiency of evidence: (1) do the necessary facts appear in any form, or by fair
    construction can they be found, on the face of the charging document and, if so,(2)
    can the defendant show that he or she was nonetheless actually prejudiced by the
    inartful language that caused a lack of notice? 
    Kjorsvik, 117 Wash. 2d at 105-06
    . Under
    the first prong of Kjorsvik, courts may examine other charged counts when assessing
    whether an information gave a defendant appropriate notice. Nonog, 169 Wn.2d at
    state V. Pry(Robert Lee), Davis (Robert Lavalle), & Cruz(Arnold Mafnas), No. 96599-4
    226. We do not look past the face of the document—and therefore do not examine
    items such as statements of probable cause—until the second prong In Kjorsvik.
    State V. Goodman, 
    150 Wash. 2d 774
    , 788, 
    83 P.3d 410
    (2004); see also State v.
    Williams, 
    162 Wash. 2d 177
    , 186, 170 P.3d 30(2007)(turning to a statement of probable
    cause that accompanied the information only after reaching the second prong of
    Kjorsvik).
    If the necessary elements are not found or fairly implied, we presume prejudice
    and reverse without reaching the second prong and the question of prejudice. State
    V. Zillyette, 
    178 Wash. 2d 153
    , 163, 
    307 P.3d 712
    (2013); City of Auburn v. Brooke, 
    119 Wash. 2d 623
    , 636, 
    836 P.2d 212
    (1992)(courts do not reach prejudice unless there Is
    some language in the document, however inartful, relating to the necessary
    elements); see also Wayne R. LaFave et al., 5 Criminal Procedure § 19.3(b) (4th
    ed. 2015) ("[l]n most jurisdictions, even where the lack of an element in a pleading
    was not challenged before the trial court. It can be raised on appeal following a trial
    conviction, and if the pleading completely fails in this regard, the conviction will be
    automatically reversed.").
    II.    The information charging Cruz with rendering criminal assistance lacked
    essential elements of the crime and therefore was constitutionally
    insufficient
    Here, Cruz was charged with rendering criminal assistance in the first degree
    pursuant to RCW 9A.76.070. Count 1 reads:
    On or about or between December 17, 2015 and December 30,
    2015, in the County of Kitsap, State of Washington, the above-named
    Defendant, rendered criminal assistance to a person who had committed
    state V. Pry(Robert Lee), Davis (Robert Lavalle), & Cruz (Arnold Mafnas), No. 96599-4
    or was being sought for any class A felony; contrary to the Revised Code
    of Washington 9A.76.070(1).
    CP at 578. This closely tracks the language of RCW 9A.76.08.070, which reads, In
    part:
    A person Is guilty of rendering criminal assistance In the first degree If he
    or she renders criminal assistance to a person who has committed or Is
    being sought for murder In the first degree or any class A felony . . . .
    RCW 9A.76.070(1). In other words, Cruz was charged with "rendering criminal
    assistance," and the Information told him this meant that he was charged with
    "rendering criminal assistance."
    Cruz contends his Information Is deficient because It does not contain the
    essential elements set out In RCW 9A.76.050. Section .050 explains:
    As used In RCW 9A.76.070, 9A.76.080, and 9A.76.090, a person
    "renders criminal assistance" If, with Intent to prevent, hinder, or delay
    the apprehension or prosecution of another person who he or she knows
    has committed a crime or juvenile offense or Is being sought by law
    enforcement officials for the commission of a crime or juvenile offense or
    has escaped from a detention facility, he or she:
    (1) Harbors or conceals such person; or
    (2) Warns such person of Impending discovery or apprehension;
    or
    (3) Provides such person with money, transportation, disguise, or
    other means of avoiding discovery or apprehension; or
    (4) Prevents or obstructs, by use of force, deception, or threat,
    anyone from performing an act that might aid In the discovery or
    apprehension of such person; or
    (5) Conceals, alters, or destroys any physical evidence that might
    aid In the discovery or apprehension of such person; or
    (6) Provides such person with a weapon.
    We must determine whether section .050 provides essential elements or merely
    defines the offense of rendering criminal assistance. Fortunately, we have already
    state V. Pry(Robert Lee), Davis (Robert Lavalle), & Cruz(Arnold Mafnas), No. 96599-4
    opined on this issue. In State v. Budik, we reviewed the sufficiency of the evidence
    supporting a conviction for rendering criminal assistance. 
    173 Wash. 2d 727
    , 736-37,
    
    272 P.3d 816
    (2012). We identified the essential elements of the offense in light of
    section .050, stating that "a person renders criminal assistance if he or she(1) knows
    that another person (a)'has committed a crime or juvenile offense' or (b) 'is being
    sought by law enforcement officials for the commission of a crime or juvenile offense'
    or (c)'has escaped from a detention facility' and (2) intends 'to prevent, hinder, or
    delay the apprehension or prosecution' of that other person and (3) undertakes one
    of the six specified actions [listed in RCW 9A.76.050(1 )-(6)]." 
    Id. at 734(quoting
    RCW
    9A.76.050). We held that the evidence presented was not sufficient to support Budik's
    conviction based on the "essential element" in RCW 9A.76.050(4). 
    Id. at 734-35,
    738.
    Budik makes clear that RCW 9A.76.050 provides essential elements of the crime of
    rendering criminal assistance. 
    Id. at 736-37.
    Even if Budik could be distinguished, section .050 itself provides the essential
    elements of rendering criminal assistance. As noted above,'"[a]n "essential element
    is one whose specification is necessary to establish the very illegality of the behavior"
    charged.'" 
    Ziiiyette, 178 Wash. 2d at 158
    (quoting State v. Ward, 
    148 Wash. 2d 803
    , 811,
    64 P.3d 640(2003)(quoting 
    Johnson, 119 Wash. 2d at 147
    )). The aspects of rendering
    criminal assistance described in RCW 9A.76.050—and interpreted by Budik as
    essential elements—are essential elements under this rule. Without RCW 9A.76.050,
    we are left only with section .070, and this provision does not state what constitutes
    rendering criminal assistance. Section .070 states only that rendering criminal
    assistance occurs if one renders criminal assistance. This does not "'establish the
    state V. Pry (Robert Lee), Davis (Robert Lavalle), & Cruz (Arnold Mafnas), No. 96599-4
    very illegality of the behavior" charged.'"/d.(quoting Ward, 148Wn.2d at 811 (quoting
    
    Johnson, 119 Wash. 2d at 147
    )).
    The State contends that section .050 is merely definitional and Budik is
    inapposite.   Because a charging document is not required to define essential
    elements, 
    Johnson, 180 Wash. 2d at 302
    , the State argues that section .050's definition
    of rendering criminal assistance is unnecessary to include in Cruz's information. But
    if section .050 is merely definitional, the question then becomes what does section
    .050 define? The simple answer might be that it defines rendering criminal assistance.
    However, no single act or mental state constitutes that offense. Section .050 requires
    intent, knowledge, and action: the intent io prevent, hinder, or delay the apprehension
    or prosecution of someone that he or she knows has committed a crime or is sought
    by authorities for commission of a crime, and action on behalf of that person by
    (among other things) harboring, concealing, or warning them; providing them with aid
    to avoid discovery; and concealing or destroying evidence. See ROW 9A.76.050.
    Section .050 does substantially more than provide a definition; it informs a suspected
    person of the very crime the State alleges he or she committed.
    Furthermore, section .050 is necessary to give content to the crime of rendering
    criminal assistance. As Cruz correctly notes, not just any act of assistance is illegal—
    it must be one of six acts identified in section .050. 
    Budik, 173 Wash. 2d at 734-35
    . For
    example, a person who simply cooks a meal or provides emotional support for a
    person he or she knows has committed a crime is not rendering criminal assistance.
    Suppl. Br. of Resp't at 17; ROW 9A.76.050. As section .050 makes clear, section .070
    does /7of criminalize that behavior. See Zillyette, 178 V\/n.2d at 160(alleging a violation
    10
    state V. Pry(Robert Lee), Davis (Robert Lavalle), & Cruz (Arnold Mafnas), No. 96599-4
    of a statute that includes both criminal and noncriminal behavior is overinclusive and
    fails to satisfy the essential elements rule). In this example, section .070 identifies
    neither the actions nor the mental state required to render criminal assistance. Those
    elements are found in RCW 9A.76.050. Thus, the definition of rendering criminal
    assistance found in section .050 necessarily provides essential elements of the crime.
    The State also argues that Budik is inapposite for two reasons:(1) Budik treats
    section .050 as definitional and (2) the Budik court was not asked whether section
    .050 constitutes essential elements to be included in a charging document. The
    State's arguments are unconvincing.
    First, although Budik uses the title of section .050, which uses the word
    "definition" ("Rendering criminal assistance—Definition of 
    term"), 173 Wash. 2d at 733
    -
    34, Budik characterizes section .050 not as merely definitional but as providing
    essential elements that the State must prove. E.g., 
    id. at 738
    (describing RCW
    9A.76.050(4) as "one essential element" of the crime of rendering criminal
    assistance). Second, the State points to our decision in State v. Porter as evidence
    that this court distinguishes between essential elements for the sufficiency of the
    evidence versus sufficiency of an information. 
    186 Wash. 2d 85
    , 92-93, 
    375 P.3d 664
    (2016). The State misconstrues Porter. In that case, the defendant argued that
    charging documents must mirror pattern jury instructions. 
    Id. We disagreed,
    noting
    charging documents and jury instructions serve different purposes. 
    Id. Here, Cruz
    does not argue that an information must align with jury instructions; he contends only
    that Budik recognized section .050 as providing the essential elements of rendering
    11
    state V. Pry (Robert Lee), Davis (Robert Lavalle), & Cruz (Arnold Mafnas), No. 96599-4
    criminal assistance. The State offers no principled reason why the essential elements
    set out in Budik are not essential elements to be included in a charging document.
    Despite the State's protests, the information here does not include any of the
    six acts specified in section .050 and identified in Budik as essential 
    elements. 173 Wash. 2d at 734
    , 738. Nor does the charging document include any facts that describe
    what, exactly, Cruz's crime entailed. 
    Nonog, 169 Wash. 2d at 226
    . The information
    "[m]erely cite[s] to the proper statute and nam[es] the offense": the "name of the
    offense" does not "apprise[]the defendant of all of the essential elements of the crime."
    
    Vangerpen, 125 Wash. 2d at 787
    . It is therefore constitutionally insufficient. 
    Id. Next, the
    State contends that reversing Cruz's conviction conflicts with our
    decisions in 
    Johnson, 180 Wash. 2d at 301-02
    , and 
    Porter, 186 Wash. 2d at 92-93
    . The
    State misreads these cases.
    In Johnson, the defendant was charged by information with unlawful
    
    imprisonment. 180 Wash. 2d at 301
    . The charging document stated, in relevant part:
    ". . . J.C. JOHNSON [is accused] of the crime of Unlawful
    Imprisonment - Domestic Violence, based on a series of acts
    connected together with another crime charged herein, committed as
    follows:
    "That the defendant J.C. JOHNSON in King County, Washington, during
    a period of time intervening between May 4, 2009 through May 6, 2009,
    did knowingly restrain [J.C.'s wife], a human being;
    "Contrary to RCW 9A.40.040, and against the peace and dignity of the
    State of Washington."
    
    Id. 12 state
    V. Pry (RobertLee), Davis (RobertLavaile), & Cruz (Arnold Mafnas), No. 96599-4
    Johnson alleged that the definition of "restrain" set forth in former
    RCW 9A.40.010(1)'' constituted an essential element of unlawful imprisonment, and
    the failure to include this definition rendered the information deficient. 
    Id. at 301-02.
    We rejected this argument and held that the definition of restrain defines the term and
    limits the scope of the essential elements. 
    Id. at 302.
    Definitions of elements are not
    required in a charging document. 
    Id. In Porter
    , a defendant was charged with unlawful possession of a stolen motor
    vehicle under RCW 
    9A.56.068. 186 Wash. 2d at 88
    . The charging document stated:
    "[tjhat CLIFFORD MELVIN PORTER, JR., in the State of Washington,
    on or about the 27th day of August, 2011, did unlawfully and feloniously
    knowingly possess a stolen motor vehicle, knowing that it had been
    stolen, contrary to RCW 9A.56.068 and 9A.56.140, and against the
    peace and dignity of the State of Washington."
    
    Id. (alteration in
    original). Porter argued that the information was insufficient because
    it did not include the definition of "possess." 
    Id. at 90.
    Relying on Johnson, we held
    that the definition of "possess" merely defined and limited the scope of the essential
    elements of unlawful possession of a motor vehicle. 
    Id. at 91.
    The State contends that Cruz's case Is similar to Johnson and Porter. But the
    State overlooks the critical difference between the crime charged in Cruz's information
    and the contested terms in Johnson and Porter. This case does not concern the
    definition of terms like "restrain" and "possess," which simply clarified crimes that were
    fully and properly stated in a charging document. We are instead concerned with the
    "'Restrain' is defined as 'to restrict a person's movements without consent and without legal
    authority   in   a    manner     which    interferes    substantially   with    his   liberty.'
    Former RCW 9A.40.010(1)(1975)." 
    Johnson, 180 Wash. 2d at 301
    .
    13
    state V. Pry(Robert Lee), Davis (Robert Lavalle), & Cruz (Arnold Mafnas), No. 96599-4
    proper statement of the crime itself. RCW 9A.76.070 states only that one is guilty of
    rendering criminal assistance if he or she renders criminal assistance to a criminal. In
    effect, one commits a crime by committing a crime. Section .070 does not inform a
    defendant in plain and simple terms what rendering criminal assistance means,
    CrR 2.1(a)(1), nor does it list any elements specifying the '"very illegality of the
    behavior'" charged. 
    Zillyette, 178 Wash. 2d at 158
    (internal quotation marks omitted)
    (quoting Ward, 148Wn.2d at 811).
    Johnson and Porter are also distinguishable because the charging documents
    at issue in those cases included the intent elements of the charged crimes.
    See 
    Johnson, 180 Wash. 2d at 301
    ('"knowingly restrain'") and 
    Porter, 186 Wash. 2d at 88
    ("'feloniously knowingly possess . . . knowing that it had been stolen'"). These cases
    concerned only whether the terms "possession" and "restraint" were essential
    elements and included intent, whereas here, the challenged information wholly
    omitted reference to the mental state required to commit the crime of rendering
    criminal assistance. RCW 9A.76.070.®
    Under our analysis in Johnson and Porter, the information charging Cruz with
    rendering criminal assistance does not make the grade under the Sixth Amendment
    and article I, section 22. The State was required to include the essential elements as
    set out in section .050 and recognized in Budik. Unlike the definitions of "restrain" and
    "possess," section .050 does not simply define or limit the scope of essential elements
    5 The definitions for "restrain" and "possess" are also unlike that of "rendering criminal
    assistance" because these terms can be generally understood by the ordinary person. Further
    elaboration would only further define these commonsense terms, and a charging document
    need not define essential elements. 
    Johnson, 180 Wash. 2d at 302
    .
    14
    state V. Pry(Robert Lee), Davis (Robert Lavaile), & Cruz (Arnold Mafnas), No. 96599-4
    set forth in section .070. Section .050 provides those elements. Because they were
    not present in the charging document, it was constitutionally deficient.
    This deficiency cannot be cured by locking to count 2 of the information against
    Cruz, charging him with "removal or concealment of a deceased body," a gross
    misdemeanor under ROW 68.50.050. CP at 579. From count 2, it is possible to
    conclude that concealing a dead body was an act that amounted to rendering criminal
    assistance. But this is far from providing sufficient notice for the charge of rendering
    criminal assistance. Nothing in count 2 expressly links it to the crime of rendering
    criminal assistance or provides any description of the substance of rendering criminal
    assistance. Even if count 2 could be read as qualifying as one of the six acts listed in
    section .050(such as concealing physical evidence under RCW 9A.76.050(5)), count
    2 does not contain the required mens rea elements of rendering criminal assistance:
    intent io hinder or delay apprehension of someone he or she knows has committed a
    crime. Perhaps count 2 could be viewed as indicating that a suspect concealed a
    body with the intent to prevent its discovery, but this falls far short of the specific
    mental states RCW 9A.76.050 requires.
    In contrast, sometimes a count or counts in an information may inform the
    defendant of elements missing from an otherwise deficient count of the same
    information. Such was the case in Nonog, in which the information charging Nonog
    with the crime of interfering with domestic violence reporting was constitutionally
    sufficient. 
    Nonog, 169 Wash. 2d at 223
    . Nonog argued that his charging document was
    insufficient because it did not define "domestic violence." 
    Id. at 228.
    We reasoned that
    15
    state V. Pry (Robert Lee), Davis (Robert Lavalle), & Cruz (Arnold Mafnas), No. 96599-4
    the information was sufficient because other counts in that information, which the
    challenged count expressly referenced, did define domestic violence. 
    Id. at 229.
    Here,
    nothing in count 2 indicates that it defines, or is associated with, rendering criminal
    assistance. Moreover, count 1 charges rendering criminal assistance but does not
    reference count 2's concealing a body. Thus, count 2 cannot save count 1 from
    constitutional deficiency.
    The dissent disagrees on a different basis entirely. The dissent asserts that
    because the certificate of probable cause was purportedly attached® to the
    information, it was part of the information, and therefore we may properly turn to it
    under the first prong of the Kjorsvik test to determine whether the information gave
    constitutionally sufficient notice. Dissent at 2-3. With the certificate's assistance, the
    dissent concludes that the information was sufficient. 
    Id. at 8-9.
    The dissent is incorrect. Under the first prong           Kjorsvik, the inadequacy of the
    information cannot be cured by referring to the certificate of probable cause. Under
    Kjorsvik, we do not treat certificates of probable cause as part of the information, even
    when they are attached to or accompany the information. Our case law on this is clear.
    ® The dissent produces no proof that the certificate of probable cause was actually attached to
    the information. It asserts that the "fact is not disputed" that the certificate of probable cause was
    attached to the charging document—but the dissent's only "facts" are assertions the State made
    in its briefing before the Court of Appeals, before this court, and at oral argument. Dissent at 6-7.
    But assertions from appellate briefing and argument do not create facts. In any event, attached
    or unattached, the certificate of probable cause is irrelevant to the first prong of the Kjorsvik test
    16
    state V. Pry(Robert Lee), Davis (Robert Lavalle), & Cruz (Arnold Mafnas), No. 96599-4
    In Williams, the petitioner challengecl a charging document as inadequate for the first
    time on 
    appeal. 162 Wash. 2d at 185
    . In conducting the Kjorsvik analysis, we faced a
    situation identical to the one the dissent claims is before us today: "the information
    was accompanied by a statement of probable cause." 
    Id. at 186.
    But we turned to this
    accompanying statement of probable cause only after reaching the second prong of
    the Kjorsvik analysis, noting that it is the second prong that "allows the court to look
    outside the information." 
    Id. In short,
    the Williams court treated the information as only
    the text of the information itself, and the statement of probable cause—although
    accompanying the information—was not part of the information. 
    Id. Rather, the
    statement of probable cause was considered part of the '"other circumstances of the
    charging process'" that Kjorsvik allows us to look to in the second prong of its analysis.
    
    Id. (quoting Kjorsvik,
    117 Wn.2d at 106). Although the dissent relies on Leach, 
    113 Wash. 2d 679
    , to justify its turn to the certificate of probable cause under the first prong
    of Kjorsvik, Leach predates Kjorsvik—as the dissent admits. Dissent at 3. Williams,
    decided in 2007, nearly two decades after Leach, expressly conducted a Kjorsvik
    analysis and clearly provides the persuasive precedent on this issue.
    Accordingly, we shall not consider the certificate of probable cause when the
    text of the information itself is found constitutionally deficient under KjorsviKs first
    prong, whether the certificate accompanies the information or not.
    The dissent protests, arguing that its analysis represents the "[cjommon sense"
    method. Dissent at 5. But a commonsense reading of our own precedent points to
    precisely the opposite conclusion as Williams shows. Further, when Nonog—which
    the dissent cites for its turn to common sense—talks about "read[ing] the information
    17
    state V. Pry(Robert Lee), Davis (Robert Lavalle), & Cruz(Arnold Mafnas), No. 96599-4
    as a whole, according to common sense," it was discussing reading individual counts
    in the information in concert and not limiting our consideration in a Kjorsvik analysis
    to the challenged count 
    alone. 169 Wash. 2d at 227-28
    . When our long-established case
    law discusses analyzing the sufficiency of the information by looking "solely to the face
    of the charging instrument," a commonsense approach leads us to look at on/y what
    is actually Included in the text of the information, not ancillary documents like a
    certificate of probable cause. 
    Goodman, 150 Wash. 2d at 788
    .
    From the dissent's flawed methodology stems its flawed conclusion. The
    dissent's only way to save the information from being unconstitutional is to turn to the
    certificate of probable cause; without that certificate, the dissent's argument cannot
    succeed. With only the information itself before us, it is clear that Cruz was not given
    constitutionally sufficient notice of the crime of rendering criminal assistance.
    In sum, the charging document failed to put Cruz on notice that he committed
    the offense of rendering criminal assistance.         Cruz's objection to his charging
    document is not that it could be more elaborate; his objection is simply that the
    information failed to adequately inform him of the crime for which he was charged. We
    agree. This information was constitutionally insufficient. Accordingly, the Court of
    Appeals did not err in reversing Cruz's conviction.
    18
    state V. Pry(Robert Lee), Davis (Robert Lavalle), & Cruz (Arnold Mafnas), No. 96599-4
    CONCLUSION
    ROW 9A.76.050 sets forth essential elements for rendering criminal assistance.
    The State was therefore required to include the elements set out in section .050 in the
    information charging Cruz with rendering criminal assistance.           Because Cruz's
    information entirely omitted the elements found in section .050, we hold it was
    constitutionally insufficient. Accordingly, the Court of Appeals properly reversed
    Cruz's conviction. We affirm the Court of Appeals and remand Cruz's case to the trial
    court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    19
    state V. Pry(Robert Lee), Davis (Robert Lavalle), & Cruz (Arnold Mafnas), No. 96599-4
    WE CONCUR.
    ^(X\A hAA/ui^ ^ Q'                                                  ■y
    cl<2..eyy\ ,
    20
    State V. Pry, Davis & Cruz, No. 96599-4
    (Yu, J., dissenting)
    No. 96599-4
    YU, J. (dissenting) — The legal principles at issue are well settled. "In
    criminal prosecutions the accused shall have the right... to demand the nature and
    cause of the accusation against him." WASH. CONST, art. I, § 22; see also U.S.
    Const, amend. VI. Therefore,"[a]ll essential elements of a crime, statutory or
    otherwise, must be included in a charging document in order to afford notice to an
    accused ofthe nature and cause of the accusation against him." State v. Kjorsvik,
    
    117 Wash. 2d 93
    , 97, 
    812 P.2d 86
    (1991). However,"[cjharging documents which
    are not challenged until after the verdict will be more liberally construed in favor
    of validity than those challenged before or during trial." 
    Id. at 102.
    My disagreement with the majority is not based on these legal principles but
    on a fundamental question that precedes them: What is the "charging document"?
    State V. Pry, Davis & Cruz, No. 96599-4
    (Yu, J., dissenting)
    The majority's answer is that in every case the charging document is strictly
    limited to the information and therefore can never include an attached certificate of
    probable cause. Applying this formalistic approach, the majority holds that the
    charge of rendering criminal assistance (count 1) was constitutionally insufficient,
    so petitioner Arnold Cruz's conviction must be reversed. The majority's approach
    is not compelled by our precedent and ignores the practical and legal
    considerations at issue in postverdict challenges to the sufficiency of charging
    documents. I would take a more flexible approach, and I would hold that the
    charging document in this case was constitutionally sufficient to survive Cruz's
    postverdict challenge. I therefore respectfully dissent.
    ANALYSIS
    A.     The charging document in this case includes both the information and the
    attached certificate of probable cause
    Where, as here, the constitutional sufficiency of a charging document is
    challenged for the first time after the verdict, we apply the two-step Kjorsvik test:
    "(1) do the necessary facts appear in any form, or by fair construction can they be
    found, in the charging document; and, if so,(2) can the defendant show that he or
    she was nonetheless actually prejudiced by the inartful language which caused a
    lack of notice?" 
    Id. at 105-06.
    The first step of the Kjorsvik IqsX "looks to the face
    of the charging document itself." 
    Id. at 106.
    Proper application of this first step
    State V. Pry, Davis & Cruz, No. 96599-4
    (Yu, J., dissenting)
    therefore requires us to determine what "the charging document itself is. In this
    case, I would hold that because the information and certificate of probable cause
    were physically attached to each other and were treated as a single document, they
    are both included within the charging document itself. Therefore, both may be
    considered in the first step of the Kjorsvik test.
    Our precedent has already endorsed the approach I would take. For
    instance, in State v. Leach, we explicitly considered both the misdemeanor
    complaint and a copy of the police report that was attached to the complaint and
    incorporated by reference with the notation '"(see case).'" 
    113 Wash. 2d 679
    , 684,
    
    782 P.2d 552
    (1989). We concluded that the charge was insufficient, but not
    because we refused to consider the police report. To the contrary, we held the
    charge was insufficient because "the photocopy of the police report received by
    Mr. Leach and incorporated by reference into the complaint omitted the year of
    birth of one of the alleged victims," an essential element raising the offense from a
    misdemeanor to a gross misdemeanor. 
    Id. However,"[i]f that
    crucial information
    had been provided him, he would have been able to determine that he was charged
    with a gross misdemeanor" and the charge would have been constitutionally
    sufficient. 
    Id. ,- see
    also 
    id. at 690.
    Leach predates Kjorsvik, but it is still good law for the proposition that the
    charging document may include a police report or certificate of probable cause that
    State V. Pry, Davis & Cruz, No. 96599-4
    (Yu, J., dissenting)
    is attached to the complaint or information. Kjorsvik did not abrograte Leach] it
    reached an issue that Leach did not, namely "whether a different standard of
    review should be applied when, as here, the accused first raises the issue on
    appeal." 
    Kjorsvik, 117 Wash. 2d at 103
    ; see 
    Leach, 113 Wash. 2d at 700-01
    (Brachtenbach, J., concumng). Kjorsvik answered yes,"[cjharging documents
    which are not challenged until after the verdict will be more liberally construed in
    favor of validity than those challenged before or during 
    trial." 117 Wash. 2d at 102
    .
    Kjorsvik did not disavow Leach's approach to defining the charging
    document, nor did Williams or Goodman. State v. Williams, 
    162 Wash. 2d 177
    , 170
    P.3d 30(2007); State v. Goodman, 
    150 Wash. 2d 774
    , 
    83 P.3d 410
    (2004). In each
    case, the court merely held that the language of the information, by itself, was
    sufficient to satisfy the first step of the Kjorsvik test. 
    Williams, 162 Wash. 2d at 186
    ;
    
    Goodman, 150 Wash. 2d at 788
    -89; 
    Kjorsvik, 117 Wash. 2d at 110-11
    . None ofthese
    cases reexamined (much less explicitly rejected) Leach's recognition that a
    charging document sometimes includes an attached police report or statement of
    probable cause.
    Nevertheless, the majority contends these cases show that Kjorsvik's explicit
    adoption of a more liberal construction standard for charging documents implicitly
    compels a stricter definition of the charging document itself. See majority at 16-
    18. The counterintuitive result is that in a case like this one, a charging document
    State V. Pry, Davis & Cruz, No. 96599-4
    (Yu, J., dissenting)
    that would have been constitutionally sufficient pursuant to Leach is
    constitutionally deficient pursuant to Kjorsvik. I cannot agree with this reading of
    our precedent.
    Leach'^ approach to defining the charging document is also entirely
    consistent with the logic of the Kjorsvik test. The purpose of Kjorsvik's more
    liberal construction standard is to discourage '"sandbagging,"' which is "a
    potential defense practice wherein the defendant recognizes a defect in the
    charging document but forgoes raising it before trial when a successful objection
    would usually result only in an amendment of the pleading." 
    Kjorsvik, 117 Wash. 2d at 103
    . In keeping with this purpose, the only reason that the first step of the
    Kjorsvik test is limited to the charging document is to differentiate between
    challenges to the sufficiency of the charging document and challenges to the
    sufficiency of the State's evidence. See United States v. Hall, 
    20 F.3d 1084
    , 1087
    (10th Cir. 1994). This limitation is not intended to artificially narrow our inquiry
    based on "formal defects." Hagner v. United States, 
    285 U.S. 427
    , 431, 
    52 S. Ct. 417
    , 
    76 L. Ed. 861
    (1932).
    In postverdict challenges, we must read the charging document "as a whole,
    according to common sense." State v. Nonog, 
    169 Wash. 2d 220
    , 227, 
    237 P.3d 250
    (2010). Common sense indicates that when Cruz was provided with a three-page
    information attached to a thi"ee-page certificate of probable cause, he was put on
    State V. Pry, Davis & Cruz, No. 96599-4
    (Yu, J., dissenting)
    notice of the contents of all six pages. If he felt that the certificate of probable
    cause was surplusage, then he could have moved to strike it. See CrR 2.1(b). He
    also had the right to challenge the sufficiency of the charges before or during trial.
    Cruz was clearly aware of this right because he brought a midtrial motion to
    dismiss the charge of concealment of a deceased body (count 2)for failing to
    allege the essential elements, which the trial court denied. Clerk's Papers(CP) at
    968-70; 27 Verbatim Report ofProceedings (June 20, 2016) at 4728. However, he
    did not challenge the sufficiency of the rendering criminal assistance charge (count
    1) until after he was convicted. Although we cannot know for certain, this history
    strongly suggests intentional sandbagging. The majority's approach today
    encourages such tactics, contrary to the purpose of the Kjorsvik test.
    The majority further suggests that we cannot consider the certificate of
    probable cause in the first step of the Kjorsvik test because there is "no proof that
    the certificate of probable cause was actually attached to the information."
    Majority at 16 n.6. However, that fact is not disputed. If it were, I would request
    further briefing from the parties or remand to the superior court to take additional
    evidence pursuant to RAP 9.11, but such additional steps are unnecessary here.
    The superior court's docket shows that the information and certificate of
    probable cause were filed on the same day under the same subnumber as a single
    document. The State asserted in its briefing to both the Court of Appeals and this
    State V. Pry, Davis & Cruz, No. 96599-4
    (Yu, J., dissenting)
    court that the information "was accompanied by a statement of probable cause."
    Br. of Resp't at 84(Wash. Ct. App. No. 49284-9-II (2018)); Pet. for Review at 11.
    Cruz never challenged those assertions. And at oral argument before this court, the
    State confirmed that it is the ordinary practice of the Kitsap County Prosecutor's
    Office to physically attach the certificate of probable cause to the information and
    provide them both to the defendant as a single document at arraignment. Wash.
    Supreme Court oral argument, State v. Pry, No. 96599-4 (June 25, 2019), at 7 min.,
    5 sec., video recording by TVW, Washington State's Public Affairs Network,
    http://www.tvw.org. Cruz has not challenged that assertion either, nor has he
    contended that the State deviated from its ordinary practice in this case.
    There is thus no dispute that the certificate of probable cause was attached to
    the information and they were provided to Cruz together as a single charging
    document. I would therefore hold that for purposes of the first step of the Kjorsvik
    test, the charging document here includes both the information and the attached
    certificate of probable cause.'
    'The record does not indicate whether the certificate of probable cause was also attached
    to the amended information, but that does not change the analysis because Cruz had already been
    provided with the certificate of probable cause as an attachment to the original information.
    State V. Pry, Davis & Cruz, No. 96599-4
    (Yu, J., dissenting)
    B.     Assuming that RCW 9A.76.050 does set forth essential elements of
    rendering criminal assistance, the charging document in this case sufficiently
    alleges them
    When both the information and the certificate of probable cause are
    considered, the charging document in this case easily passes the first step ofthe
    KjorsvikiQsX. Cruz contends that RCW 9A.76.050 sets forth essential elements of
    the crime of rendering criminal assistance and that three ofthose elements are
    missing from the charging document in this case:
    [That the defendant]"(1) knows that another person (a)'has
    committed a crime or juvenile offense' or(b)'is being sought by law
    enforcement officials for the commission of a crime or juvenile
    offense' or(c)'has escaped from a detention facility' and (2)intends
    'to prevent, hinder, or delay the apprehension or prosecution' ofthat
    other person and (3)undertakes one of the six specified actions."
    Answer to Pet. for Review at 7(emphasis omitted)(quoting State v. Budik, 
    173 Wash. 2d 727
    , 734, 
    272 P.3d 816
    (2012)(quoting RCW 9A.76.050)). I would
    assume without deciding that these are essential elements because the facts
    supporting each one are alleged in the charging document:
    Cruz then told [his fiiend] about how he had disposed of the body of
    the "old man" from Bremerton that had been in the news. Cruz stated
    he had killed people before and he did not want the young men
    responsible to go to prison. Cruz stated he agreed to dispose of the
    body so there would be no evidence of the murder.
    CP at 5.
    State V. Pry, Davis & Cruz, No. 96599-4
    (Yu, J., dissenting)
    This language, liberally construed, alleges every element that Cruz contends
    is missing:(1) Cruz knew that other people (the young men) had committed a
    crime (killing the "old man");(2) Cruz intended to prevent the young men's
    apprehension and prosecution (because he did not want them to go to prison); and
    (3) Cruz undertook the specific action of"[c]onceal[ing], alter[ing], or destroy[ing]
    any physical evidence that might aid in [their] discovery or apprehension"(by
    disposing of the victim's body). RCW 9A.76.050(5). Therefore, assuming
    without deciding that these are all essential elements,"the necessaiy facts" for each
    one appear "in the charging document." 
    Kjorsvik, 117 Wash. 2d at 105
    .
    CONCLUSION
    The majority today applies an unduly strict standard for evaluating a
    charging document that is challenged for the first time after the verdict,
    encouraging the very type of sandbagging the Kjorsvik test is intended to prevent.
    I would hold that the charging document in this case satisfies the first step of the
    Kjorsvik test and, because Cruz does not argue he was "nonetheless actually
    prejudiced by the inartful language," his conviction should be affirmed. 
    Id. at 106.
    I therefore respectfully dissent.
    State V. Pry, Davis & Cruz, No. 96599-4
    (Yu, J., dissenting)
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