State of Washington v. Daviel Canela ( 2021 )


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  •                                                                          FILED
    MAY 6, 2021
    In the Office of the Clerk of Court
    WA State Court of Appeals, Division III
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION THREE
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,                         )
    )         No. 36763-1-III
    Respondent,             )
    )
    v.                                    )
    )
    DAVIEL DAVIS CANELA,                         )         UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    )
    Appellant.              )
    SIDDOWAY, A.C.J. — Daviel Canela appeals his convictions for attempted first
    degree murder and second degree unlawful possession of a firearm. Omission of an
    essential element from the charging document requires reversal of the attempted murder
    conviction without prejudice to refiling. We affirm the firearm conviction. We remand
    for resentencing, at which Mr. Canela can raise his objections to terms of his judgment
    and sentence and to his offender score calculation.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    On an afternoon in March 2018, Pasco police officers responded to calls reporting
    that someone had been shot outside an apartment complex. The victim, Victor Garcia,
    had been shot twice, but survived.
    There were four eyewitnesses to the shooting. One was Zeima Cadenas Quintero,
    Mr. Garcia’s girlfriend. She testified at Mr. Canela’s trial that she and Mr. Garcia were
    No. 36763-1-III
    State v. Canela
    outside his sister’s apartment building, moving items from Mr. Garcia’s brother-in-law’s
    van to Ms. Cadenas’s car, when they saw Mr. Canela, who they knew. Mr. Garcia
    walked over to speak with Mr. Canela. Nothing about the men’s actions led Ms. Cadenas
    to believe they were arguing, but there came a point when she heard Mr. Canela say
    something to Mr. Garcia about being “Xed out,” after which she heard the popping of
    gunshots. Report of Proceedings (RP) at 292. She turned to look and saw that Mr.
    Canela had his arm extended and was shooting at Mr. Garcia. Mr. Garcia appeared to
    have been walking away from Mr. Canela. Ms. Cadenas testified that Mr. Garcia had
    been “Xed out” from a gang to which Mr. Canela still belonged, “meaning that [Mr.
    Garcia] is like no longer from it, because they’re saying that he snitched on somebody or
    something.” RP at 301. When the shooting stopped, Ms. Cadenas ran toward Mr. Garcia
    and claims to have seen Mr. Canela smirk and run off.
    Two of the eyewitnesses to the shooting were 16-year-old high school friends,
    U.G. and C.S.,1 who were on their way from a grocery store to one of the teen’s homes.
    U.G. testified in the trial below that the shooter was wearing a gray hoodie and blue
    jeans. He testified that after shooting his victim, the shooter ran away down an alley.
    1
    Initials are used to protect the juvenile witnesses’ identities, consistent with a
    general order of this court. See General Order of Division III, In re the Use of Initials or
    Pseudonyms for Child Victims or Child Witnesses (Wash. Ct. App. June 18, 2012),
    available at https//www.courts.wa.gov/appellate_trial_courts/?fa=atc.genorders &
    div=III.
    2
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    State v. Canela
    Because U.G. saw a black vehicle drive away at that point, he believed the shooter might
    have left in the vehicle. He did not see the shooter get into the car.
    C.S. also testified that the shooter was wearing a gray hoodie and dark blue pants.
    He, too, testified that the shooter ran away through an alley, although he never saw the
    shooter run toward a black car.
    The fourth eyewitness was Josef Stueckle. Mr. Stueckle testified he had been
    visiting a friend at the apartment complex and stepped outside to smoke. He spoke with
    Mr. Canela and Mr. Garcia and offered them cigarettes. When he finished his cigarette,
    he went back to his friend’s apartment to return a borrowed lighter. He returned to the
    sidewalk and began walking toward another friend’s apartment when he heard shouting.
    He heard the words, “Weren’t you Xed out?” RP at 333. He saw Mr. Canela firing shots
    in his direction and that Mr. Garcia had already fallen. After Mr. Canela ran off, Mr.
    Stueckle remained at the scene and spoke to responding officers. They took him to a
    police location where they presented him with a photomontage of six males and asked
    him if he believed any of them was the shooter. Mr. Stueckle identified Mr. Canela.
    Information from witnesses led the responding officers to look for Mr. Canela at
    his friend’s apartment a few blocks away, where they located him. After obtaining a
    search warrant for the apartment, police found a .22 caliber revolver in a leather holster
    that was hidden in the toilet tank. Three other guns were found in a cutout in the wall
    3
    No. 36763-1-III
    State v. Canela
    that was located behind the bathroom mirror. Police located a gray hooded sweatshirt in
    a bedroom located next to the bathroom where the guns were found.
    Mr. Canela was charged with one count of attempted first degree murder and one
    count of unlawful possession of a firearm in the second degree. Although the means of
    attempted first degree murder that the State relied on at trial was premeditated intentional
    murder, its charging document did not identify premeditation as an element of the charge.
    Trial
    In October 2018, Mr. Canela’s trial was continued for a week at the request of the
    defense. When the State then moved to further continue the trial to late November, Mr.
    Canela’s attorney objected, stating, “I’m really ready to go on the current trial date.”
    RP at 5. The court denied the continuance.
    At the outset of trial, defense counsel complained to the trial court that the State’s
    witness list did not provide all the information about its witnesses required by the
    criminal rules. The two juvenile witnesses were identified only by their initials and date
    of birth, and Mr. Stueckle was named but no contact information was provided. The
    prosecutor explained that it was State policy to identify juvenile witnesses by initials and
    birthdate. He explained that Mr. Stueckle was a “street person” who had no permanent
    address and was presently in jail in Kennewick. RP at 95. The prosecutor claimed this
    was the first he had heard that defense counsel was having difficulty contacting the
    witnesses.
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    State v. Canela
    Asked by the trial court if these three witnesses would be called, the prosecutor
    said that they would be, and he expected them to appear.
    Although the trial court expressed frustration at the failure of the defense to raise
    the issue earlier, it ultimately found a discovery violation by the State and strove to
    identify the least-onerous remedy that would allow the defense to be prepared to examine
    the witnesses. Having been informed by the State that the two juveniles were presently at
    the court, were available to be interviewed, and had no prior convictions, it accepted a
    defense proposal that it recess for the remainder of the day, giving the defense an
    opportunity to interview those witnesses. The State informed the court that Mr. Stueckle
    did have a criminal history, which it would provide to defense counsel.
    The next morning, the State informed the court it was in the process of running the
    criminal histories for its remaining civilian witnesses. Defense counsel said he was under
    the impression he would receive the criminal histories the day before. The prosecutor
    explained that his staff’s workday ends at 4:00 p.m., and no one able to run the histories
    was around by the time court concluded the prior day. The trial court directed the
    prosecutor to provide the information and give defense counsel a chance to look at it.
    The court said to defense counsel, “[I]f you don’t have enough time to prepare, you can
    address that with the Court.” RP at 107.
    After the noon recess, defense counsel informed the court that he had been
    “literally dragged in back from lunch” to be offered an unexpected three-minute
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    State v. Canela
    interview with Mr. Stueckle, and only after that was he given Mr. Stueckle’s criminal
    history. RP at 197. He argued that “[a]t this point the only option” was to exclude as
    witnesses Mr. Stueckle and two other civilian witnesses whose criminal histories he had
    not yet received. Id. Recriminations ensued. The prosecutor informed the trial court that
    he could fill the following trial day (a Friday) with officer testimony, meaning that the lay
    witnesses would not be called until the following Monday.
    After hearing from counsel, the trial court said it knew that excluding witnesses
    was an option, but it was instead going to recess for the day so that defense counsel could
    interview Mr. Stueckle. It told the lawyers it would have the jurors return at 9:30 a.m.
    the next morning and expected to see the lawyers at 8:30 a.m.
    Asked the next morning by the trial court if the lawyers were ready to proceed, the
    following exchange occurred:
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: . . . I had the opportunity to speak with
    [Mr. Stueckle]. I was advised by the state that the other two witnesses will
    be available all day today since they’re not going to be called until Monday.
    I can maybe do it during the lunch hour. I can find enough time between
    now and then.
    THE COURT: I appreciate that. Do we have the, criminal histories
    for all those witnesses as well?
    [PROSECUTOR]: Yes, your Honor.
    THE COURT: Excellent. Thank you. I did just see an order for
    transporting Mr. Stueckle. Is he here?
    [PROSECUTOR]: He’s in Kennewick, your Honor, and I expect to
    call him this afternoon. So we’ll get him transported, and he’ll be in
    civilian clothes and be ready to go.
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    No. 36763-1-III
    State v. Canela
    THE COURT: . . . [Addressing defense counsel], you have spoken
    with him?
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Yes, sir.
    THE COURT: So we are going to be ready at 9:30 when the jurors
    are here to take up with testimony?
    [PROSECUTOR]: Yes, your Honor.
    THE COURT: Any issues that we can address between now and
    then?
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: None that I can think of.
    RP at 207-08. Trial proceeded with no further defense objections about witness
    disclosures.
    The State called as trial witnesses four officers, an evidence technician, a
    medically trained firefighter, U.G., C.S., Ms. Cadenas, and Mr. Stueckle. Their
    testimony was consistent with the foregoing statement of the facts. Mr. Canela did not
    call any witnesses.
    Toward the end of the State’s case, the prosecutor informed the trial court outside
    the presence of the jury that Mr. Canela had stipulated to the prior felony that the State
    was required to prove as an element of the firearm possession charge. He stated:
    I have a stipulation, along with a certified copy of the judgment and
    sentence that the stipulation’s based on.
    One of the interesting things about the stipulation, your Honor, is
    that the certified copy does not go to a jury, but a copy of the stipulation
    would.
    RP at 364. The trial court asked defense counsel if he was in agreement and
    defense counsel affirmed that he was. Both counsel had signed the stipulation and
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    No. 36763-1-III
    State v. Canela
    the trial court announced for the record that it was signing the stipulation “and it
    will be provided to the jury.” RP at 365.
    Defense counsel argued in closing that holes in the State’s case were “plentiful,”
    and after his own investigation the State’s case was “almost like looking at Swiss
    cheese.” RP at 407. Among reasons for reasonable doubt he argued to the jury were
    inconsistencies in the witness’s testimony about the shooter’s clothing, discrepancies
    between the gun described by witnesses and the gun offered by the State as the one used
    in the crime, and challenges to the reliability of the four eyewitnesses.
    In rebuttal, the prosecutor defended the reliability of Mr. Stueckle’s identification,
    saying:
    Mr. Stueckle knew the defendant from serving time with him at the
    jail. There was no mistake on his part. He actually looked at a photo
    lineup, picked the defendant out of the photo lineup. The officers knew
    who shot Garcia from almost the point of arriving at the scene, because
    they were told by two eye witnesses.
    RP at 427. The affidavit of probable cause filed at the commencement of Mr. Canela’s
    prosecution stated that Mr. Stueckle knew Mr. Canela from serving time with him at the
    jail. But no evidence on that score had been presented during the trial. The defense did
    not object.
    Immediately following closing arguments and the discharge of the jury for
    deliberations, the prosecutor brought up the need to provide a copy of Mr. Canela’s
    stipulation to a prior felony to the jury for its deliberations. The court clerk admitted she
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    No. 36763-1-III
    State v. Canela
    might not have understood how the trial court expected the stipulation and judgment and
    sentence to be handled. The clerk had marked the judgment and sentence as an exhibit
    that had not been provided to the jury; the stipulation had not been marked as an exhibit
    and also had not been provided to the jury.
    After both parties reaffirmed that the stipulation should be provided to the jury, the
    trial court said, “We’ll mark it at this time and have it admitted. . . . So the stipulation
    will be marked and admitted as exhibit number 50.” RP at 430-31.
    The jury found Mr. Canela guilty as charged.
    Motion for New Trial
    A little over a week after the jury’s verdict, Mr. Canela moved for a new trial after
    defense counsel obtained his own criminal history for Mr. Stueckle and discovered two
    convictions that had not been disclosed by the State. The convictions disclosed by the
    State had included one recent shoplifting (third degree theft) conviction, but the history
    obtained by defense counsel showed three recent convictions for third degree theft. Mr.
    Canela argued that this nondisclosure exacerbated the failures to disclose that he
    complained about at the outset of trial.
    The State responded that any possible prejudice from the initial failures to disclose
    had been avoided by the continuances, disclosures, and interview opportunities ordered
    by the trial court. It argued that the two undisclosed misdemeanor convictions were de
    9
    No. 36763-1-III
    State v. Canela
    minimis in light of the disclosed felonies, and that the evidence against Mr. Canela was
    overwhelming.
    The trial court entertained oral argument of the new trial motion, at the conclusion
    of which it found that the State had committed misconduct by failing to disclose some
    witness contact and criminal history information prior to trial, and that the criminal
    history for Mr. Stueckle provided by the State was incomplete. It nonetheless concluded
    that Mr. Canela failed to show that the disclosure violations materially affected his right
    to a fair trial.
    In thereafter sentencing Mr. Canela, the trial court imposed a $500 victim’s
    assessment that the judgment and sentence provided would be interest-bearing, and the
    judgment and sentence included preprinted language requiring Mr. Canela to pay
    supervision fees as determined by the Department of Corrections. The court had said
    during the sentencing hearing that other than the crime victim’s assessment and
    restitution, it would not impose any further fines, fees, or costs.
    Mr. Canela filed a notice of appeal and obtained an order of indigency on the day
    he was sentenced. In addition to the customary briefing, we granted two motions by Mr.
    Canela to brief additional issues supplementally.
    ANALYSIS
    Between his opening brief and the two supplemental briefs authorized by this
    court, Mr. Canela makes a dozen assignments of error. We first address and agree with
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    No. 36763-1-III
    State v. Canela
    Mr. Canela’s contention that the State’s amended information omitted an essential
    element of attempted first degree murder, which requires us to reverse that conviction
    without prejudice and remand for further proceedings. Because resentencing will be
    required, we do not address Mr. Canela’s challenges to community custody conditions, to
    costs imposed, and to an offender score rendered inaccurate by our Supreme Court’s
    recent decision in State v. Blake, 
    197 Wn.2d 170
    , 
    481 P.3d 521
     (2021). Many of these
    challenges are conceded by the State. All can be raised at resentencing.
    Of the assignments of error that remain, a second category relates to the trial
    court’s refusal to grant relief for the State’s discovery violations: it failed to exclude Mr.
    Stueckle as a witness and denied Mr. Canela’s motion for a new trial.
    A third category of error alleged is that the prosecutor’s reference to facts outside
    the record during closing argument deprived Mr. Canela of his right to a fair trial.
    A fourth category challenges Mr. Canela’s firearm possession conviction for
    failure to give a unanimity instruction and because there was insufficient evidence of a
    predicate conviction.2
    We address the assigned errors in the order stated.
    2
    Mr. Canela also argues cumulative error, but we find no error affecting the
    conviction that we affirm.
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    No. 36763-1-III
    State v. Canela
    I.     FOR REASONS EXPLAINED IN STATE v. MURRY, ATTEMPTED MURDER WAS
    INADEQUATELY CHARGED
    “[A] charging document is constitutionally adequate only if all essential elements
    of a crime, statutory and nonstatutory, are included in the document so as to apprise the
    accused of the charges against him or her and to allow the defendant to prepare a
    defense.” State v. Vangerpen, 
    125 Wn.2d 782
    , 787, 
    888 P.2d 1177
     (1995) (Vangerpen
    II). Following Vangerpen II, premeditation is an element of first degree attempted
    murder for charging purposes, if not for conviction purposes. State v. Murry, 13 Wn.
    App. 2d 542, 552, 
    465 P.3d 330
     (citing Vangerpen II, 
    125 Wn.2d at 791
    ), review denied,
    
    196 Wn.2d 1018
    , 
    474 P.3d 1050
     (2020).
    The first decision in Vangerpen’s appeal of his attempted first degree murder
    conviction was the decision of this court. State v. Vangerpen, 
    71 Wn. App. 94
    , 
    856 P.2d 1106
     (1993) (Vangerpen I) aff’d, 
    125 Wn.2d 782
    . The State intended to charge
    Vangerpen with attempted first degree (premediated) murder. Instead, the information
    stated in relevant part that the defendant
    in King County, Washington on or about July 20, 1991, with intent to cause
    the death of another person did attempt to cause the death of Officer D.C.
    Nielsen, a human being;
    Contrary to RCW 9A.32.030(1)(a) and 9A.28.020.
    
    Id.
     at 97 n.1. At trial, and after the State rested its case, defense counsel moved to
    dismiss the charge, arguing that the information “failed to set out an essential
    element of attempted first degree murder, specifically premeditation.” Id. at 97.
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    No. 36763-1-III
    State v. Canela
    The trial court denied the motion and allowed the State to amend its information to
    include the element.
    On appeal, this court held that allowing amendment after the State rested its case
    was prejudicial per se under State v. Pelkey, 
    109 Wn.2d 484
    , 491, 
    745 P.2d 854
     (1987).
    Vangerpen I, 
    71 Wn. App. at 102
    . This court next considered whether the charging
    document had been sufficient without the challenged amendment, and held that it had not
    been. 
    Id.
     This court reasoned first that “the initial document charging appellant failed to
    include the necessary element of premeditation.” Id. at 103. It also observed that “as
    drafted, the information failed to charge attempted first degree murder. Instead it charged
    attempted second degree murder. It is fundamental that an accused cannot be tried for a
    crime which has not been charged.” Id.
    Review was granted by our Supreme Court, which affirmed, explaining:
    In the present case, the information alleged only intent to cause
    death, not premeditation. Therefore, the State failed to charge one of the
    statutory elements of first degree murder and instead included only the
    mental element required for second degree murder.
    Vangerpen II, 
    125 Wn.2d at 791
    .
    In Murry, this court acknowledged that premeditation is actually not an element of
    attempted first degree murder. But it followed the Supreme Court’s binding decision in
    Vangerpen II, reasoning that the Supreme Court held that premeditation was an element
    for charging purposes. Murray, 13 Wn. App. 2d at 552. In addition to observing that we
    13
    No. 36763-1-III
    State v. Canela
    are bound by the high court’s decision, this court observed that the statutory manner or
    means of committing a crime is an element that the State must include in the information,
    
    id.
     at 551 (citing State v. Bray, 
    52 Wn. App. 30
    , 34, 
    756 P.2d 1332
     (1988)), and of the
    three means of committing first degree murder, only premeditated murder can be the
    basis for an attempted first degree murder charge. Id. at 553. Unless premeditated
    murder is identified as the basis for the charge, “a charging document that merely states
    that a defendant took a substantial step toward committing first degree murder would fail
    to state a crime.” Id.
    The State attempts to distinguish Murry by arguing that in Mr. Canela’s case, the
    amended information, liberally construed, includes the element of premeditation in some
    form. Since the sufficiency of the amended information is being challenged for the first
    time on appeal, “we construe the document liberally and will find it sufficient if the
    necessary elements appear in any form, or by fair construction may be found, on the
    documents face.” State v. Satterthwaite, 
    186 Wn. App. 359
    , 362, 
    344 P.3d 738
     (2015).
    The State argues that the amended information in this case is sufficient because it
    specifies the act of shooting the victim with a handgun as the substantial step toward the
    crime of first degree murder.3 It argues that the language implies a premeditated intent to
    3
    The amended information included the following language in count I:
    14
    No. 36763-1-III
    State v. Canela
    kill. The act of shooting the victim with a handgun could be used to support any of the
    three ways of committing murder in the first degree, however. See RCW
    9A.32.030(1)(a)-(c).
    The necessary elements cannot be found on the charging document’s face. The
    remedy for this error is dismissal of the attempted first degree murder charge without
    prejudice. Vangerpen II, 
    125 Wn.2d at 792-93
    .
    II.    THE DISCOVERY VIOLATIONS ALLEGED BY MR. CANELA DID NOT DEPRIVE HIM OF
    A FAIR TRIAL
    The evidence that Mr. Canela was the shooter was inextricably related to the
    State’s proof that he unlawfully possessed a firearm, so the remaining assignments of
    error bear on his conviction on the second count. The second category of error he alleges
    is that the discovery violations should have resulted in the exclusion of Mr. Stueckle as a
    witness at trial and later, an order granting his motion for a new trial.
    ATTEMPTED MURDER IN THE FIRST DEGREE, [RCW
    9A.28.020(1) AND 9A.32.030(1)(a)], A CLASS A FELONY, maximum
    penalty of LIFE and $50,000, committed as follows:
    That the said Daviel Davis Canela in the County of Franklin, State of
    Washington, on or about March 29, 2018, then and there, with intent to
    commit the crime of Murder in the First Degree, committed an act, to wit:
    did shoot the victim with a handgun, which was a substantial step toward
    that crime.
    Clerk’s Papers at 9.
    15
    No. 36763-1-III
    State v. Canela
    Witness exclusion
    CrR 4.7 addresses the parties’ obligations to provide discovery in criminal cases.
    The prosecutor is required to disclose to the defendant, no later than the omnibus hearing,
    the names and addresses of persons whom the prosecuting attorney intends to call as
    witnesses at trial. CrR 4.7(a)(1)(i). The prosecutor is further required to disclose “any
    record of prior criminal convictions known to the prosecuting attorney . . . of persons
    whom the prosecuting attorney intends to call as witnesses at the hearing or trial.” CrR
    4.7(a)(1)(vi). The obligations are continuing, requiring supplementation. CrR 4.7(h)(2).
    “The purpose behind discovery disclosure is to protect against surprise that might
    prejudice the defense.” State v. Barry, 
    184 Wn. App. 790
    , 796, 
    339 P.3d 200
     (2014). “If
    the State fails to disclose such evidence or comply with a discovery order, a defendant’s
    constitutional right to a fair trial may be violated; as a remedy, a trial court can grant a
    continuance, dismiss the action, or enter another appropriate order.” Id.; see also CrR
    4.7(h)(7)(i). Discovery violation sanctions are reviewed for an abuse of discretion. State
    v. Bradfield, 
    29 Wn. App. 679
    , 682, 
    630 P.2d 494
     (1981). “Discretion is abused when a
    trial court’s decision is exercised on untenable grounds or for untenable reasons or is
    manifestly unreasonable.” Barry, 184 Wn. App. at 797.
    “Exclusion or suppression of evidence is an extraordinary remedy and should be
    applied narrowly.” State v. Hutchinson, 
    135 Wn.2d 863
    , 882, 
    959 P.2d 1061
     (1998),
    abrogated on other grounds by State v. Jackson, 
    195 Wn.2d 841
    , 
    467 P.3d 97
     (2020)).
    16
    No. 36763-1-III
    State v. Canela
    “The appropriate remedy for late disclosure is typically to continue the trial to give the
    other party time to interview the new witness and prepare to address his or her
    testimony.” State v. Kipp, 
    171 Wn. App. 14
    , 31, 
    286 P.3d 68
     (2012), rev’d on other
    grounds by 
    179 Wn.2d 718
    , 
    317 P.3d 1029
     (2014).
    When deciding whether exclusion is an appropriate sanction, courts should
    consider “(1) the effectiveness of less severe sanctions; (2) the impact of witness
    preclusion on the evidence at trial and the outcome of the case; (3) the extent to which
    [the other party] will be surprised or prejudiced by the witness’s testimony; and (4)
    whether the violation was willful or in bad faith.” Hutchinson, 
    135 Wn.2d at
    882-83
    (citing Taylor v. Illinois, 
    484 U.S. 400
    , 415 n.19, 
    108 S. Ct. 646
    , 
    98 L. Ed. 2d 798
    (1988)).
    Mr. Canela fails to demonstrate that by refusing to exclude witnesses, the trial
    court abused its discretion. His trial lawyer’s actions belie prejudice. A week before
    trial, Mr. Canela’s lawyer objected to the State’s request for a continuance, saying, “I’m
    really ready to go on the current trial date.” RP at 5. No mention was made of problems
    contacting witnesses as a result of inadequate disclosure. He first raised the issue of
    missing witness list information the day the jury was to be sworn in. Trial was recessed
    for the afternoon so that he could interview U.G. and C.S., who had no criminal histories.
    Defense counsel never informed the trial court that any further accommodation was
    needed with respect to U.G. or C.S.
    17
    No. 36763-1-III
    State v. Canela
    Mr. Stueckle’s criminal history was provided following a noon recess, and trial
    was again recessed for the afternoon so that defense counsel could interview him. Asked
    the next morning (a Friday) if the parties were ready to proceed, Mr. Canela’s lawyer
    answered that he had spoken to Mr. Stueckle and would be able to find time to interview
    two remaining civilian witnesses the State planned to call on Monday. Asked if there
    were “[a]ny issues that we can address between now and [when the jury arrives],”
    defense counsel answered, “None that I can think of.” RP at 208.
    In arguing this issue on appeal, Mr. Canela provides a thorough description of the
    applicable law. He cites authority that disclosure that comes as late as it did here,
    concerning key witnesses such as eyewitnesses, can result in surprise, prejudice, and
    constitute evidence of bad faith. But he fails to demonstrate that any of the late
    disclosures in this case actually did result in surprise or prejudice or demonstrate bad
    faith. No abuse of discretion resulting in a violation of his right to a fair trial is shown.
    Denial of new trial motion
    After discovering postverdict that Mr. Stueckle had two undisclosed third degree
    theft convictions, Mr. Canela moved for a new trial under CrR 7.5(a)(5) and (a)(8). For
    the first time on appeal, he argues that the nondisclosures constituted a Brady4 violation.
    A violation of Brady presents an issue of constitutional dimension, and because the
    4
    Brady v. Maryland, 
    373 U.S. 83
    , 
    83 S. Ct. 1194
    , 
    10 L. Ed. 2d 215
     (1963).
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    No. 36763-1-III
    State v. Canela
    constitutional challenge turns on the same facts Mr. Canela argued as a basis for his new
    trial motion, the alleged error is manifest and eligible for review. RAP 2.5(a)(3).
    No Brady violation is shown
    “In Brady, the United States Supreme Court articulated the government’s
    disclosure obligations in a criminal prosecution: ‘the suppression by the prosecution of
    evidence favorable to an accused upon request violates due process where the evidence is
    material either to guilt or to punishment, irrespective of the good faith or bad faith of the
    prosecution.’” State v. Mullen, 
    171 Wn.2d 881
    , 894, 
    259 P.3d 158
     (2011) (quoting
    Brady, 
    373 U.S. at 87
    ). Brady and its progeny require the State to disclose material
    exculpatory and impeachment evidence favorable to a criminal defendant. 
    Id.
     “The
    government must disclose not only the evidence possessed by prosecutors but evidence
    possessed by law enforcement as well.” 
    Id.
    To establish a Brady violation, a defendant must demonstrate the existence of each
    of three elements: “‘[(1)] the evidence at issue must be favorable to the accused, either
    because it is exculpatory, or impeaching; [(2)] that evidence must have been suppressed
    by the State, either willfully or inadvertently; and [(3)] prejudice must have ensued.’” Id.
    at 895 (alterations in original) (quoting Strickler v. Greene, 
    527 U.S. 263
    , 281-82, 
    119 S. Ct. 1936
    , 
    144 L. Ed. 2d 286
     (1999)). With respect to the third element, prejudice, the
    terms “material” and “prejudicial” are used interchangeably. Id. at 897. “[E]vidence is
    material only if there is a reasonable probability that, had the evidence been disclosed to
    19
    No. 36763-1-III
    State v. Canela
    the defense, the result of the proceeding would have been different. A ‘reasonable
    probability’ is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.” United
    States v. Bagley, 
    473 U.S. 667
    , 682, 
    105 S. Ct. 3375
    , 
    87 L. Ed. 2d 481
     (1985) (Blackmun,
    J., plurality portion).
    The State does not dispute that the undisclosed convictions were favorable
    evidence, because impeaching. It does argue on appeal that Mr. Canela fails to show that
    the two undisclosed convictions were in the prosecutor’s database on the day that the
    prosecutor’s office ran and provided Mr. Canela’s history. But the State never made that
    argument in the trial court, despite having ample time to determine whether the
    undisclosed convictions were too recent to be available. Five months passed between the
    filing of Mr. Canela’s new trial motion and the filing of the State’s response. The State’s
    only argument in the trial court was that the two additional convictions were immaterial
    and their nondisclosure was not prejudicial.
    Mr. Canela’s failure to demonstrate the element of prejudice is dispositive. The
    trial court found that Mr. Canela had not demonstrated prejudice, noting that Mr.
    Stueckle was not the only witness to the shooting and Mr. Canela was able to impeach
    Mr. Stueckle with other criminal history.
    Mr. Stueckle was impeached with evidence that he had engaged in quite a bit of
    criminal conduct during his young life. The State began Mr. Stueckle’s direct
    examination by establishing his age (24) and having him acknowledge his prior
    20
    No. 36763-1-III
    State v. Canela
    convictions: a 2017 conviction in Cowlitz County for second degree theft, a Franklin
    County conviction for second degree burglary, and one other conviction out of Benton
    County, that year, for shoplifting. Defense counsel covered the same ground at the
    beginning of his cross-examination, coupled with questioning about whether the evidence
    Mr. Stueckle would provide was truthful:
    Q.      . . . Now you had indicated that you had [a] recent conviction
    for shoplifting in Benton County? Is that right?
    A.   Yes.
    Q.    You also indicated that you have felony theft and felony
    burglary charges?
    A.   Correct.
    Q.     So the, one of the issues and one of the things that’s raised
    here and before you were able to testify is the importance of telling the
    truth. So are you able to convince me that you are telling us the truth here?
    [PROSECUTOR]: Your Honor, I’m going to object to the form of
    the question. It’s improper.
    THE COURT:      I’ll sustain the objection.
    Q.      The information you’re about to give us today, is that
    information to the best of your knowledge the truth?
    A.     Before the Judge I swore. I was placed in custody for theft,
    not for dishonesty. Thank you.
    RP at 338-39.
    In general, impeachment evidence may be considered material where the witness
    in question supplied the only evidence linking the defendant to the crime or to an
    essential element of the offense. United States v. Avellino, 
    136 F.3d 249
    , 256-57 (2d Cir.
    1998). “This is especially true where the undisclosed matter would have provided the
    21
    No. 36763-1-III
    State v. Canela
    only significant basis for impeachment.” 
    Id. at 257
    . But “where the undisclosed
    evidence merely furnishes an additional basis on which to challenge a witness whose
    credibility has already been shown to be questionable or who is subject to extensive
    attack by reason of other evidence, the undisclosed evidence may be cumulative, and
    hence not material.” 
    Id.
    For example, in Avellino, the government failed to produce evidence that its chief
    informant had perjured himself as a government witness at other trials. 
    Id. at 258
    .
    However, the appeals court determined the evidence was not material under Brady in
    light of the fact that the informant could be impeached with terms of his favorable plea
    agreement and other acknowledged illegal activities. 
    Id.
    Here, Mr. Stueckle was not the only eyewitness to the shooting, nor was he the
    only eyewitness who could identify Mr. Canela. And he was impeached with other
    convictions for more serious crimes. Because the evidence he provided was cumulative
    and the undisclosed impeachment material was cumulative, prejudice is not shown.
    The failure to demonstrate prejudice is fatal to Mr. Canela’s rule-based
    argument as well
    Mr. Canela argues that “[e]ven setting Brady aside,” he was entitled to a new trial
    because he demonstrated a substantial likelihood that the prosecutor’s conduct affected
    the jury’s verdict. Br. of Appellant at 29. He likens the circumstances of his case to that
    in State v. Copeland, 
    89 Wn. App. 492
    , 
    949 P.2d 458
     (1998).
    22
    No. 36763-1-III
    State v. Canela
    “[P]rosecutorial misconduct requires a new trial only if the misconduct was
    prejudicial.” State v. Stith, 
    71 Wn. App. 14
    , 19, 
    856 P.2d 415
     (1993). “Misconduct is
    prejudicial when, in context, there is ‘a substantial likelihood’ that the misconduct
    ‘affected the jury’s verdict.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting State v. Barrow, 
    60 Wn. App. 869
    , 876, 
    809 P.2d 209
     (1991)). The defendant bears the burden of proving (1) there was prosecutorial
    misconduct, and (2) prejudice. 
    Id.
     The determination of whether prosecutorial
    misconduct requires a new trial is within the discretion of the trial judge, and will not be
    disturbed absent an abuse of discretion. State v. Carr, 
    13 Wn. App. 704
    , 709, 
    537 P.2d 844
     (1975) (“[W]hether prosecutorial misconduct prejudiced a defendant’s right to a fair
    trial can be assessed most effectively by the trial judge.”).
    In Copeland, the defendant, having been convicted of second degree rape, made a
    rule-based motion for a new trial after discovering that the prosecution failed to disclose
    that the complaining witness had a prior felony conviction for theft. 89 Wn. App. at 495-
    96. The trial court denied the motion. Id. at 495. The appeals court reversed, reasoning
    the State’s failure to disclose the prior conviction was prejudicial because “[t]he State’s
    case essentially relied upon the credibility of the complaining witness.” Id. at 498.
    Because the State’s case depended on one witness and the undisclosed impeachment
    evidence could have created reasonable doubt, the court concluded “[t]here is a
    substantial likelihood that the [prosecution’s] misconduct affected the jury’s verdict.” Id.
    23
    No. 36763-1-III
    State v. Canela
    As previously explained, however, Mr. Canela does not demonstrate a substantial
    likelihood that the nondisclosure affected the jury’s verdict because Mr. Stueckle’s
    evidence was cumulative and he could be impeached with other convictions. For the
    same reasons a Brady violation is not shown, Mr. Canela does not demonstrate that the
    trial court abused its discretion in denying his rule-based motion for a new trial.
    III.   THE PROSECUTOR’S UNOBJECTED-TO REFERENCE TO FACTS OUTSIDE THE RECORD
    IS NOT SHOWN TO BE PROSECUTORIAL MISCONDUCT
    Mr. Canela next contends that the prosecutor’s reference to Mr. Stueckle knowing
    Mr. Canela from time spent in jail together was prosecutorial misconduct that deprived
    him of his right to a fair trial.
    To repeat, a defendant alleging prosecutorial misconduct must demonstrate both
    improper conduct and prejudice. State v. Stenson, 
    132 Wn.2d 668
    , 718, 
    940 P.2d 1239
    (1997). It is improper for a prosecutor to advance argument on the basis of facts
    unsupported by the record. State v. Reeder, 
    46 Wn.2d 888
    , 892, 
    285 P.2d 884
     (1955).
    When the misconduct alleged is improper argument, the defendant’s failure to
    object constitutes waiver of the error unless the comment is “so flagrant and ill-
    intentioned that it causes an enduring and resulting prejudice that could not have been
    neutralized by a curative instruction to the jury.” State v. Brown, 
    132 Wn.2d 529
    , 561,
    
    940 P.2d 546
     (1997). “‘Reversal is not required if the error could have been obviated by
    24
    No. 36763-1-III
    State v. Canela
    a curative instruction which the defense did not request.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting State v. Russell,
    
    125 Wn.2d 24
    , 85, 
    882 P.2d 747
     (1994)).
    This case is unlike Reeder, in which our Supreme Court held that the prosecutor’s
    “flagrantly made” statement of matters outside the record could not have been cured by
    an objection and instruction because the “harm had already been done.” 
    46 Wn.2d at 893
    . In Reeder, the prosecutor repeatedly argued that the defendant had threatened his
    wife with a gun despite testimony that was only to the contrary. The prosecutor also
    referred to a divorce complaint that he knew the court had excluded as evidence.
    Here there was a factual basis for the prosecutor’s statement and there was no
    order excluding it. But the evidence had not been presented to the jury. There is a reason
    the introductory and closing pattern jury instructions tell jurors (and told jurors in this
    case) that the lawyers’ statements are not evidence, and that they must disregard any
    remark, statement or argument that is not supported by evidence in the form of testimony
    and exhibits. See RP at 109, 390. The lawyers will always be aware of more information
    than comes in as evidence. When making a closing argument, a lawyer might not have
    clearly in mind exactly what the jury has heard. Mr. Canela’s lawyer makes a valid point
    that information about a defendant being in jail would ordinarily be a red flag to a lawyer
    that the information had not been presented to the jury. But here the jury was informed
    that Mr. Canela had a prior felony conviction.
    25
    No. 36763-1-III
    State v. Canela
    We are unpersuaded that the prosecutor’s improper reference to a fact outside the
    record could not have been cured by an instruction that Mr. Canela did not request. The
    objection was waived.
    IV.    THE RECORD IS CLEAR AS TO THE ONLY FIREARM POSSESSION AT ISSUE AT THE
    TRIAL, AND AMBIGUITY ABOUT WHETHER THE STIPULATION TO A PREDICATE
    FELONY WAS DELIVERED TO THE JURY DOES NOT REQUIRE REVERSAL
    Finally, Mr. Canela makes two assignments of error specific to his firearm
    possession conviction. For the first time on appeal, he argues that a unanimity instruction
    was required. He also posits that Mr. Canela’s stipulation to a predicate felony was not
    presented to the jury.
    Unanimity instruction
    Mr. Canela argues that the jury heard evidence that could have supported his
    unlawful possession of five different guns: the gun that witnesses testified was used in the
    shooting, the holstered gun found in the toilet of the apartment in which Mr. Canela was
    found, and the three additional guns discovered in a cutout behind a bathroom mirror in
    that apartment. He argues that without a unanimity instruction, the jury’s guilty verdict
    might have been the result of different jurors finding that he possessed different guns.
    Washington criminal defendants have a right to a unanimous jury verdict. State v.
    Ortega-Martinez, 
    124 Wn.2d 702
    , 707, 
    881 P.2d 231
     (1994). “When the State presents
    evidence of several acts that could form the basis of one charged count, the State must
    either tell the jury which act to rely on in its deliberations or the court must instruct the
    26
    No. 36763-1-III
    State v. Canela
    jury to agree on a specific criminal act.” State v. Beasley, 
    126 Wn. App. 670
    , 682, 
    109 P.3d 849
     (2005). Failure to do one or the other violates the defendant’s state
    constitutional right to a unanimous jury verdict and his United States constitutional right
    to a jury trial. 
    Id.
     Because jury unanimity is a constitutional right, the alleged failure to
    give a unanimity instruction may be raised for the first time on appeal. State v. Holland,
    
    77 Wn. App. 420
    , 424, 
    891 P.2d 49
     (1995).
    Mr. Canela’s argument presents a novel flaw: this is not a case in which “the State
    . . . present[ed] evidence of numerous separate criminal acts,” thereby requiring an
    election or instruction to assure jury unanimity. State v. Petrich, 
    101 Wn.2d 566
    , 570,
    
    683 P.2d 173
     (1984) (emphasis added), abrogated on other grounds by State v. Kitchen,
    
    110 Wn.2d 403
    , 
    756 P.2d 105
     (1988). There was evidence of the existence of more than
    one gun, but no suggestion by the State that Mr. Canela possessed any gun other than the
    one he used to shoot Mr. Garcia.
    The State presented no evidence or argument that Mr. Canela, while found in the
    apartment where three firearms were secreted in a cutout behind a bathroom mirror,
    possessed or constructively possessed any of those guns. The State did nothing to
    suggest that those guns were evidence of “separate criminal acts” by Mr. Canela.
    Similarly, the State’s theory that the holstered gun found in the toilet was the gun
    used by Mr. Canela in the shooting does not make this a multiple acts case. By analogy,
    a prosecution for robbing a victim of her jewels is not a multiple acts case simply because
    27
    No. 36763-1-III
    State v. Canela
    a juror could speculate that the jewels found under the defendant’s bed—which the State
    contends were the stolen jewels—were actually a different set of stolen jewels. A
    prosecution for a murder seen by eyewitnesses is not a multiple acts case because a juror
    could speculate that the body found in the trunk of the defendant’s car—which the State
    contends is the murder victim—was actually a second victim.
    The State makes the alternative argument that if this was a multiple acts case, then
    it made an election. We believe the problem with Mr. Canela’s assignment of error is
    more basic. But we agree that if this can be characterized as a multiple acts case, the
    State’s clear election was that the gun unlawfully possessed was the gun used in the
    shooting. “An election by the State need not be formally pleaded or incorporated into the
    information. As long as the election clearly identifies the particular acts on which
    charges are based, verbally telling the jury of the election during closing argument is
    sufficient.” State v. Lee, 12 Wn. App. 2d 378, 393, 
    460 P.3d 701
     (2020) (citation
    omitted).
    In his opening statement, the prosecutor told the jury that one of the charges
    against Mr. Canela was second degree unlawful possession of a firearm. It told jurors
    there were three elements to the crime and said, of the first, “One, on or about March
    29th, 2018 the defendant knowingly had a firearm in his possession or control. That’s the
    gun he actually used to shoot Victor Garcia.” RP at 116.
    28
    No. 36763-1-III
    State v. Canela
    The same identification of the firearm possession charged was made in closing
    argument:
    [THE STATE:] The second offense was unlawful possession of a
    firearm in the second degree. I think it goes without saying the defendant
    had a gun that day when he pointed it at Victor Garcia and shot him a
    number of times. It was witnessed by the two high school boys from Delta
    [High School], who just happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong
    time, but they without a doubt saw the individual shooting Victor Garcia
    with a handgun. And that the possession or control of the firearm occurred
    here in the State of Washington.
    RP at 400 (emphasis added).
    This is not a multiple acts case; if it were, there was a clear election.
    Insufficient proof
    The last assignment of error we address is one that Mr. Canela characterizes as a
    challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence to prove that Mr. Canela had been previously
    convicted of a felony. He contends the evidence was insufficient to prove the element
    because “[t]he record . . . contains no written stipulation,” and, while it contains the trial
    court’s statement that a stipulation signed by counsel and the court was marked and
    admitted as exhibit 50, “there is no exhibit 50” on the clerk’s exhibit list. Br. of
    Appellant at 42-43. The State responds that Mr. Canela’s assignment of error is solely
    based on the fact that “the exhibit has been lost by the clerk,” which is not a sufficiency
    challenge. Resp’t’s Br. at 35.
    29
    No. 36763-1-III
    State v. Canela
    The parties’ dispute on this score presents a factual question: was the stipulation
    that was signed and admitted and intended to be delivered to the jury for its deliberations
    in fact delivered to the jury for its deliberations? If the answer to that question was
    controlling, we would order a reference hearing. But the answer is not controlling,
    because the record is clear that Mr. Canela stipulated to the element and his lawyer
    admitted the element in closing argument.
    “Under both the federal and state constitutions, due process requires that the State
    prove every element of a crime beyond a reasonable doubt.” State v. Johnson, 
    188 Wn.2d 742
    , 750, 
    399 P.3d 507
     (2017). The court’s instruction 15 provided the jury with
    the elements of the firearm possession charge:
    To convict the defendant of the crime of unlawful possession of a
    firearm in the second degree, each of the following elements of the crime
    must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt:
    (1) That on or about March 29, 2018 the defendant knowingly had a
    firearm in his possession or control;
    (2) That the defendant had previously been convicted of a felony;
    and
    (3) That the possession or control of the firearm occurred in the State
    of Washington.
    Clerk’s Papers at 29.
    This court held in State v. Wolf, 
    134 Wn. App. 196
    , 
    139 P.3d 414
     (2006), that
    when a defendant stipulates to an element of a crime, he waives the requirement that the
    State prove it beyond a reasonable doubt. Similar to this case, the defendant in Wolf was
    30
    No. 36763-1-III
    State v. Canela
    charged as a felon in possession of a firearm and stipulated to the element that he had
    been convicted of a prior serious offense. Id. at 197. By agreement of the parties, the
    stipulation was presented to the jury in the form of a jury instruction. Id. at 202. The
    stipulation was also mentioned by both parties in closing argument. Id. It was not
    offered into evidence or read to the jury, however. Following conviction, the defendant
    appealed, arguing that because the State did not offer the stipulation into evidence, the
    jury lacked sufficient evidence to convict. Id. at 198.
    This court rejected the argument in strong terms, finding that stipulations are
    waivers. It suggested it might have been enough for the trial court to “simply tell the jury
    that certain matters have been the subject of a stipulation and that the jury need not
    concern itself with such matters.” Id. at 203. Satisfied that the trial court’s instruction
    and the lawyers’ references to the stipulation in argument were sufficient, if not more
    than sufficient, this court concluded, “It is unnecessary for us to decide how a trial court
    should deal with a written stipulation of the parties.” Id. It did observe that the Ninth
    Circuit has held that a concession made during closing argument is a binding judicial
    admission that may not be challenged on appeal. Id. at 202 n.26 (citing United States v.
    Bentson, 
    947 F.2d 1353
    , 1355 (9th Cir. 1991)).
    The Ninth Circuit has held that where there is nothing in the record to support the
    jury’s awareness of a stipulation to an essential element, there may be insufficient
    evidence to sustain a conviction. In United States v. James, 
    987 F.2d 648
    , 650 (9th Cir.
    31
    No. 36763-1-III
    State v. Canela
    1993), a case distinguished by this court in Wolf, 134 Wn. App. at 202,5 the Ninth Circuit
    reversed the defendant’s conviction where the record showed the parties agreed to a
    stipulation on an aspect of the case, but the stipulation was neither mentioned to the jury
    nor placed in the record. The majority of the panel reasoned that a stipulation that had
    not been “read to the jury or received into evidence” could not sustain a conviction,
    because there was “no fact in evidence that the jury could take as proved.” Id. at 650-51.
    It observed that even a correct, signed stipulation would not be enough if not presented to
    the jury in some manner, rejecting the argument that a defendant’s stipulation outside the
    trial record meant that “no further evidence on the issue was required.” Id. at 650.
    The majority also rejected the dissent’s suggestion that there was a judicial
    admission by James in the form of his lawyer’s agreement with the State, in opening
    statement and closing argument, that the case presented only “one issue.” Id. at 651. The
    majority could not conclude “that by focusing his comments on the issue of
    identification, [the defendant’s] counsel thereby admitted all other elements of the
    crime.” Id. It distinguished its earlier decision in Bentson, which had presented a
    sufficient admission. Id. In Bentson—a prosecution for willful failure to file federal tax
    returns—the appeals court held that defense counsel’s statement in closing argument,
    5
    The Wolf court questioned whether James holds that the jury must be presented
    with the stipulation in some manner. 134 Wn. App. at 201. It surmised that the
    fundamental reason for James’s reversal of the conviction was because the stipulation,
    not being a part of the record, could not be reviewed. Id.
    32
    No. 36763-1-III
    State v. Canela
    “The defense is not suggesting that returns were filed for 1983 and ’84, which the
    Internal Revenue Service would consider to be valid documents,” was a binding
    concession that Bentson did not file valid returns for those years. 
    947 F.2d at 1356
    .
    Assuming without deciding that Mr. Canela’s undisputed stipulation is not
    enough, and there must be something in the trial record from which the jury could
    consider the stipulated fact proved, we hold that the record is sufficient. In closing
    arguments, the prosecutor addressed the stipulated element first. He spoke to the jurors
    about the elements of the firearm possession charge and told them that the second
    element—the element “that the defendant had previously been convicted of a felony”—
    was stipulated:
    The second element is going to be stipulated to by the defendant.
    And you will actually have a document to go back into the jury room. The
    second element was that the defendant had previously been convicted of a
    felony. He’s admitting that through the stipulation, a written stipulation.
    RP at 403.
    Defense counsel implicitly agreed. In his own closing, he told jurors:
    The attempted murder charge and the gun possession charge that is before
    you here have certain elements. You recall we talked about those elements.
    It’s like chicken soup. Chicken. Broth. Water. You need those elements
    in order to meet the requisite crime. And like the Judge said, you’re going
    to get some instructions.
    RP at 420. He first talked to the jurors about the elements of the attempted murder
    charge. He then turned to the elements for the gun possession charge, and stated:
    33
    No. 36763-1-III
    State v. Canela
    Previous felony conviction when it comes to the gun possession
    charge. But that’s not enough. There has to be a possession of a gun. So
    this particular gun came back with no prints. They arrested him. There
    was no gun on him. So where’s the possession?
    RP at 421 (emphasis added).
    Because Mr. Canela stipulated that he had a prior felony, he waived the
    requirement that the State prove that element. His lawyer’s admission in his closing
    argument is sufficient to satisfy any requirement that the jury have a basis in the record
    for considering the element proved. No reference hearing is required.
    We reverse the conviction for attempted first degree murder without prejudice,
    affirm the conviction for second degree unlawful possession of a firearm, and remand for
    resentencing and other proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    A majority of the panel has determined this opinion will not be printed in the
    Washington Appellate Reports, but it will be filed for public record pursuant to RCW
    2.06.040.
    _____________________________
    Siddoway, A.C.J.
    WE CONCUR:
    _____________________________                     _____________________________
    Staab, J.                                         Fearing, J.
    34