State Of Washington v. Nicholas Ryan Cook ( 2017 )


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  •     IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,
    No. 74449-6-1
    Respondent,
    DIVISION ONE
    v.
    NICHOLAS RYAN COOK,                            UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    Appellant,               FILED: January 17, 2017
    HOLLY ANN BURKHART, and
    each of them,
    Defendant.
    Becker, J. — Nicholas Cook appeals his conviction for one count of
    residential burglary. He contends that he was denied effective assistance of
    counsel when defense counsel failed to object to evidence that he was a suspect
    in unrelated uncharged offenses. But the challenged comments were brief and
    isolated and did not clearly identify Cook's relationship to any prior offenses.
    Counsel's failure to object was therefore a reasonable trial strategy and did not
    constitute deficient performance. We affirm.
    FACTS
    Kelly Szabo lives in the Richmond Beach area of Shoreline. At about
    11:30 a.m. on March 18, 2015, Szabo dropped off lunch for her child at nearby
    Syre Elementary School. Syre Elementary is located in a residential area near
    No. 74449-6-1/2
    12th Avenue NW and NW 196th Street. The school is on a dead-end street that
    is accessible only through "side roads."1
    As she left the school, Szabo noticed a white Buick with license number
    ANK7245 parked near the school on 12th Avenue, just north of NW 196th Street.
    One person was inside the car. Based on "prior information"2 about the Buick,
    Szabo called 911.
    Szabo had seen the same car on March 7 and followed it to a house in
    nearby Woodway. When Szabo drove past the house again on March 17, she
    noticed a red pickup truck with license number B06608S parked outside.
    Grant Bordon and his fiancee Gail Erickson live on 12th Avenue NW, two
    houses south of Syre Elementary. On March 18, 2015, both Bordon and
    Erickson left their house for work by 8:30 a.m. Bordon believed that the couple
    left the door from the rear deck to the kitchen unlocked.
    When Bordon returned to the house around 1:30 p.m. and opened the
    garage door, he was surprised to find some of the parties' possessions, including
    suitcases filled with property, a television, and other "boxes of stuff,"3 piled up
    near the garage door. After entering the house, Bordon found that the house had
    been ransacked:
    1 Report of Proceedings at 282.
    2 Report of Proceedings at 283.
    3 Report of Proceedings at 355.
    No. 74449-6-1/3
    the doors were open, the living room ... we have a big violin oboe,
    whatever it is, but anyway, it was staged to go out the front door.
    There was boxes. There was a big container with a lot of my
    mom's stuff in it by the backdoor. Went upstairs, all the drawers
    had been pulled open and, you know, things were on the bed, on
    the floors. So each room had been gone through.[4]
    Bordon called 911.
    King County Sheriffs officers responded to Szabo's 911 call at about
    11:45 a.m. After speaking briefly with the officers about the white Buick, Szabo
    left to take lunch to one of her other children at a different school. The officers
    were aware that Holly Burkhart, Burkhart's boyfriend Nicholas Cook, and Cook's
    brother Randolph were "associated"5 with the white Buick.
    When Detective Mark Souza arrived, Sergeant Richard Connelly was
    speaking with Dane Sullivan, the driver of the Buick. The Buick was parked
    facing south toward the Bordon/Erickson residence. Sullivan told Souza that he
    had "dropped some friends off'6 in the area. Connolly was holding Sullivan's cell
    phone, which was "blowing up, ringing constantly."7 The phone identified Holly
    Burkhart as the caller.
    After delivering another lunch, Szabo returned to Syre Elementary at
    around 12:15 p.m. While speaking with Detective Eric Soderstrom, Szabo saw
    4 Report   of Proceedings   at   339.
    5 Report   of Proceedings   at   320.
    6 Report   of Proceedings   at   313.
    7 Report   of Proceedings   at   320.
    -3-
    No. 74449-6-1/4
    the red pickup truck with license number B06608S drive down the hill on NW
    196th Street. The truck then turned north onto 12th Avenue NW and sped past
    the officers. After Szabo directed his attention to the truck, Soderstrom directed
    other deputies to stop the truck.
    As officers began their pursuit, Anthony Birchman was working at a
    nearby house. Birchman noticed a red truck drive by going "pretty fast for the
    area."8 Birchman watched as the passenger door of the truck opened and a man
    jumped out. The man, who lost his baseball cap as he jumped, crouched behind
    a nearby parked carand bush. Ashort time later, a patrol car pulled up nearby.
    When the officer stepped out ofthe patrol car, the man opened a gate and ran
    into a backyard. Birchman showed the officer where the man had fled.
    Detective Souza pursued the red truck as it turned off 12th Avenue NW
    and drove uphill on NW 199th Street. Part way up the block, Souza stopped
    behind Sergeant Connelly, who was standing outside his patrol car. Connelly
    had his pistol drawn and was "yelling commands."9 Connelly directed Souza to
    the backyard of a nearby house, where Souza found Cook lying on the ground.
    Cook had fresh scratches on his arm and was "breathing really, really hard, kind
    ofsweating profusely, and his heart was racing."10
    8 Report of Proceedings at 301.
    9 Report of Proceedings at 326.
    10 Report of Proceedings at 328-29.
    -4-
    No. 74449-6-1/5
    Officers stopped the red truck near the corner of NW 199th and 11th
    Avenue NW, a short distance from where Cook had jumped out. Randolph Cook
    was driving; Holly Burkhart was in the rear compartment of the truck's cab.
    After obtaining a search warrant, Deputy Coby Coblantz searched the
    Buick and the truck. Coblantz found a black backpack on the front passenger
    floorboard of the truck. The backpack contained some of Erickson's jewelry,
    prescription medication with Erickson's name on it, and one of Erickson's
    external hard drives. Coblantz found Cook's identification and wallet in the white
    Buick.
    The State charged Cook and codefendant Holly Burkhart with one count of
    residential burglary. The State also charged Burkhart with one count oftheft in
    the third degree. Burkhart pleaded guilty before trial. The jury found Cook guilty
    as charged, and the court imposed a standard range sentence of 72 months.
    FAILURE TO OBJECT
    Cook contends that he was denied effective assistance when defense
    counsel failed to object to inadmissible "propensity"11 evidence. He argues that
    the evidence violated a pretrial order and effectively informed the jury that he was
    a suspect in other uncharged burglaries in the neighborhood.
    11 Brief of Appellant at 11.
    No. 74449-6-1/6
    Before trial, the defense moved to exclude evidence that Cook was a
    suspect in earlier burglaries. Among other things, defense counsel objected to
    any references to a police "bulletin."12 Edmonds police had prepared the bulletin
    in February 2015, about a month before the charged offense, after a rash of
    home burglaries. The bulletin eventually appeared on the local website for the
    Richmond Beach neighborhood where the charged offense occurred. The
    bulletin warned residents to watch out for a white Buick with license number
    ANK7245. Police arrested Cook after Kelly Szabo saw the white Buick
    mentioned in the bulletin and called 911.
    Defense counsel argued thatthe prior police investigations into Cook and
    others created a significant risk of unfair references to prior crimes. Counsel
    asked the court to limit the testimony to Cook's actions on March 18.
    After an extensive colloquy, the court agreed with defense counsel's
    suggestion that Szabo could testify she called 911 based on "information ... [to]
    be on the lookout for this . . . white Buick with a specific license plate,"13 without
    any reference to a "bulletin."
    The trial court also ruled that the testimony of the responding police
    officers, who were familiar with the bulletin, should be restricted in a similar
    12 Report of Proceedings at 44.
    13 Report of Proceedings at 49.
    No. 74449-6-1/7
    manner. The deputy prosecutor acknowledged that testimony about the bulletin
    could "open up a huge can of worms"14 and informed the court that the State did
    not intend to elicit testimony about Cook's possible participation in prior
    burglaries. Defense counsel also suggested that the deputy prosecutor should
    use leading questions during examination of the officers.
    During trial, Detective Souza testified, without objection, that police had
    information about a white Buick with a specific license plate number, that Sullivan
    told the police he had just dropped off some friends, and that Sullivan's cell
    phone rang repeatedly, showing Burkhart's name as the caller. Souza then
    continued:
    Q. Okay. So we has [sic] stated earlier that you had
    previously received information about this white Buick, ANK7245.
    Now, you see this phone ringing. Did you take any action based on
    that?
    A.   We had information that the white Buick that was there,
    and Holly Burket (sic) along with her boyfriend, Mr. Cook, and his
    brother, Randy, were associated with that vehicle.
    Q. Okay. So what did you do then?
    A. Based on the information that we had, previous
    information, we had suspected that they were somewhere in the
    neighborhood and a crime was being occurred [sic].
    Q. Okay. Did you receive any instruction from the Sergeant
    as to what to do then?
    A. We all—the three of us there put our—kind of put our
    minds together, and we decided to have the patrol units and the
    unmarked units, which is us and another detective's—we call it
    14 Report of Proceedings at 47.
    No. 74449-6-1/8
    roaming the area or roving the area to see if we can locate where
    they are, where they're coming from, or where they're hiding, or
    what they're doing.
    Q. Okay. When you say roam or rove, maybe it's self-
    explanatory, but what exactly do you do?
    A. So not knowing where they are, we'll - we'll fan out in a
    neighborhood with our patrol vehicles and our unmarked cars in
    hopes of locating them.[15]
    Detective Soderstrom testified that he responded to the 911 call at about
    11:45 a.m. The deputy prosecutor then asked about the type of call:
    A.    Patrol guys were out with—or looking for a—a white
    Buick that   we had information was possibly associated with a
    burglary.
    Q.    Okay. Did you respond?
    A.    I did. When I hear our guys go out on—or the patrol
    officers go out on a call like that, if I'm not doing anything pressing
    in the office, the detectives will generally go out and assist.1161
    Cook maintains that the highlighted comments violated the pretrial
    ruling and essentially informed the jury that Cook had committed prior
    burglaries. He argues that defense counsel's failure to object to the
    "prejudicial propensity evidence"17 constituted constitutionally deficient
    performance.
    To prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, the defendant
    must show that counsel's performance fell below an objective standard of
    15 Report of Proceedings at 320-21 (emphasis added).
    16 Report of Proceedings at 378-79 (emphasis added).
    17 Brief of Appellant at 11.
    -8-
    No. 74449-6-1/9
    reasonableness and that the deficient performance prejudiced the outcome of the
    trial. Strickland v. Washington. 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 687, 
    104 S. Ct. 2052
    , 
    80 L. Ed. 2d 674
    (1984); State v. McFarland. 
    127 Wash. 2d 322
    , 334-35, 
    899 P.2d 1251
    (1995).
    There is a strong presumption that counsel provided effective representation, and
    we accord "exceptional deference" to counsel's strategic decisions. State v.
    McNeal. 
    145 Wash. 2d 352
    , 362, 
    37 P.3d 280
    (2002). The defendant bears the
    burden of demonstrating the absence of any legitimate tactical or strategic
    decision. State v. Grier, 
    171 Wash. 2d 17
    , 42, 
    246 P.3d 1260
    (2011), cert, denied.
    
    135 S. Ct. 153
    (2014). We review claims of ineffective assistance de novo.
    State v. Sutherbv. 
    165 Wash. 2d 870
    , 883, 
    204 P.3d 916
    (2009).
    "The decision of when or whether to object is a classic example of trial
    tactics." State v. Madison, 
    53 Wash. App. 754
    , 763, 
    770 P.2d 662
    , review denied.
    
    113 Wash. 2d 1002
    (1989). When an ineffective assistance of counsel claim is
    based on the failure to object, the defendant must show that (1) the failure to
    object fell below an objective standard of reasonableness, (2) the trial court
    would have sustained an objection, and (3) the result of the trial would have been
    different. In re Pers. Restraint of Davis, 
    152 Wash. 2d 647
    , 714, 
    101 P.3d 1
    (2004).
    Under certain circumstances, the failure to object may be a reasonable strategy
    to avoid emphasizing improper or irrelevant testimony. 
    Davis, 152 Wash. 2d at 714
    ;
    No. 74449-6-1/10
    see also State v. Donald. 
    68 Wash. App. 543
    , 551, 
    844 P.2d 447
    , review denied.
    
    121 Wash. 2d 1024
    (1993).
    Cook contends that the challenged testimony violated the trial court's
    pretrial ruling and that the court would therefore have sustained defense
    counsel's objection. But the fact that the trial court would have sustained an
    objection does not by itself determine the reasonableness of counsel's failure to
    object. See 
    Davis, 152 Wash. 2d at 714
    .
    Defense counsel in this case vigorously and successfully argued against
    the admission of evidence identifying Cook as a suspect in any prior offenses.
    During the lengthy pretrial colloquy, defense counsel repeatedly expressed her
    concern that the trial testimony could become "very messy"18 because of the
    scope ofthe prior police investigation and the presence of multiple suspects.
    Counsel explained that because ofthe significant risk of inadmissible evidence,
    she was attempting to clarify the issues in orderto avoid objections during trial:
    I wanted to alert the Court and Counsel to the issues that I see
    because, when we get into trial, the actual testimony, it's going to
    be very awkward.
    . . . And I don't want the Court or Counsel to hear my
    objection right there, so that we have to take time out of the
    presence of the jury, back and forth, back and forth.
    18 Report of Proceedings at 27.
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    No. 74449-6-1/11
    Counsel also hoped "to keep things tidy and clean . . . [and to] minimize sidebars,
    excessive objections, confusion, et cetera."19
    The unchallenged evidence before the jury established that the police had
    prior information about the Buick and that the Buick was associated with multiple
    persons, including Cook. Viewed in context, the challenged testimony refers only
    vaguely to the existence of prior uncharged crimes. Nor did the officers provide
    any specific details identifying Cook as a suspect in prior burglaries or any further
    information about the events that led to the police bulletin. The challenged
    comments were brief and isolated, and both officers immediately moved on to
    unchallenged testimony about Cook's arrest. The State presented no further
    testimony or argument that might have suggested Cook's involvement with prior
    crimes.
    Given the attenuated and isolated nature of the comments, defense
    counsel could reasonably have decided not to object in order to avoid
    emphasizing the testimony and to minimize any additional speculation about the
    underlying circumstances. Because the decision not to object was a legitimate
    trial strategy, defense counsel's performance was not deficient.
    Report of Proceedings at 28-29.
    -11-
    No. 74449-6-1/12
    APPELLATE COSTS
    Cook asks this court to exercise its discretion and not impose appellate
    costs. See State v. Sinclair, 
    192 Wash. App. 380
    , 385-86, 
    367 P.3d 612
    , review
    denied. 
    185 Wash. 2d 1034
    (2016). The State does not address Sinclair and
    contends only that the record contains insufficient information to determine
    Cook's future ability to pay. After considering the nonexclusive factors
    addressed in Sinclair, including the length of Cook's sentence, the trial court's
    waiver of all nondiscretionary legal financial obligations, and Cook's continuing
    indigence, we exercise our discretion and do not assess appellate costs against
    Cook.
    Affirmed.
    WE CONCUR:
    OeHj
    -12-