State of Washington v. Lars Ronson Braun ( 2022 )


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  •                                                                       FILED
    JANUARY 20, 2022
    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. 37635-4-III
    Respondent,              )
    )
    v.                                     )
    )         PUBLISHED OPINION
    LARS RONSON BRAUN,                         )
    )
    Appellant.               )
    FEARING, J. —
    [S]ex traffickers select victims who demonstrate vulnerabilities
    including homelessness, substance abuse, mental health issues, and
    histories of physical, emotional or sexual abuse. A typical trafficker
    recruits victims by telling them that he loves them, promising them a better
    life, providing them with shelter and drugs, and lying to them about the
    nature of the job. . . .
    ....
    [T]raffickers control their victims through physical violence, sexual
    violence, psychological violence and grooming. Traffickers . . . groom
    victims with promises and compliments, but escalate to physical abuse,
    sexual assault and death threats. . . . They also use psychological violence
    such as tearing a victim down, telling them they are worthless, socially
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    isolating them, and controlling them financially and by taking advantage of
    a victim’s drug dependency. . . .
    . . . [V]ictims often stay with their traffickers—or leave and then
    return—because they believe they have nowhere to go; that there is no one
    else out there for them, and no other options for them; they feel ashamed
    and guilty and stigmatized, thinking that they will not be accepted
    elsewhere. They are also afraid that if they leave, the trafficker will find
    them and harm them even more egregiously. Testimony of Sharon Cooper
    in United States v. Carson, 
    870 F.3d 584
    , 590-91 (7th Cir. 2017).
    Appellant Lars Braun appeals his convictions, after a bench trial, for human
    trafficking and promoting prostitution. Because overwhelming evidence supports a
    finding that his victim engaged in prostitution as the result of Braun’s manipulation, we
    affirm both convictions. We also reject Braun’s contention that the trial court violated
    the appearance of fairness doctrine. We grant Braun’s request for resentencing because
    his offender score included an earlier conviction for possessing a controlled substance.
    FACTS
    This prosecution arises from the protracted, poignant, and pungent relationship
    between Jane, a pseudonym, and defendant Lars Braun. The four-year relationship
    included the performance of commercial sex acts by Jane at the request of and for the
    financial gain and sexual enchantment of Braun. Braun’s appeal raises two principal
    questions. First, whether Braun, within the meaning of Washington’s human trafficking
    statute, meted “force, coercion, and fraud” against Jane in fulfillment of one of the
    crime’s elements? Second, whether the force, coercion, or fraud led to Jane’s prostitution
    in satisfaction of a second element of the crime? Answers to these questions require a
    2
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    review of the language, intent, and history behind RCW 9A.40.100, Washington’s
    trafficking statute. Answering the questions also necessitates a narrative of Jane’s
    remarkable story, remarkable not because of its singularity or the tragedy portrayed, but
    because of the prevalence, yet hidden nature, of trafficking and because of the story’s
    example of how enduring manipulation can implausibly result in the control of another’s
    choices, even to the extent of causing the other to perform repulsive and dangerous acts.
    We glean the appeal’s facts primarily from the trial testimony of Jane.
    In February 2013, Jane began communicating with Lars Braun over the Internet.
    Jane was then twenty years old and married. Braun was in his early fifties and also
    married. Jane lived in Spokane, and Braun resided in Ellensburg. Jane knew Braun’s
    children through her husband, who socialized with the offspring. In her cyber messages
    to Braun, Jane expressed concern about the methamphetamine intake of Braun’s children.
    At the same time that Jane started writing Lars Braun, she commenced abusing
    alcohol. Her alcohol use created conflict in her marriage.
    By April 2013, Lars Braun and Jane spoke by phone or communicated by e-mail
    several hours each day. Jane then admired Braun, thirty years her senior, as an
    accomplished intellectual. Jane divulged her marital problems. Braun advised Jane to
    engage in an extramarital affair. Braun expounded that he rekindled his marriage by
    cheating on his wife.
    3
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    In May 2013, Lars Braun and Jane met in person for the first time and interlocked
    in sexual intercourse inside a Spokane hotel room. By May, Braun and his wife were in
    the process of divorce. Jane’s husband soon learned of her carnal encounter with Braun.
    Jane moved from her husband’s residence and divorced him.
    Lars Braun learned that Jane informed Jane’s husband of her sexual encounter
    with Braun. Braun grew furious at Jane because he worried that his wife would also hear
    about the affair and use the tryst against him in their divorce and child custody
    proceeding. Braun ceased speaking with Jane.
    Alas, the lack of interaction between Lars Braun and Jane did not last. While Jane
    engaged in intimate relations with another man, Braun called Jane. We do not know why
    Jane answered the phone during this rendezvous. During the telephone conversation,
    Braun screamed at Jane. Braun called Jane “‘slut.’” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 253-54.
    Braun’s clamorous comments suggested to Jane that Braun was jealous. The remarks
    also surprised Jane since Braun had told her he would never speak to her again. Braun
    and Jane spoke by phone on additional occasions in the coming days. Jane repeatedly
    apologized to Braun. Braun revealed to Jane she was his girlfriend.
    In early June 2013, Lars Braun invited Jane to visit him in Ellensburg, where he
    would introduce her to his friends. Jane lacked a driver’s license. So Jane traveled by
    bus from Spokane to Ellensburg to visit Braun. Braun there purchased alcohol for Jane,
    since she remained below the legal age to purchase liquor. Contrary to his telephonic
    4
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    enticement, Braun hid his relationship with Jane from acquaintances in Ellensburg. He
    directed her to use the name “Kathy,” and he informed others that “Kathy” and he shared
    a platonic relationship. During the first visit, Braun permitted his seven-year-old son to
    enter the bed where Braun and Jane lay naked.
    Dave, with an unidentified last name, also resided with Lars Braun in Ellensburg
    during Jane’s early June 2013 visit. On one day, Braun left Jane alone with Dave, during
    which time Dave groped Jane. Dave informed Jane that Braun gave him permission to
    have sex with her. Jane refused Dave’s overture, after which Dave punched the bed by
    her head. Jane ran into and locked herself in a bathroom, while crying hysterically. She
    texted Braun and requested he return to the residence. Braun declined. When Braun
    eventually returned home, he accused Jane of promoting the advance by Dave because of
    her suggestible behavior. Braun questioned Jane about why she did not strike Dave if she
    objected to the housemate’s advance. Braun volunteered that she encouraged Dave to
    engage in sex with her. He instructed Jane not to report Dave to law enforcement. Braun
    then initiated sex with Jane. Jane never saw Dave again.
    At 2:00 a.m. on the morning following Dave’s sexual assault, Lars Braun
    deposited Jane at the Ellensburg Greyhound station. Braun instructed Jane to leave
    Ellensburg. Jane lacked money for a ticket, but, after pleading with the bus driver,
    received a free ride to Spokane.
    5
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    After her return to Spokane, Jane resided with her parents, but encountered
    difficulty living with them. Weeks later, Lars Braun offered to allow Jane to live with
    him in Ellensburg. Late in June 2013, Jane returned to Ellensburg to reside with Braun
    indefinitely. She brought her personal belongings. In the coming months, Braun
    supplied Jane alcohol, and Jane furnished Braun sex. Jane continued to employ the
    pseudonym “Kathy” among Braun’s acquaintances.
    In September 2013, Jane’s monogamous sexual relationship with Lars Braun
    shifted. Braun expressed his desire for group sex for his impending birthday. Although
    Jane did not relish the idea of a quartet of bodies, she employed the Internet to procure an
    encounter with an Ephrata couple. When Braun and Jane met the couple in their Ephrata
    home, Braun pressured the woman to kiss and touch Jane. The woman refused because
    of Jane’s reticence. Though the foursome engaged in sexual intercourse, the lethargic
    Braun quickly retired to the couch to nap, while Jane continued the assignation with the
    couple. Braun later told Jane that she failed him because of the unattractive, advancing
    age of the Ephrata woman. Braun’s comment saddened Jane.
    Lars Braun told Jane that the two should locate other individuals for group sex.
    Jane unearthed another man-woman couple in Yakima. When the four met, Braun
    directed Jane to please the man as he watched. During Jane’s encounter with the male,
    the male grew aggressive. Despite Jane’s plea to Braun to stay near, he retreated with the
    woman to another room.
    6
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    Jane and Lars Braun resided together in Ellensburg from late June to December
    2013. During these six months, Jane relied exclusively on Braun for food and housing.
    Braun supplied Jane mass quantities of alcohol.
    In December 2013, Lars Braun moved to Florida without Jane. Braun never told
    Jane the reason behind his cross-continent move. Jane returned to Spokane and resided
    again with her parents. She missed and wanted the company of beau Braun. While in
    Florida, Braun lived with his friend, Susan.
    Lars Braun and Jane distantly communicated. Braun began entreating Jane to post
    Craigslist ads for sex. Jane minded Braun. An individual responded to one
    advertisement and offered Jane money for sex. The offer of remuneration surprised Jane.
    She asked Braun why somebody would pay money for sex. In response, Braun
    encouraged Jane to market sexual performances for money. Braun spoke of dating a
    prostitute as tantalizing. Braun explained to Jane that he would grow bored of their
    exclusive relationship without the thrill of other sexual partners. He threatened to cheat
    on Jane if she refused to prostitute herself. Conversely, he promised to love and cherish
    till death do them part if Jane fulfilled his directions to sell her body.
    Jane engaged in sexual liaisons with those that responded to her Craigslist postings
    while Lars Braun resided in Florida. Lars Braun reviewed the communications between
    Jane and the respondents to her ads. He instructed her on the amount to charge, which
    sum depended on the duration of the encounter and the nature of the act.
    7
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    On one occasion, Lars Braun requested that Jane send him a photograph of herself
    with the john. She humored Braun and sent a photograph. On reviewing the photo, an
    incensed Braun scolded Jane for appearing to enjoy the assignation.
    In June 2014, Jane moved to Florida to reside with Lars Braun, who continued to
    live with Susan. Susan soon expelled Braun and Jane from her home. For two weeks,
    the reunified couple then slept on an air mattress in the outdoors. Braun found
    employment at a pizzeria. His boss allowed him and, by extension, Jane to sleep at the
    restaurant. In the daytime when Braun did not work, the couple resigned to Braun’s
    vehicle. After residing in the pizza parlor, Lars Braun and Jane next dwelled in a motel.
    While reunited in Florida, Lars Braun and Jane abused alcohol, which led to
    verbal and physical altercations. After fighting with Braun on one occasion, Jane exited
    Braun’s vehicle and walked along the street. Police approached her. A woozy Jane
    yelled at the officers. The officers detained and placed Jane in jail.
    On Jane’s release from jail, Lars Braun drove her to their motel room. Jane retired
    to bed early that evening because of her employment with Panera Bread. Her job duties
    required her to open the bakery at 6:00 a.m. Braun shook Jane and called her vulgar
    names as she attempted to slumber. Braun grabbed Jane by her throat and straddled her.
    As Braun strangled Jane, he slowly released phlegm and spittle into her face. Jane
    constantly feared Braun thereafter.
    8
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    On a later occasion, while Jane and Lars Braun argued, Braun smashed Jane’s
    Nintendo Wii against the ground. The destruction of the game console aggravated Jane
    because she lacked possessions and her parents had purchased the Wii for her as a gift.
    An altercation ensued, and law enforcement arrived to expel the couple from the motel
    room. Braun pestered Jane while she packed her belongings, which act prompted officers
    to threaten him with jail. Police ordered Braun to stay away from Jane’s place of work.
    On an ensuing day, Braun disregarded the officers’ demand, and approached Jane as she
    left work. Jane entered Braun’s vehicle.
    While in Florida, Jane twice left the company of Lars Braun. She returned each
    time.
    We move forward to the summer of 2015. During this time while still in Florida,
    Lars Braun directed Jane to dress in provocative outfits. The duo would cruise bars,
    where Braun asked men to come home with him and have sex with Jane. Braun did not
    always ask men for money in exchange for the sex. Sometimes, he procured men to
    fornicate with Jane for his enjoyment and thrill.
    Jane insists that she never wished to prostitute herself. She believed that her
    sexual performances with others, however, gratified Braun. During trial, when asked by
    the prosecution whether she believed she had a choice to participate in the sexual
    encounters, Jane responded: No. When asked about her claimed lack of choice, Jane
    testified:
    9
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    Because he—he would still—he would—I was gonna suffer. He
    would—he would ignore me or still try to have sex with women and do that
    and have me do things I didn’t want to do. And I never ever felt like I
    could say no. And if I did say no, it certainly wasn’t going to be respected.
    RP at 219.
    When sober, Jane told Lars Braun that she could not engage in sex for money.
    Braun then provided Jane with alcohol and drugs. He also promised to participate in the
    sexual acts with her. While under the influence, Jane relented to engage in sex with
    others. Braun rarely kept his promise to partake in the encounter, however. The money
    gained from Jane’s tricks paid for motel stays, fuel, and alcohol.
    For awhile in Florida, Lars Braun and Jane stayed in separate motel rooms because
    of their constant quarreling. On one evening, Braun, wanting to reconcile with Jane,
    invited her to join in sex. Jane agreed. While the two entangled in bed, Braun announced
    his intent to anally penetrate Jane. Jane told him: no. Nevertheless, Braun forcibly
    penetrated Jane’s anus. The anal incursion hurt Jane. She could not sit for days.
    One evening while the couple rested in a Florida motel, Jane informed Lars Braun
    that she intended to call her parents on the phone provided in their room, since her cell
    phone had broke. Jane intended to notify her parents about Braun’s forcing her to engage
    in sexual relations with strangers for money. Braun reacted by yanking the phone cord
    from the wall. Jane threw the phone at Braun, who bled from the impact with the phone.
    Jane worried that Braun would hit her in retaliation. Braun told Jane that, if he was a
    10
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    woman and she a man, law enforcement would jail her for her conduct. Braun’s
    comment horrified a repentant Jane, who employed the motel lobby phone to report, to
    law enforcement, her assaultive behavior. She also struck herself in the nose with a beer
    bottle to demonstrate her remorse to Braun. Law enforcement journeyed to the motel and
    arrested Jane.
    Jane spent thirty-five days in a Florida jail for assaulting Lars Braun. The Florida
    court issued a no-contact order between the two. Apparently Florida correction officers
    do not enforce no-contact orders, because Braun twice visited Jane in jail. During his
    first visit, Braun voiced his everlasting love for Jane. On the second visit, Braun reported
    that he had been fired from his job and intended to return to Ellensburg. Braun asked
    Jane to call him on her release from jail.
    While Jane resided in the Florida jail, motel staff disposed of all of Jane’s
    belongings, including her Social Security card. Jane believes that Lars Braun permitted
    staff to discard her possessions. After release from incarceration in July 2015, Jane
    journeyed by bus to Spokane. Once in Spokane, Jane’s father drove her to Ellensburg to
    reunite with Braun.
    In Ellensburg, Lars Braun and Jane stayed at Bill Thulean’s house. Both Braun
    and Jane then engaged in recreational methamphetamine use. Before leaving Florida,
    Jane had used methamphetamine one time. While in Ellensburg, Jane became addicted to
    the controlled substance. She relied on Braun for access to the drug. Braun’s primary
    11
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    source was Thulean. Braun commenced referring to Jane as his “‘little meth whore’”
    and parceled drugs to her if she performed sexually the way he desired. Report of
    Proceedings (RP) at 146.
    Jane’s prostitution continued in Ellensburg. Lars Braun dictated the clothes and
    makeup that Jane wore. Braun allowed Jane to keep twenty percent of the money she
    earned from her services, but he otherwise kept all money earned. Jane’s twenty percent
    of the earnings went to refining her looks and to the couple’s food. Braun did not permit
    Jane her own phone.
    Lars Braun dictated the length and nature of Jane’s profitable sexual activity. If
    the rendezvous lasted longer than planned, Braun punished Jane by arranging encounters
    with violent johns. Braun would also shun Jane for days. If Braun concluded that Jane
    immensely enjoyed herself during a sexual encounter, he punished her by insisting on sex
    with him immediately thereafter.
    Lars Braun sometimes arranged sexual encounters for Jane without her knowledge
    and while using her e-mail account. He misrepresented to Jane the nature of upcoming
    trysts. Braun numbered the quantity of men with which Jane engaged in sex.
    Periodically he announced the number to Jane, while labeling her a slut.
    Lars Braun nicknamed Jane “whore,” “‘little floozy,’” and “‘F toy.’” RP at 243.
    Acquaintances referred to Jane as Braun’s property, and men asked, in Braun’s presence,
    for the services of Jane. Braun informed Jane that, despite his loving devotion to her, no
    12
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    one else liked her because of her loose morals. Braun constantly told Jane that the only
    valuable asset she had to offer to the world was her body. Braun isolated Jane from her
    parents by insulting them to Jane and telling Jane that her parents were ashamed of her
    and wanted no contact with her. Braun insisted that Jane owed him sexual favors because
    of her infidelities with others.
    Lars Braun once drew a bucket with sperm dripping into the bucket. He labeled
    the bucket with Jane’s name. A confused Jane interpreted the amount of detail Braun
    drew on the dribbling picture as displaying his love for her.
    Sometimes Lars Braun promised Jane that, if she did as requested, he would marry
    her, have children with her, and start a family with her. Jane desperately wanted
    children. Once Lars Braun told Jane that, if she obeyed him one last time, he would not
    demand she perform sex with another again. The promise went unfulfilled.
    Although many of Jane’s sexual encounters resulted in monetary payment, Lars
    Braun arranged for some rendezvouses in exchange for other goods and services. Lars
    Braun allowed Bill Thulean to periodically fornicate with Jane in exchange for drugs.
    Jane once trysted with a man in exchange for access to a shower. On another occasion,
    Jane netted the duo a temporary residence with her services. At the arrangement of
    Braun, Jane performed sexual turns for cigarettes and chewing tobacco. Jane once had
    intercourse with a man in exchange for Braun engaging in sex with the man’s wife.
    13
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    When Braun’s boss caught him stealing money from work, the employer agreed to
    withhold calling law enforcement in exchange for sexual encounters with Jane.
    Some of Jane’s sexual encounters caused her pain or placed her in danger. When
    Jane complained to Lars Braun about pain from her sexual assignations, Braun would
    disburse unlawful medication to her. Jane then felt loved.
    Lars Braun once left Jane alone with a man after Braun tied her to a tree. She
    pleaded with Braun not to leave her alone with the john. Braun left for over an hour
    while he ate at a Taco Bell restaurant. On another occasion, while Jane lay roped to a
    bed, a man sharpened his machete nearby. When performing fellatio on another man,
    Jane could not breathe. The man’s penis penetrated her throat far enough to choke her.
    She vomited and needed to swallow her vomit while the male continued to orally
    penetrate her, despite her striving for his attention by tapping him from behind and
    kicking her legs.
    Lars Braun and Jane referred to one john as “‘Trailer Guy.’” CP at 266. When
    angry at Jane, Braun occasionally threatened her: “‘trailer guy is coming over.’” CP at
    266. On one day, Braun scheduled a tryst at a hotel with Trailer Guy because of Braun’s
    ire, and Jane begged Braun not to leave the hotel room because of the john’s past history
    of injuring her during their sexual encounters. Braun, nonetheless, left Jane alone in the
    hotel with the man he knew would hurt her physically.
    14
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    On another occasion, Lars Braun arranged for Jane to trick with two men in
    exchange for money to repair his truck. The second man in the pair violently held Jane’s
    head down on the bed. Braun knocked on the door. Jane yelled that she was unable to
    stand. The man ejaculated and then released Jane’s head. A bleeding Jane rose and
    opened the room door for Braun. She went to the bathroom to rest from the pain. Braun
    followed her, stroked Jane, and announced: “‘Now it’s my turn.’” CP at 267. When
    Jane did not respond, he angrily shouted: “You just F’d them and you’re not even paying
    any attention to me.” CP at 267. She told him that she was hurt and bleeding. She knew,
    however, that, despite her pain, pleasing Braun held first priority.
    On one occasion, Jane bled because of a rough rendezvous. Lars Braun, despite
    Jane’s moans from pain, insisted on sex with her that night.
    At an unidentified time, Lars Braun posted an advertisement on Craigslist for sex
    with two women, Jane and another girlfriend of Braun’s. The advertisement included the
    acronym BOGO, shorthand for “buy one, get one free.” Jane met the other woman and
    concluded that the lady suffered a developmental disability. She expressed to Bill
    Thulean and Braun the unseemliness of employing the lady as a prostitute. The two men
    laughed in response. Jane and the second woman engaged in two encounters with men.
    Braun also directed the lady to have oral sex with him and with Thulean.
    15
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    Jane sometimes engaged in consensual bondage with Lars Braun. He liked to tie
    her to a bed. Braun permitted others to enter the room and see Jane naked while
    restrained.
    During the pair’s stay in Ellensburg in 2015-16, police occasionally responded to
    vociferous arguments between the two. Because of the presence of illegal drugs in her
    vicinity, Jane each time refrained from informing law enforcement about Braun’s use and
    abuse of her. One day in Ellensburg, during a time when the couple occupied Lars
    Braun’s truck, Braun slapped Jane in the face. The police responded. Jane asked law
    enforcement not to press charges, however, because all of her belongings were in Braun’s
    truck. She feared Braun’s fury if authorities arrested him.
    In 2017, Lars Braun and Jane resided in Braun’s deceased father’s Colfax home.
    Braun continued to require Jane to perform sex with others, but now without pay. The
    sex was only for Braun’s titillation. Jane still believed she had no choice but to obey.
    During the time in Colfax, Jane, as the result of methamphetamine use, became
    emaciated and decreased to ninety pounds. She suffered from bladder infections and
    thinning hair. Jane experienced multiple seizures. Nonetheless, Braun continued to
    schedule sexual encounters for her. The couple received methamphetamine in return.
    Braun occasionally tied Jane to the bed and allowed his son to view her naked.
    While the couple resided in Colfax, the pair traveled to the Carolinas, where Lars
    Braun bought a vehicle with money he inherited from his father. While returning to
    16
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    Washington State with the purchased vehicle and at an unidentified location, Jane
    suffered a seizure. A nurse, who fortuitously witnessed the convulsion, directed Jane to
    the nearest hospital. While in the hospital lobby, Jane experienced another seizure, was
    taken to the emergency room, and admitted to neurology for observation. After twenty-
    four hours, Jane departed from the hospital, and the couple resumed their journey to
    Colfax.
    During the same transcontinental journey, while the two traveled in New Mexico,
    Lars Braun received news that his son had died by drug overdose. The couple spent that
    night in a New Mexico hotel and planned to travel directly to Pullman the next day for
    the son’s funeral. When Jane awoke the next morning, she felt dizzy, could barely walk,
    and noticed a large blister on her face. Jane ambulated to the hotel lobby, asked the desk
    clerk to summon an ambulance, and collapsed on a sofa.
    New Mexico emergency responders ferried Jane to a hospital, where medical staff
    performed blood work. A physician diagnosed Jane with Stevens-Johnson syndrome as a
    result of an adverse reaction to her phenytoin, an anti-seizure medication. Stevens-
    Johnson causes the epidermis, the top layer of the skin, to die and separate. The hospital
    airlifted Jane to an Amarillo hospital for further treatment. Lars Braun continued on his
    journey to Pullman for his son’s funeral. Four days later, Jane’s parents retrieved her
    from the Texas panhandle and drove her to their Spokane home. Her mother described
    her appearance as that of a cancer patient.
    17
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    On the day Jane returned to Spokane in April 2017, Lars Braun texted her to
    inform her that he had garnered methamphetamine. The two rendezvoused in a Spokane
    hotel room and got high on meth. While together in the room, Jane spied Braun’s phone
    and discovered that he had been messaging a prostitute in Lewiston. Jane then
    recognized her triviality to Braun. With this epiphany, she ended her relationship with
    Braun and returned to her parents.
    Lars Braun continued to text Jane. He pleaded with her to visit him and promised
    he would dispense drugs for her. Braun offered to return Jane’s personal possessions to
    her if she met him alone. Jane refused. Lars Braun e-mailed Jane’s mother. He wrote
    the mother that, if Jane reported his conduct to anyone, Braun would inform others of the
    number of people with whom Jane had sex. Braun continued with unreturned texting to
    Jane until January 2018.
    PROCEDURE
    The State of Washington charged Lars Braun with one count each of human
    trafficking in the first degree, human trafficking in the second degree, promoting
    prostitution in the first degree, and promoting prostitution in the second degree. The
    State alleged that Braun committed all four crimes in Washington State between July 1,
    2015 and April 3, 2017.
    Before trial, Lars Braun moved the trial court to dismiss the human trafficking
    charges. Braun argued that his alleged conduct did not amount to “force, fraud, or
    18
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    coercion,” an element of Washington’s trafficking statute, RCW 9A.40.100. The trial
    court denied the motion. In so ruling, the court reasoned that the word “force,” as used in
    the statute, included nonphysical force such as psychological pressure. Because RCW
    9A.40.100 does not define “force,” the trial court used one of many dictionary definitions
    to demarcate the word.
    On June 8, 2020, during a pretrial hearing, the superior court judge commented
    about Washington Governor Jay Inslee’s order regarding COVID-19 and the judge’s own
    mask-wearing policy:
    You’re [everyone in the courtroom] certainly free to wear a mask in
    here. It’s encouraged by everyone. Please feel free. . . . But, I’m not
    requiring people, adults, to comply with the governor’s order [regarding
    masks]. It’s not my order to enforce. But certainly it’s a good idea.
    RP at 50.
    During the June 8, 2020 hearing, the State requested a continuance due to Seattle
    Police Detective Maurice Washington’s unavailability to testify as a human trafficking
    expert. The State informed the court that, due to riots in Seattle over George Floyd’s
    death, Detective Washington’s superior ordered him to remain in Seattle. The trial court
    denied the State’s continuance motion. In return, Lars Braun motioned for the exclusion
    of Detective Maurice Washington’s testimony rather than allow him to testify remotely.
    The court reserved ruling on Braun’s motion.
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    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    On June 11, 2020, the case proceeded to a bench trial. At the beginning of trial,
    the trial judge reiterated his mask-wearing policy:
    My policy is—is slightly different than the governor’s policy. He
    wants everybody who is indoors to be wearing a mask at all times. Even if
    they sit—sit—social distancing guidelines are met. I think adults are able
    to run their own lives, and so I’ll let you folks decide how you want to do it
    in this courtroom.
    RP at 67-68. Near the close of the State’s case, the trial court granted Lars Braun’s
    motion to exclude Detective Maurice Washington’s testimony regarding human
    trafficking.
    Before the superior court judge delivered its decision, the judge commented about
    COVID-19 and pandemics in general:
    The world is sure in a turmoil right now, isn’t it, with Covid 19, with
    the unprecedented—which means “never happened before”, not in my
    lifetime, not in the lifetime of my parents, who are both in their 80s.
    Theoretically it happened in 1917. We don’t really know because the
    newspaper reporting back then was somewhat sensationalized; similar to
    today. But the public health response to that crises was different than this
    one.
    RP at 295. The judge also mentioned the uncertainty in the judicial system resulting from
    the perceived pandemic:
    Thus, we’re here. We’re doing a bench trial for Mr. Braun, not a
    jury trial, because we can’t say when we’re going to have the ability to
    bring jurors back into the courthouse. Wow. Wow. Uncertainty.
    RP at 295-96.
    Before rendering his decision, the superior court judge discussed the George Floyd
    20
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    protests occurring in Seattle in May and June 2020:
    This very case is touched by another crisis that’s going on 105 miles
    away from here in Seattle right this very minute. There are blocks, city
    blocks, of the largest city in our State that are in anarchy. There is no law.
    Or perhaps there is law; it’s just not the law that we’re used to. Someone
    else is deciding what the law is, not us, as the people who are in charge of
    the sovereign. So I’ve been thinking about these things a lot.
    RP at 296 (emphasis added).
    We have blocks and blocks in Seattle this second that caused it so a
    witness couldn’t come to this trial because he’s a police officer and he can’t
    break away to come down here. He’s got—he’s got to police the City of
    Seattle. And it’s not going so well if people don’t want to follow the rules.
    Psychologically. Right?
    RP at 298 (emphasis added).
    The trial court found Lars Braun guilty of human trafficking in the first degree and
    promoting prostitution in the first degree. The court acquitted Braun of the lesser
    included offenses of second degree human trafficking and second degree promoting
    prostitution.
    The trial court entered findings of fact and conclusions of law. Lars Braun does
    not challenge any of the findings of fact. We, however, quote those findings relevant to
    his use of force and his forceful conducting causing Jane to engage in sexual acts. We
    repeat some of the facts already written, because Braun contends the findings do not
    support his conviction for human trafficking and we wish to meet this contention.
    The trial court found, among other facts:
    21
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    While living in Florida, they [Lars Braun and Jane] . . . had several
    violent encounters where the police were called.
    CP at 257.
    While drunk, the defendant . . . on one occasion strangulat[ed] her
    [Jane]. While he was on top of her, he spit phlegm and saliva all over her
    face, refusing to let her sleep, every time she would fall asleep, he would
    wake her up, even though she had to be at work at 4 a.m. the next morning.
    From this point forward, she was afraid of the defendant, this event always
    in her mind.
    CP at 258.
    On one occasion in Florida when they were fighting, he told her he
    was going to “F- [her] in the ass right [there].” She told him no, but he
    forced his penis into her anus with no lubrication. It was very painful for
    her.
    CP at 258.
    One time in their truck in Ellensburg, he slapped her in the [face]. . .
    CP at 261.
    There were particular Johns who were mean to the victim, including
    one they referred to as “Trailer Guy,” and he [Lars Braun] would threaten
    her [Jane] by saying, “trailer guy is coming over,” if he [Braun] were [sic]
    angry at her. One time he arranged a meeting at a hotel with trailer guy
    because he was angry at [Jane] and she begged him not to leave the hotel
    room because she was afraid of how Trailer Guy always physically hurt her
    during their sexual encounters, but the defendant left her alone in the hotel
    with the man he knew would hurt her physically.
    CP at 266.
    The victim [Jane] became completely dependent upon the defendant.
    All of her belongings were in his truck. She did not drive. She felt that she
    had no choice but to do what he wanted, if she did not, she would suffer.
    22
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    CP at 266.
    On one occasion, the defendant arranged for [Jane] to have sex with
    two men in exchange for money to repair their truck. The defendant told
    her she had to do it because they needed the money to fix the truck. In the
    encounter with the second man, he was very violent to the victim and took
    longer than the defendant was expecting. The man was holding [Jane]’s
    head down on the bed and the defendant came and knocked on the door
    [Jane] yelled to him that she could not get up. The man ejaculated and the
    victim got up and let the defendant into the room. She went to the
    bathroom where she was bleeding from the violent encounter with the
    [j]ohn and in a lot of pain. The defendant started touching her saying,
    “Now it’s my turn.” When she did not respond, he got angry and yelled at
    her, “You just F’d them and you’re not even paying any attention to me.”
    She told him that she was hurt and bleeding. She knew that no matter how
    she felt, making the defendant happy was the priority.
    CP at 267.
    In December 2016 or January 2017, the defendant’s father died, and
    [Jane] and the defendant moved into his deceased father’s house in Colfax,
    Washington. At that point, the defendant continued to advertise and offer
    [Jane] to people for sexual encounters, but no longer got money; he just
    forced her to have sex with strangers for his own sexual gratification. Even
    without them paying him, [Jane] believed that she had no choice but to
    continue to have sex with the strangers who the defendant arranged for and
    did not believe she could say no.
    CP at 268 (emphasis added).
    The defendant would tie [Jane] to the bed in the bedroom in Colfax.
    CP at 269. The court also found:
    While they were together, [Jane] believed she could not live without
    him based on what he had told her while they were together and the way he
    controlled her money, drugs, food, and every facet of her life. She believed
    that no one else would be willing or able to love her because he repeatedly
    23
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    to her that. . . . In their time together, her self-esteem was completely
    destroyed.
    CP at 270.
    The trial court entered the following conclusions of law, some which could also be
    read in part as findings of fact or mixed findings and conclusions:
    3.1. On or between July 1, 2015 and April 3[, 2017], the defendant:
    3.1.1. Recruited, transported, transferred, provided, obtained,
    bought, purchased, and/or received by any means [Jane] knowing or in
    reckless disregard of the fact that force, fraud, or coercion would be used to
    cause [Jane] to engage in a sexually explicit act or a commercial sex act; or
    3.1.1.1. The force/fraud/coercion used to include [sic] during the
    hundreds of incidents of sexual trafficking described by [JANE].
    3.1.1.2. The defendant lied to her about what was happening
    3.1.1.3. The defendant bound the victim (tied her up)
    3.1.1.4. The defendant exerted psychological force through
    controlling her money, her phone, her drugs, her transportation, and her
    self-esteem
    3.1.1.5. There was evidence of physical coercion as well, including
    an immediate threat to physically harm, restrain, or destroy [Jane]’s
    property.
    3.1.1.6. The victim was afraid of the defendant
    ....
    3.2. That these acts or this venture involved sexual motivation
    3.2.1. The evidence supporting sexual motivation include that the
    first time she had sex with someone she did not want to was for his
    Birthday in September of 2013 and from that point forward he would tell
    her consistently and repeatedly that it turned him on for her to be with a
    promiscuous woman, and
    3.3. That any of these acts occurred in the State of Washington.
    ....
    4.1. That on or between July 1, 2015—April 3, 2017, the defendant
    4.1.1. [K]nowingly advanced prostitution by compelling [Jane] by
    threat or force to engage in prostitution or profited from prostitution
    resulting from such threat or such force, and
    4.1.2. That any of these acts occurred in the State of Washington.
    24
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    CP at 272-74 (emphasis added).
    The trial court conducted a sentencing hearing. The court calculated Lars Braun’s
    offender score at one, based on his sole prior conviction for possession of a controlled
    substance. The trial court imposed a sentence of 184 months’ confinement for the human
    trafficking charge and 34 months’ confinement for the promoting of prostitution charge.
    The sentences run concurrently.
    LAW AND ANALYSIS
    On appeal, Lars Braun challenges his two convictions and his sentence. Braun
    also objects to the superior court judge’s comments about COVID-19 and the George
    Floyd protests. He asserts that those remarks establish an appearance of unfairness that
    infected the entire proceeding. We begin by analyzing the validity of Braun’s conviction
    for human trafficking.
    Human Trafficking
    Lars Braun contends on appeal that the trial court misconstrued the word “force”
    used within RCW 9A.40.100, Washington’s human trafficking statute, and the
    misinterpretation renders the statute void for vagueness. In turn, Braun maintains that,
    under a correct construction of RCW 9A.40.100, the State presented insufficient evidence
    to show he violated the statute’s element of the imposition of force, coercion, or fraud
    against the victim. Finally, according to Braun, the State failed to prove that any force,
    25
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    fraud, or coercion caused Jane to engage in commercial sex. Before deciphering RCW
    9A.40.100 and before deciding whether sufficient evidence supports a conviction, we
    outline the legislative history and the purpose behind RCW 9A.40.100.
    Trafficking in persons is a modern form of slavery whose victims are commonly
    women and children. 
    22 U.S.C. § 7101
    (b)(1); Aragon v. Che Ku, 
    277 F. Supp. 3d 1055
    ,
    1069 (D. Minn. 2017). Human trafficking is the fastest growing worldwide criminal
    industry. HUMAN TRAFFICKING: A GLOBAL ENTERPRISE, freeforlifeintl.org. 31
    July 2020; Louise Shelley, Human Trafficking: A Global Perspective, Cambridge
    University Press, p. 2. ISBN 978-1-139-48977-5 (2010).
    Even before the Washington Legislature created the state crime of human
    trafficking, the United States Congress, in 2000, as part of its authority to implement the
    Thirteenth Amendment’s prohibition of slavery, enacted the federal Trafficking Victims
    Protection Act, 
    18 U.S.C. § 1591
    , the analog to Washington State’s RCW 9A.40.100.
    The federal statute and numerous state statutes in general penalize one who recruits,
    harbors, transports, transfers, provides, obtains, or receives by any means another person
    knowing that force, fraud, or coercion will be used to cause the person to engage in
    forced labor, involuntary servitude, a sexually explicit act, or a commercial sex act. 
    101 A.L.R.6th 417
    , 417 (2015). The federal statute reads:
    Whoever knowingly . . . in or affecting interstate or foreign
    commerce, . . . recruits, entices, harbors, transports, provides, obtains,
    advertises, maintains, patronizes, or solicits by any means a person . . .
    26
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    knowing, or . . . in reckless disregard of the fact, that means of force,
    threats of force, fraud, . . . or any combination of such means will be used
    to cause the person to engage in a commercial sex act, . . . shall be punished
    as provided in subsection (b).
    
    18 U.S.C. § 1591
    (a).
    In 2003, Washington became the first state to outlaw human trafficking.
    BRIAN BONLENDER, WASHINGTON DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, STATEWIDE
    COORDINATING COMMITTEE ON SEX TRAFFICKING: REPORT ON COMMITTEE ACTIVITIES
    AND PLAN TO ADDRESS SEX TRAFFICKING (RCW 43.280.091),           at 4 (2014)
    [https://perma.cc/LR7X-QSZH]; LAWS OF 2003, ch. 267, § 1 (codified as RCW
    9A.40.100). The Washington Legislature adopted the measure in response to the murders
    of Filipina mail-order brides in Washington State in the 1990s and early 2000s. Velma
    Veloria, The Road to H.B. 1175: Making Human Trafficking a Crime in the State of
    Washington, My Story, 9 SEATTLE J. FOR SOC. JUST. 549, 549-50 (2011).
    Washington’s statute, RCW 9A.40.100, declares, in relevant part:
    (1) A person is guilty of trafficking in the first degree when:
    (a) Such person:
    (i) Recruits, harbors, transports, transfers, provides, obtains, buys,
    purchases, or receives by any means another person knowing, or in reckless
    disregard of the fact, (A) that force, fraud, or coercion as defined in RCW
    9A.36.070 will be used to cause the person to engage in:
    (I) Forced labor;
    ....
    (III) A sexually explicit act; or
    (IV) A commercial sex act, or . . .
    27
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    (ii) Benefits financially or by receiving anything of value from
    participation in a venture that has engaged in acts set forth in (a)(i) of this
    subsection; and
    (b) The acts or venture set forth in (a) of this subsection:
    ....
    (ii) Involve a finding of sexual motivation under RCW 9.94A.835;
    (Emphasis added.) The state act differs from the federal statute in that the state statute
    omits the phrase “threats of force” from the list of methods employed to cause the victim
    to engage in commercial sex.
    For purposes of the prosecution of Lars Braun, the State sought to prove the
    crime’s elements of: (1) recruiting, harboring, transporting, transferring, obtaining,
    purchasing, or retaining Jane, (2) while knowing or in reckless disregard of the fact (3)
    that force, fraud, or coercion will be used (4) to cause Jane to engage in (5) forced labor,
    a sexually explicit act, or a commercial sex act, (6) with a sexual or financial motivation.
    This appeal focuses on the second, third, and fourth elements. Braun does not challenge
    the sufficiency of evidence for purposes of elements one, five, and six.
    Force
    The third element of RCW 9A.40.100 identifies three nouns, “force,” “fraud,” and
    “coercion,” as the cause for commercial sex. Despite the inclusion of the terms “fraud”
    and “coercion” in the statute, the parties focus on the word “force” and dispute the
    meaning of the term in the context of the statute.
    28
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    The trial court found that Lars Braun engaged in all three activities: force, fraud,
    and coercion. Thus, we might limit our review to whether the evidence supported a
    conviction for the use of “fraud” or “coercion” and thereby avoid defining “force,” while
    circumventing a weighing of the sufficiency of evidence for a finding of force.
    Following a bench trial, when a single offense can be committed by alternative methods,
    a conviction may rest on proof that the crime was committed by any one of the means
    charged. State v. Munson, 
    120 Wn. App. 103
    , 107, 
    83 P.3d 1057
     (2004). We proceed to
    assess the sufficiency of evidence of force anyway for two reasons. First, we question
    whether RCW 9A.40.100 presents alternative means. Second, Braun challenges the
    sufficiency of evidence under each potential means and claims insufficient evidence
    established causation under either of the three nouns. We, however, avoid definitively
    circumscribing “force” because, under any of the definitions forwarded by the parties, the
    evidence supports the trial court’s finding.
    The parties may assume that RCW 9A.40.100’s employment of the disjunctive
    “or,” when listing “force,” “fraud,” and “coercion,” suggests that the statute creates
    alternative means for committing the crime. We question whether “force” should be
    isolated and construed separately from the other methods of triggering commercial sex.
    Courts sometimes read the disjunctive “or” as denoting an alternative means crime.
    Nevertheless, the use of “or” does not always signify alternate means. State v. Barboza-
    Cortes, 
    194 Wn.2d 639
    , 643-44, 
    451 P.3d 707
     (2019). Instead, courts ask whether each
    29
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    noun describes distinct acts that amount to the same crime. State v. Sandholm, 
    184 Wn.2d 726
    , 732, 
    364 P.3d 87
     (2015). The more varied the criminal conduct, the more
    likely the statute describes alternative means. State v. Barboza-Cortes, 
    194 Wn.2d 639
    ,
    644 (2019). When the statute describes minor nuances inhering in the same act, the more
    likely the various alternatives are merely facets of the same criminal conduct. State v.
    Sandholm, 
    184 Wn.2d 726
    , 732 (2015).
    Generally the three words “force,” “fraud,” and “coercion” connote divergent acts,
    but we notice a common theme amidst these three nouns in the milieu of human
    trafficking. Trafficking comprises the concept of a human being’s will being subjugated
    to the will of another. United States v. Lewis, 
    644 F. Supp. 1391
    , 1403 (W.D. Mich.
    1986), aff’d sub nom. United States v. King, 
    840 F.2d 1276
     (6th Cir. 1988). In the
    context of sexual trafficking, the victim believes that she lacks a viable alternative but to
    perform services for the master. Force, coercion, and fraud all lead to a vanquished
    independence and destroyed spirit and generally combine to effectuate sexual trafficking.
    Thus, we could analyze the appeal as if force, coercion, and fraud all equate to usurping
    one’s willpower.
    Neither RCW 9A.40.100 nor a related statute defines “force.” Lars Braun argues
    that the trial court committed legal error when construing the word “force” in the
    trafficking statute to include nonphysical force. Even if we adopted Braun’s reading of
    the statute as requiring physical force, the overwhelming, if not undisputed, facts show
    30
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    that Lars Braun employed corporeal force against Jane and that he knew force would
    compel her to engage in commercial sex.
    To repeat, Lars Braun does not challenge any of the trial court’s findings of fact as
    unsupported by the evidence. Instead, Braun argues that the findings do not support the
    trial court’s conclusions of law that he committed the crime. We treat unchallenged
    findings as verities on appeal. State v. Allen, 
    138 Wn. App. 463
    , 468, 
    157 P.3d 893
    (2007).
    The trial court entered many findings of fact about Lars Braun imposing physical
    force on Jane. Braun and Jane had violent encounters, during which someone summoned
    law enforcement. Braun strangulated Jane. Braun anally raped Jane. Braun slapped Jane
    in the face. Braun tied Jane to a tree and left her alone with a john while he ventured to
    Taco Bell for more than one hour. Braun tied Jane to the Colfax bed and other divans of
    repose.
    Physical assaults by the defendant on the victim constitute force for purposes of
    human trafficking. United States v. Wilkins, 
    583 F. Supp. 3d 49
    , 73 (D.D.C. 2021). Lars
    Braun’s assaults on Jane led to sex with Braun, not only commercial sex with johns. The
    defendant may be both the perpetrator of the force, fraud, or coercion and the beneficiary
    of the sexual act. Ardolf v. Weber, 
    332 F.R.D. 467
    , 475-76 (S.D.N.Y. 2019).
    Lars Braun employed physical violence perpetrated by other men to compel sexual
    performances from Jane. When Jane perturbed Braun, Braun solicited violent men to
    31
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    engage with Jane. Trailer Guy physically hurt Jane, and Braun issued threats of trysts
    with sex with Trailer Guy. When having intercourse for truck repairs, a man violently
    struck the bed next to Jane’s head. The language of the human trafficking statutes allow
    for a conviction even when the defendant did not personally use force, fraud, or coercion
    as long as he knew someone would use such means. United States v. Todd, 
    627 F.3d 329
    ,
    336 (9th Cir. 2010) (Smith, J., concurring).
    The only Washington reported decision applying RCW 9A.40.100, State v. Clark,
    
    170 Wn. App. 166
    , 
    283 P.3d 1116
     (2012), did not need to identify the nature or
    demarcate the extent of force needed for a conviction. Since RCW 9A.40.100 echoes the
    federal human trafficking statute and because State v. Clark provides limited guidance,
    we review federal cases to assist in determining whether evidence supported a finding or
    conclusion of force against Jane. In his brief, Lars Braun often relies on federal
    decisions. The Washington anti-trafficking statute references federal trafficking statutes
    in its legislative history. See Final Bill Report, SHB 1175 (Wash. 2003), available at
    http://lawfilesext.leg.wa.gov/biennium/2003-04/Pdf/Bill%20 Reports/House/1175-
    S.FBR.pdf?q=20210128094842 (last visited January 2021).
    The conduct of Johnelle Lewis Bell, in United States v. Bell, 
    761 F.3d 900
     (8th
    Cir. 2014) parallels the facts behind the prosecution of Lars Braun. A jury convicted Bell
    of, among other crimes, sex trafficking in violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 1591
    (a). Bell met
    victim Jennifer Olewnik at a bar. Bell informed Olewnik that he was going through a
    32
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    divorce, and the two began an intimate relationship. Bell asked Olewnik if she was
    interested in working as a prostitute. Bell assured Olewnik that the two would continue
    with a committed, intimate relationship despite her trade. He would care for her, help her
    regain custody of her daughter, and they would beget children together. With these
    assurances, Olewnik agreed to prostitute herself. Bell advertised for Olewnik’s services
    on the Backpage website. Bell later began physically assaulting Olewnik. When
    Olewnik refused to prostitute at a truck stop, Bell told Olewnik she lacked a choice and
    struck her with a belt. Olewnik complied. Bell repeated this conduct with three other
    women, one to whom he wrote poetry expressing his love. When Olewnik discovered
    that Bell engaged in sex with one of the other women, she confronted Bell and threatened
    to call law enforcement. Bell slapped Olewnik in the face and choked her. On one
    occasion, Bell beat Olewnik for falling asleep while performing a trick. Bell insisted that
    Olewnik perform anal sex with johns. Olewnik performed sex, at the request of Bell, so
    that the money earned would purchase narcotics for both of them. At trial, Olewnik
    announced her continuing love for Bell and her hope he would fulfill his promises to her.
    On appeal, Johnelle Lewis Bell argued that the government presented insufficient
    evidence to convict him of trafficking. He contended that no evidence showed that he
    knew that force, threats of force, fraud, or coercion would compel Olewnik and the other
    victims to perform commercial sex acts. He contended that the women engaged in the
    33
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    sex acts because of their love for him. According to Bell, the fact that two of the women
    left his company established that he did not force them against their will to perform.
    The federal circuit court, in United States v. Bell, concluded that the government
    proved force, under the federal human trafficking statute, because Bell physically
    assaulted the women when they disobeyed him. The assaults caused the women to
    perform more sex acts for Bell.
    In United States v. Carson, 
    870 F.3d 584
     (7th Cir. 2017), McKenzie Carson
    trafficked a seventeen-year-old girl in part by isolating her from her mother and not
    allowing her to access a phone. Carson manipulated three other women, who were drug
    users, desperate for drugs, and homeless. When entreating her to traffic her body, Carson
    promised one woman, Veronica Del Valle, that she could keep all money she made.
    Carson instead kept almost all of Del Valle’s money. He supplied her drugs. He took her
    cell phone. He beat her with belts, slapped her face, gave her black eyes, and anally
    raped her. Carson warned Del Valle not to leave him or he would kill her children.
    On appeal, in United States v. Carson, McKenzie Carson contended that the
    women willingly agreed to work for him as prostitutes. They turned to him for emotional
    support. The court did not deem the women’s repeated turning to Carson for support
    important.
    Victims of sex trafficking may make decisions that look voluntary at
    times due to the incredible weight of coercion and force upon them. And
    they may make some decisions along the way that are truly voluntary.
    34
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    Those decisions do not take away from the fact that they have been held
    hostage, coerced, forced, or threatened to engage in commercial sexual acts.
    Sometimes that coercion and force may be subtle, leading a fact-finder to
    have to decipher whether the mens rea has been met. But this is not such a
    case. There is nothing subtle about rape, beatings, death threats, and taking
    women’s clothes and phones so that they cannot readily escape. Carson
    kept these victims under his control by using a tightly woven web of rape,
    physical assault, threats, manipulation, isolation, and fear.
    United States v. Carson, 870 F.3d at 591.
    McKenzie Carson, like Lars Braun, also claimed that he did not know the women
    worked for him from force. The court answered:
    Had Carson truly subjectively believed (whether correctly or not)
    that the victims were voluntarily working for him as prostitutes, he would
    have had no reason to rape, beat and threaten them, to take their telephones,
    clothing, shoes and control their access to drugs.
    United States v. Carson, 870 F.3d at 594.
    Lars Braun’s relationship with Jane included bondage. Jane in fact consented to
    some bondage acts, but she testified that Braun went beyond her consent. Braun argues
    that this encroachment on consent constituted a mere betrayal in their relationship, rather
    than force supporting a conviction for human trafficking. He also complains that the
    legislature never intended RCW 9A.40.100 to apply to domestic violence offenses and
    ordinary prostitution offenses.
    In United States v. Marcus, 
    487 F. Supp. 2d 289
     (E.D.N.Y. 2007), vacated, 
    538 F.3d 97
     (2d Cir 2008), rev’d and remanded, 
    560 U.S. 258
    , 
    130 S. Ct. 2159
    , 
    176 L. Ed.2d 1012
     (2010), the complaining witness began a consensual bondage, dominance, and
    35
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    sadism relationship with Glenn Marcus. Marcus later employed force and coercion to
    prevent her from leaving and to engage in sexual conduct that Marcus and others
    photographed and placed on a website. Marcus derived financial benefit from the
    photographs. The court rejected Marcus’ contention that Congress did not intend the
    Trafficking Victims Protection Act to apply to conduct that occurred within an intimate,
    domestic relationship.
    Lars Braun contends that the State may not rely on any assaults that occurred in
    Florida. He does not cite any authority for this argument, however. We anticipate that
    any court faced with this contention would rule to the contrary as long as at least one of
    the acts of assault occurred in the home state or if the assaults in another state led to
    commercial sex in the home state. We do not address the argument because some of the
    physical force and much of the prostitution occurred in Washington State.
    Coercion
    We also conclude that sufficient evidence supports a conviction of Lars Braun for
    human trafficking based on his use of coercion within the meaning of RCW 9A.40.100.
    Another statute, RCW 9A.36.070, defines “coercion” as follows:
    (1) A person is guilty of coercion if by use of a threat he or she
    compels or induces a person to engage in conduct which the latter has a
    legal right to abstain from, or to abstain from conduct which he or she has a
    legal right to engage in.
    (2) “Threat” as used in this section means:
    (a) To communicate, directly or indirectly, the intent immediately to
    use force against any person who is present at the time; or
    36
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    (b) Threats as defined in RCW 9A.04.110[28] (a), (b), or (c).
    (Emphasis added.) In turn, RCW 9A.04.110 defines the term “threat” as used in RCW
    9A.40.100:
    (28) “Threat” means to communicate, directly or indirectly the
    intent:
    (a) To cause bodily injury in the future to the person threatened or to
    any other person; or
    (b) To cause physical damage to the property of a person other than
    the actor; or
    (c) To subject the person threatened or any other person to physical
    confinement or restraint[.]
    Since RCW 9A.36.070(2)(b) incorporates the definition in RCW 9A.40.110, the threat,
    for a human trafficking conviction, need not be of immediate force but can include
    threats of bodily injury in the future.
    We look to State v. Clark, 
    170 Wn. App. 166
     (2012) and federal decisions to
    confirm the use of coercion. In Clark, this court found the State proved coercion because
    of the repeated beatings by DeShawn Clark of the victim, which led to the victim fearing
    for her safety if she did not obey Clark’s commands. The court found coercion even
    though the victim left Clark’s company and voluntarily returned from love. According to
    one federal decision, the opportunity to escape, and even a successful escape, does not
    preclude a finding of involuntary servitude. United States v. Mussry, 
    726 F.2d 1448
    ,
    1454 (9th Cir. 1984).
    37
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    When enacting the Trafficking Victims Protection Act, Congress desired the
    means of compelling commercial sex to not only apply to overt beatings, but more subtle
    means designed to cause victims to believe that serious harm will result to themselves or
    others if they leave the defendant. United States v. Marcus, 
    487 F. Supp. 2d 289
    , 301
    (E.D.N.Y. 2007). Congress intended to reach cases when the trafficker holds another in a
    condition of servitude through nonviolent coercion. United States v. Dann, 
    652 F.3d 1160
    , 1169 (9th Cir. 2011); United States v. Bradley, 
    390 F.3d 145
    , 150 (1st Cir. 2004);
    United States v. Marcus, 
    487 F. Supp. 2d 289
    , 302 (E.D.N.Y. 2007). The methods of
    subjugating people’s wills now includes subtle, more effective forms of coercion. United
    States v. Mussry, 
    726 F.2d 1448
    , 1452 (9th Cir. 1984). A pattern intended to cause a
    person to believe that failure to perform an act of commercial sex would result in serious
    harm constitutes evidence of coercion. United States v. Campbell, 
    6 F.4th 764
    , 775 (8th
    Cir. 2014) (as amended July 26, 2021). The phenomenon that force leads to coercion
    because of the atmosphere of ongoing beatings illustrates the proximity of the concepts of
    force and coercion in the context of human trafficking.
    The federal appeals court, in United States v. Bell, 
    761 F.3d 900
     (8th Cir. 2014),
    discussed above, agreed that the government proved force because Johnelle Lewis Bell
    physically assaulted the women when they disobeyed him. The court also found that Bell
    coerced them into sex acts by implied threats of more assaults.
    38
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    Lars Braun supplied alcohol and methamphetamine to Jane in order to procure and
    market her sexual services. When Jane became addicted to methamphetamine, Braun
    withheld dispensing of the drug until Jane performed. In United States v. Mack, 
    808 F.3d 1074
     (6th Cir. 2015), the court affirmed a conviction of a defendant who coerced the
    victims into prostituting themselves by initially supplying them with drugs under the false
    pretense they were free. Supplying of drugs shows manipulation and control of the
    victim. United States v. Betts, 
    911 F.3d 523
    , 530 (8th Cir. 2018); United States v.
    Campbell, 
    49 F.3d 1079
    , 1084 (5th Cir. 1995).
    Fraud
    RCW 9A.40.100 does not define “fraud” for purposes of human trafficking. This
    court, when reviewing another criminal statute, declined to define “fraud” because of the
    word’s common understanding. State v. Stacy, 
    181 Wn. App. 553
    , 572, 
    326 P.3d 136
    (2014). Federal cases examining human trafficking by fraud require “material
    misrepresentations” used to compel the victim. United States v. Maynes, 
    880 F.3d 110
    ,
    113 (4th Cir. 2018). A false statement is material if it has a natural tendency to influence
    or is capable of influencing the intended target. United States v. Gaudin, 
    515 U.S. 506
    ,
    509, 
    115 S. Ct. 2310
    , 
    132 L. Ed. 2d 444
     (1995).
    The federal circuit court, in United States v. Bell, 
    761 F.3d 900
     (8th Cir. 2014),
    previously outlined, ruled that Johnelle Bell also used fraud because he misrepresented
    his love for his three victims and his intent to care for each to the exclusion of the others.
    39
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    Bell preyed on vulnerable women. In United States v. Mack, 
    808 F.3d 1074
     (6th Cir.
    2015), the court affirmed a conviction of a defendant who led victims into prostituting
    themselves by initially supplying them with drugs under the false pretense the substances
    were free.
    Lars Braun defrauded Jane by manipulation, false promises, and lies to induce her
    to engage in prostitution. He told Jane she was his girlfriend, but then hid their
    relationship from his acquaintances. Braun promised her that he would love her if she
    had sex with other people for money. Braun told her that, if she performed as he desired,
    he would marry her and beget children with her, both events that she desperately desired.
    Based on his representations, Jane believed Braun loved her. Braun deceptively used
    Jane’s e-mail address to procure johns. He did not inform Jane of the parameters of sex
    he promised the johns. Braun deceived Jane about advertisements he posed offering her
    for sex exploits. He told her that no one else valued her and then isolated her. The
    evidence amply supported the trial court’s finding and legal conclusion of fraud.
    Causation
    Next Lars Braun contends that insufficient evidence supported the trial court’s
    conclusion that any force, fraud, or coercion caused Jane to participate in commercial
    sexual acts. Stated differently, according to Braun, the evidence lacked a connection
    between his violence, threats of violence, and misrepresentations sufficient to compel
    Jane to engage in prostitution.
    40
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    To repeat, Lars Braun does not challenge any findings of fact. The trial court’s
    findings mention Jane’s initial hesitancy in performing sex for money, Braun’s early
    insistence that Jane prostitute herself or else he would cheat on her, his promise to love
    her if she garnered profits through sex, Jane’s later constant fear of Braun because of his
    violence, Braun’s demand that she incur income to pay for the couple’s food, gas,
    lodging, and copious amounts of alcohol, Braun’s withholding of methamphetamine and
    food until she completed a trick, Jane’s refusal to report Braun to law enforcement
    because of the anger that would result, Braun’s misrepresentation of a john’s expected
    sex acts before she serviced the john, his pressuring her for sexual favors because she had
    been sexually active with others, and Braun’s grabbing of Jane on one occasion when she
    hid in a back room from a man seeking favors.
    Jane obeyed Braun’s demands because of fear of the resultant trouble. When Jane
    disobeyed one of Braun’s rules, Braun ignored her for days, engaged in sex with other
    women, and yelled at her. Jane became completely dependent on Braun for food,
    alcohol, and her drug of choice and Braun withheld these needs and desires from Jane.
    Jane could not drive. Braun possessed all of her belongings. He took all of her money.
    In short, like other victims of human trafficking, the force, fraud, and coercion caused
    Jane to rigorously obey Braun’s whims, including participation in commercial sex. She
    had no choice.
    41
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    Lars Braun’s argument of lack of causation fails to recognize the unspeakable ruin
    he wreaked on another human being’s life. He instead challenges this court to, before
    affirming his guilt, dissect individual acts of sex performed by Jane and then identify one
    act of force, fraud, or coercion that caused that discrete act. But human trafficking does
    not lend itself to this atomization of cause and effect. The victim engages in all of her
    acts because of the triumph by the pimpish padrone over her personality, autonomy,
    spirituality, humanity, individuality, and free choice. This triumph results from the
    trafficker’s masterminding a sweeping environment of force, coercion, cheating,
    dishonesty, degradation, and self-loathing. In this opinion, we outlined the prosecution’s
    extensive facts to demonstrate the ability of one man, through persistent domineering and
    deceptive demeanor, to control another’s willpower.
    Given the realities of various forms of coercion to which sex traffickers subject
    their victims, courts recognize that traffickers often force victims to continue prostituting
    by creating an environment of fear and dependence through the use of threats of violence,
    actual violence, and various forms of manipulation against them. States v. Wilkins, 
    538 F. Supp. 3d 49
    , 72 (D.D.C. 2021). When evaluating if a defendant exerted coercive force
    over a complainant, the trier of fact should evaluate the totality of a defendant’s conduct
    toward a trafficking victim, including any threats or specific instances of past violence
    that may have created a culture of fear that renders the victim’s acts involuntary. United
    States v. Carson, 
    870 F.3d 584
    , 600 (7th Cir. 2017).
    42
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    Lars Braun anally raped Jane on one occasion. In United States v. Carson, the
    court recognized the defendant’s rape of the victim as evidence that the defendant’s
    conduct led to sex acts performed by the victim. The rape sent the message that “‘I
    control you and can do as I please.’” United States v. Carson, 870 at 600.
    RCW 9A.40.100 does not require that the State prove that any sexual act actually
    occurred. Because the statute employs the future tense, the sex act is not an element of
    the offense. United States v. Maynes, 
    880 F.3d 110
    , 114 (4th Cir. 2018). The offender
    completes the crime when he recruits, entices, harbors, transports, provides, obtains,
    advertises, maintains, patronizes, or solicits a person knowing, or in reckless disregard
    thereof, that means of force, fraud, or coercion of such means will be used to cause the
    person to engage in a commercial sex act. United States v. Maynes, 
    880 F.3d 110
    , 114
    (4th Cir. 2018). A defendant commits the crime of trafficking even if the commercial sex
    act comes in the future as long as he knew that force, fraud, or coercion would be
    employed to cause the victim to engage in the act. United States v. Todd, 
    627 F.3d 329
    ,
    334 (9th Cir. 2010). Lars Braun recruited, enticed, harbored, transported, advertised, and
    maintained Jane while knowing that he and others would impose force, coercion, and
    fraud on her for her sexual favors.
    United States v. Carson, 
    870 F.3d 584
     (7th Cir. 2017), earlier reviewed, answers
    Lars Braun’s contention that the State failed to prove causation. McKenzie Carson also
    43
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    argued that the evidence did not support a finding that the women engaged in commercial
    sex due to force. The court replied:
    No rational person could witness such force and coercion, let alone
    inflict it himself, without knowing or recklessly disregarding the fact that
    the threats and force of threats and coercion, or any combination of them,
    caused these women to engage in commercial sex acts.
    United States v. Carson, 870 F.3d at 594.
    Vagueness
    Lars Braun next contends that, if this court applies a definition of “force” in RCW
    9A.40.100 that includes emotional manipulation, the statute becomes unconstitutionally
    vague as applied. Because we do not adopt any definition of force that includes
    nonphysical force, we need not address this contention.
    Promotion of Prostitution
    Lars Braun requests reversal of his conviction for promoting prostitution in the
    first degree because the State presented insufficient evidence that he used “threat or
    force” to induce Jane into prostitution, as required by RCW 9A.88.070. RCW 9A.88.070
    governs first degree promoting prostitution. The statute reads, in relevant part:
    (1) A person is guilty of promoting prostitution in the first degree if
    he or she knowingly advances prostitution:
    (a) By compelling a person by threat or force to engage in
    prostitution or profits from prostitution which results from such threat or
    force.
    (Emphasis added.) RCW 9A.04.110 defines “threat:”
    44
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    (28) “Threat” means to communicate, directly or indirectly the
    intent:
    (a) To cause bodily injury in the future to the person threatened or to
    any other person; or
    (b) To cause physical damage to the property of a person other than
    the actor; or
    (c) To subject the person threatened or any other person to physical
    confinement or restraint; or
    ....
    (j) To do any other act which is intended to harm substantially the
    person threatened or another with respect to his or her health, safety,
    business, financial condition, or personal relationships[.]
    To prove a threat, the State need not present evidence of an explicit communicated
    threat. Threats can include nonverbal threats. State v. Pinkney, 2 Wn. App. 2d 574, 579,
    
    411 P.3d 406
     (2018).
    The State’s argument of sufficiency of evidence for promoting prostitution mirrors
    its contention in favor of affirming Lars Braun’s guilt for human trafficking. According
    to the State, Braun employed threats of force and the withholding of food and drugs to
    prompt Jane to engage in acts of prostitution. On one occasion, he destroyed her property
    in order to gain control over her activities. For many of the same reasons that we rule
    that the evidence suffices to convict Braun of human trafficking, we hold that the
    evidence supports his conviction for promoting prostitution.
    In State v. Simon, 
    64 Wn. App. 948
    , 
    831 P.2d 948
     (1991), aff’d in part, reversed in
    part on other grounds, 
    120 Wn.2d 196
    , 
    840 P.2d 172
     (1992), the court considered force
    applied by Simon to the victim, when she mentioned leaving him, sufficient for a
    45
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    conviction of promoting prostitution. A law enforcement officer also testified to the
    unwritten rules between a pimp and a prostitute whereby the latter receives physical
    punishment for leaving the pimp.
    Appearance of Fairness
    Lars Braun asserts that the trial judge violated the appearance of fairness doctrine
    when uttering comments from the bench. Before trial, the judge mentioned Governor Jay
    Inslee’s order regarding COVID-19. Nevertheless, the trial judge gave everyone a choice
    of whether to wear a mask while in the courtroom. The court questioned the occurrence
    of the 1917 pandemic. Thereafter, the trial judge lamented the George Floyd protests in
    Seattle. After informing courtroom attendees that they need not obey the governor’s
    order, the judge complained of anarchy and the lack of law. He ended by commenting
    that he had often pondered those subjects recently. Lars Braun argues that, based on the
    totality of the trial judge’s statements, the judge viewed this case as an opportunity to
    reassert law and order during uncertain and chaotic times by convicting him.
    All of the trial court’s comments occurred before the court’s ruling. Lars Braun
    did not object, before the trial court’s verdict, to any impartiality of the judge. Nor does
    he claim manifest constitutional error on appeal. We recognize the peril of impugning a
    judge’s impartiality while the case pends before him or her. Nevertheless, we question
    whether Braun preserved this challenge for appeal. The State, however, does not ask that
    we decline review of the issue.
    46
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    The federal and state constitutions guarantee a criminal defendant’s right to be
    tried and sentenced by an impartial court. U.S. CONST. amends. VI, XIV; WASH. CONST.
    art. I, § 22; State v. Solis-Diaz, 
    187 Wn.2d 535
    , 539, 
    387 P.3d 703
     (2017). The law
    requires more than an impartial judge. The law demands that the judge also appear to be
    impartial pursuant to the appearance of fairness doctrine. State v. Solis-Diaz, 
    187 Wn.2d 535
    , 540 (2017). A judicial proceeding is valid if a reasonably prudent, disinterested
    observer would conclude that the parties received a fair, impartial, and neutral hearing.
    State v. Solis-Diaz, 
    187 Wn.2d at 540
    . The party asserting a violation of the appearance
    of fairness must show a judge’s actual or potential bias. State v. Solis-Diaz, 
    187 Wn.2d at 540
    . In determining a judge’s impartiality, this court uses an objective test that assumes a
    reasonable observer knows and understands all the relevant facts. State v. Solis-Diaz, 
    187 Wn.2d at 540
    .
    In State v. Solis-Diaz, 
    187 Wn.2d 535
    , 541 (2017), forwarded by Lars Braun, the
    Washington Supreme Court remanded to the trial court for resentencing before a different
    judge to determine whether Guadalupe Solis-Diaz should be considered for an
    exceptional mitigated sentence on the basis of Solis-Diaz’s youth. The record reflected
    the trial court’s frustration and unhappiness at the Court of Appeals requiring him to
    address anew whether Solis-Diaz should be considered for an exceptional downward
    sentence. The judge’s remarks at the first resentencing strongly suggested that,
    47
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    regardless of the information presented in mitigation, he was committed to the original
    standard range sentence of 1,111 months.
    Lars Braun’s trial judge never uttered any comments that showed prejudgment of
    the guilt of Lars Braun. He never suggested that he wished to make an example out of
    Lars Braun. He indicated no frustration in the state of the law being applied to the
    prosecution. Despite complaining of Detective Maurice Washington’s inability to be
    present in Ellensburg, the trial judge granted Braun’s motion to exclude Washington’s
    testimony on human trafficking. The judge also suggested that adults should be free to
    make decisions without restraints from the government. We conclude that Braun has not
    demonstrated the trial judge’s actual or potential bias.
    A judge’s public comments on the administration of the criminal justice system
    and rampant crime do not create reasonable cause for doubting the judge’s partiality.
    United States v. Sevilla-Oyola, 
    854 F. Supp. 2d 164
    , 167-68 (D.P.R. 2012), vacated in
    part, 
    753 F.3d 309
    , superseded on reh’g, 
    770 F.3d 1
     (1st Cir. 2014). To violate the
    appearance of fairness doctrine, the judge’s comments instead must directly relate to the
    pending action. In re Boston’s Children First, 
    244 F.3d 164
    , 168-69 (1st Cir. 2001).
    Offender Score
    The trial court sentenced Lars Braun with an offender score of one based on an
    earlier conviction for possession of a controlled substance. Braun now contends that this
    controlled substance conviction should not count toward his offender score in light of
    48
    No. 37635-4-III
    State v. Braun
    State v. Blake, 
    197 Wn.2d 170
    , 
    481 P.3d 521
     (2021). He requests resentencing with an
    offender score of zero. The State agrees.
    In State v. Blake, 
    197 Wn.2d 170
     (2021), the Washington high court held that
    Washington’s strict liability drug possession statute, RCW 69.50.4013(1), violates due
    process under both the state and federal constitutions. The court found the statute
    unconstitutional and applied its ruling retroactively. Therefore, we accept the State’s
    concession that Braun’s conviction for possession of a controlled substance may not
    impact his offender score.
    CONCLUSION
    We affirm Lars Braun’s convictions for human trafficking and promoting
    prostitution. We remand for resentencing with an offender score of zero.
    _________________________________
    Fearing, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    ______________________________              _________________________________
    Pennell, C.J.                               Staab, J.
    49