State Of Washington v. Fabian Brown ( 2019 )


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  •  IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    THE STATE OF WASHINGTON,
    No. 78524-9-1
    Respondent,
    DIVISION ONE
    V.
    UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    FABIAN MARCEL BROWN,
    Appellant.                 FILED: September 23, 2019
    APPELWICK, C.J. — Brown appeals his conviction for residential burglary.
    He contends that he was deprived of a fair trial because: the prosecutor committed
    misconduct during closing argument, defense counsel failed to object to the
    prosecutor's misconduct, and the court's bailiff improperly communicated with the
    jury during deliberations. We affirm Brown's conviction, but remand for the trial
    court to strike the DNA collection fee.
    FACTS
    In the early morning hours of July 11, 2017, Laurel Evans and Michael Smith
    were asleep in an upstairs bedroom of their home. Evans woke up when a man
    opened the door to the bedroom and entered the room. Evans woke Smith and
    then got out of the bed. The intruder turned and ran and Evans ran after him down
    the short flight of stairs to the main floor. She did not catch up with him and did
    not see him after that. Neither Evans nor Smith got a clear look at the intruder's
    face. Evans saw a tall man in silhouette, who had a goatee and was carrying a
    No. 78524-9-1/2
    plastic grocery bag. Smith saw a tall man wearing an oversized gray hoodie.
    Smith followed Evans down to the main floor. The door into their kitchen from
    outside was open, the light was on, and the door window was broken. There was
    a brick on the floor among the broken glass. Smith called 911.
    After the police arrived, Evans discovered that boxes in a guest bedroom
    had been tossed and jumbled. She and Smith noted that there were items missing,
    including a couple of cell phones, a global positioning system unit, and some other
    electronics. One of the officers lifted fingerprints from the deadbolt on the kitchen
    door. When analyzed later, the prints were determined to be of no value.
    Police officers established a containment perimeter, and deployed a K-9
    team to search for the suspect. The K-9 team, led by Officer Christopher Hairston,
    began tracking from the side door of Smith and Evans' home. The tracking dog
    attempted to proceed south, but was initially blocked by a fence. After Officer
    Hairston took the dog around the house to avoid the fence, the dog tracked east
    toward an intersection briefly and lost the scent. The team returned to a staircase
    near the house and began the track again. This time, the dog followed the scent
    south down an alley towards the next block.
    An officer at the house with Smith and Evans testified that about 20-25
    minutes after being dispatched, he received notice that a homeowner about two
    blocks away had reported an unknown male on his porch "right now." Andrew
    Deceunynck was returning from work to his home, which is two blocks south of
    Smith and Evans' home. As he approached his house, he saw five or six police
    cars canvassing the area near his house. He arrived at his home at 3:18 a.m. and
    2
    No. 78524-9-1/3
    went upstairs to his bedroom. Within two or three minUtes, he heard one of his
    cats yowling on the main floor, so he went downstairs to see what was going on.
    His cat went toward the front door where there is a large window overlooking the
    front steps, and when Deceunynck approached and looked out the window, he
    saw a man walking up the stairs toward his front door. When the man got to within
    two or three steps from his front door, Deceunynck began yelling at him to "leave
    right now." After Deceunynck yelled at the man about three times, the man started
    to back down his stairs. Deceunynck then called 911.
    The police officers already in the area were notified of Deceunynck's call
    and told that a person matching the description they had from Smith and Evans
    had been seen at Deceunynck's house, and had left traveling east. Some of the
    officers involved in containment then drove toward Deceunynck's address. The K-
    9 team received the same information while the dog was leading them south in the
    direction of Deceunynck's house, and as the team left the alley and approached
    the nearest intersection, Officer Hairston saw a man matching the description of
    the intruder emerging from behind some trees. At essentially the same time, two
    officers responding in a patrol car saw the man and stopped and detained him.
    The man did not have a plastic bag in his possession.
    The K-9 team approached the suspect, and the dog then continued tracking,
    this time following the scent in the direction the suspect had been coming from
    before he was stopped and detained. The K-9 team located a white plastic bag in
    some bushes near a driveway, not far from where the suspect was stopped. It
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    No. 78524-9-1/4
    contained the electronic devices that had been stolen from the home of Smith and
    Evans.
    Officers drove Smith and Evans to the area where they had stopped and
    detained the suspect. Evans thought the man was probably the intruder she had
    seen. Smith was very sure the man was the intruder he had seen earlier.
    While he was detained on the street, Brown told one officer that he had
    come from a friend's house, but he could not provide an address or street name
    for his friend. The only landmark he could say was near his friend's house was a
    Shell station, which was four blocks north of where Brown was detained. He told
    another officer he was waiting for a friend to pick him up.
    On July 13, 2017, Brown was charged with committing residential burglary
    in violation of RCW 9A.52.025. The State alleged as an aggravating factor that
    the victim of the burglary was present in the building or residence when the crime
    was committed. RCW 9.94A.535(3)(u). Following a three day trial, the jury
    convicted Brown as charged. He was sentenced on May 11, 2018 to a standard
    range sentence of nine months. Brown appeals.
    ANALYSIS
    I.   Prosecutorial Misconduct
    Brown contends that the prosecutor committed misconduct by misstating
    the reasonable doubt standard during her rebuttal closing argument. Specifically,
    the prosecutor said it is
    not the State's burden to eliminate all the other possibilities because
    remember this is beyond a reasonable doubt, not beyond all
    reasonable doubt. That's the standard. That's the law of the land.
    4
    No. 78524-9-1/5
    And there are juries all over the country that that's the standard is
    beyond a reasonable doubt in criminal courts around the country.
    (Emphasis added.) Defense counsel did not object to the prosecutor's statement.
    The State must prove every element of a crime beyond a reasonable doubt.
    In re Winship, 
    397 U.S. 358
    , 361, 
    90 S. Ct. 1068
    , 
    25 L. Ed. 2d 368
    (1970). See
    also, 11 WASHINGTON PRACTICE: WASHINGTON PATTERN JURY INSTRUCTIONS:
    CRIMINAL 4.01, at 93 (4th ed. 2016) (Washington's pattern "reasonable doubt"
    instruction). The State does not dispute that the prosecutor's statement conflicts
    with the law. The issue is whether the statement constitutes prejudicial misconduct
    requiring remand for a new trial.
    Because Brown failed to object to the prosecutor's misstatement at trial, our
    review is limited to determining whether the prosecutor's misconduct was so
    flagrant and ill intentioned that an instruction could not have cured the resulting
    prejudice. State v. Sakellis, 
    164 Wash. App. 170
    , 184, 269 P.3d 1029(2011)(quoting
    State v. Gregory, 
    164 Wash. App. 170
    , 183, 269 P.3d 1029(2006))(holding that the
    State's argument that the jury must articulate a reason for acquitting by filling in a
    blank with that reason is improper, but the defendant could not demonstrate an
    enduring and resulting prejudice). This standard requires Brown to establish that
    (a) the misconduct resulted in prejudice that "had a substantial likelihood of
    affecting the jury verdict," and (b) a curative instruction would not have obviated
    the prejudicial effect on the jury. 
    Sakellis, 164 Wash. App. at 184
    (quoting State v.
    Thorperson, 
    172 Wash. 2d 438
    , 455, 258 P.3d 43(2011)); see also State v. Russell,
    
    125 Wash. 2d 24
    , 86, 882 P.2d 747(1994)(explaining that to show "an enduring and
    •
    5
    No. 78524-9-1/6
    resulting prejudice," the defendant must establish a "substantial likelihood that the
    alleged prosecutorial misconduct affected the verdict").
    Brown contends that the prosecutor's misstatement of the reasonable doubt
    standard was so flagrant and ill intentioned that no curative instruction could have
    overcome the prejudice. He argues that the prosecutor's statement improperly
    shifted the burden of proof to the defense. Brown relies heavily on cases holding
    that it is improper for a prosecutor to argue to the jury that to find a defendant not
    guilty, jurors must be able to say, "I don't believe the defendant is guilty because,"
    and then fill in the blank with the reason. E.q., State v. Anderson, 153 Wn. App
    417,424, 220 P.3d 1273(2009); State v. Emery, 174 Wn.2d 741,750-51, 278 P.3d
    653(2012); State v. Johnson, 
    158 Wash. App. 677
    , 682, 243 P.2d 936(2010).
    The argument that the jury must be able to articulate its reasonable doubt
    by "filling in the blank" has consistently been held to be improper. See, e.q.,
    
    Sakellis, 164 Wash. App. at 185
    (citing Johnson, Anderson, and State v. Venecias,
    
    155 Wash. App. 507
    , 228 P.3d at 813 (2010)). As the court in Anderson, explained,
    By implying that the jury had to find a reason in order to find Anderson
    not guilty, the prosecutor made it seem as though the jury had to find
    Anderson guilty unless it could come up with a reason not to.
    Because we begin with a presumption of innocence, this implication
    that the jury had an initial affirmative duty to convict was improper.
    Furthermore, this argument implied that Anderson was responsible
    for supplying such a reason to the jury in order to avoid conviction.
    
    Anderson, 153 Wash. App. at 431
    (emphasis in original).
    Brown's reliance on these cases is misplaced. The State did not make a
    fill-in-the-blank argument here. And, Anderson, Johnson, and Emery all involved
    additional statements by the prosecutor, beyond the fill-in-the-blank argument, that
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    No. 78524-9-1/7
    tended to undermine the reasonable doubt standard or to shift the burden of proof.
    E.q., 
    Anderson, 153 Wash. App. at 431
    -32 (prosecutor's argument also compared
    the reasonable doubt standard to the process by which jurors make such everyday
    decisions as choosing to leave children with a babysitter or to change lanes on the
    highway); 
    Johnson, 158 Wash. App. at 682
    (prosecutor also analogized reasonable
    doubt to assembling just half of a puzzle and determining with assurance what the
    image depicted); 
    Emery, 174 Wash. App. at 750-51
    (prosecutor also argued that the
    jury should "speak the truth" with its verdict, suggesting that the jury's role was to
    determine the truth of what happened in the case, as opposed to determining
    whether the State had proved the offenses beyond a reasonable doubt). The
    question is not whether an improper statement was made, it is whether Brown was
    prejudiced.
    The Supreme Court's decision in Emery clarifies the appropriate focus in
    cases where the defendant failed to object to a prosecutor's improper 
    argument. 174 Wash. 2d at 760-61
    . "Reviewing courts should focus less on whether the
    prosecutor's misconduct was flagrant or ill intentioned and more on whether the
    resulting prejudice could have been cured." 
    Id. at 762.
    Brown cannot establish that the prosecutor's misstatement of the
    reasonable doubt standard was so flagrant and ill intentioned that it could not have
    been cured by an appropriate instruction from the court. Here, unlike the cases
    cited by Brown, the prosecutor did not make multiple arguments that misstated or
    trivialized the reasonable doubt standard. The record shows the opposite, that the
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    No. 78524-9-1/8
    prosecutor properly framed the reasonable doubt standard in her argument several
    times. In her main closing argument, the prosecutor stated,
    Now we talked about reasonable doubt and that reasonable
    doubt is in your jury instructions. And the law recognizes that you
    aren't -- you weren't there at the scene to observe everything. If you
    were, you wouldn't be sitting in the jury box. You'd be sitting in the
    witness box. So the law doesn't require beyond all doubt. It's
    beyond a reasonable doubt.
    After the defense closing, the prosecutor argued in rebuttal that "[w]hen we
    talk about reasonable doubt, your jury instructions are as clear as possible I think
    on reasonable doubt." The prosecutor then referred to reasonable doubt in the
    context of a lack of evidence:
    Your jury instructions talk about. . . [i]t is number 3,"A
    reasonable doubt is one for which a reason exists and may arise
    from the evidence or lack of evidence."
    So lack of evidence is a real thing in criminal trials. It can be
    a real thing and a real reason to acquit someone. But I want you to
    look at the paragraph before. "A defendant is presumed innocent.
    This presumption continues throughout the entire trial unless during
    your deliberations you find it has been overcome by the evidence
    beyond a reasonable doubt."
    After the prosecutor misstated the reasonable doubt standard, she made two
    further references to reasonable doubt, but did not misstate the standard.
    The prosecutor's one misstatement of the reasonable doubt standard
    simply does not compare to the multiple improper forms of argument analyzed in
    Anderson and Johnson. The jury was instructed correctly on reasonable doubt by
    the trial judge prior to jury selection and after all evidence was presented. The jury
    received the court's instructions in writing. We review the prosecutor's improper
    - comment in the context of the total argument, the issues in the case, the evidence,
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    No. 78524-9-1/9
    and the jury instructions.    
    Feely, 192 Wash. App. at 763-64
    .        Brown has not
    established that any prejudice from the improper statement could not have been
    readily cured by a cautionary instruction had Brown objected. Cf. 
    id. at 763-65
    (holding defendant, who did not object to prosecutor's argument that the jury
    should convict if it "knew" the defendant was guilty, could not show prejudice, in
    part because the prosecutor also stated the reasonable doubt standard correctly,
    the court had instructed the jury, and juries are presumed to follow the court's
    instructions.)
    II.   Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
    Brown contends that if his prosecutorial misconduct claim fails for lack of an
    objection, then he was denied effective assistance of counsel. A defendant
    claiming ineffective assistance of counsel must show that counsel's performance
    was objectively deficient and resulted in prejudice. State v. McFarland, 
    127 Wash. 2d 322
    , 334-35, 
    899 P.2d 1251
    (1995). There is a strong presumption that counsel's
    performance was effective. 
    Id. at 335.
    Lawyers do not commonly object during
    closing argument absent egregious misstatements. In re Pers. Restraint of Davis,
    
    152 Wash. 2d 647
    , 717, 
    101 P.3d 1
    (2004). To show prejudice, the defendant must
    prove that there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel's deficient
    performance, the outcome of the proceedings would have been different. State v.
    Leavitt, 
    111 Wash. 2d 66
    , 72, 758 P.2d 982(1988). If either element of the test is not
    satisfied, the inquiry ends. Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 700, 104 S.
    Ct. 2052, 
    80 L. Ed. 2d 674
    (1984).
    9
    No. 78524-9-1/10
    We reject Brown's claims that counsel's performance resulted in prejudice.
    Brown cannot show that, but for counsel's failure to object to the prosecutor's
    misstatement, the outcome of the trial would have been different. As noted above,
    the jury was instructed in the proper reasonable doubt standard many times by the
    trial court and the attorneys. The jury was also told that the law was in the court's
    instructions, and that they must disregard any remarks, statement, or argument
    that was not supported by the evidence or the judge's instructions. We presume
    the jury follows the trial court's instructions. State v. Hopson, 
    113 Wash. 2d 273
    , 287,
    
    778 P.2d 1014
    (1989). Although the prosecutor's statement was improper, in the
    context of the entire proceedings and the court's instructions, there is no
    reasonable basis to conclude the result would have been different had defense
    counsel objected.
    III.   Improper Communication with the Jury
    Brown contends he was denied a fair trial because the court bailiff
    improperly communicated with the jury.
    On the last day of the trial, following closing arguments, the jury retired to
    begin deliberations. The court reconvened the following day at 1:43 p.m., and
    informed the parties that it had received two questions from the jury. The court
    explained to the parties what had transpired earlier in the day:
    So the first thing that happened is the jury got my bailiff's
    attention and verbally asked her if they could use a Google Maps
    app[lication] on one of their electronic devices, and she said
    absolutely not. And then she came back and told me that she had
    had that exchange and I clarified that although I completely agreed
    with her answer, it needed to be in writing so that the answer could
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    No. 78524-9-1/11
    come from me. So at that point, she directed them to put their
    question in writing.
    The jury put the question in writing at 10:56 a.m.: "Can we use our electronics to
    pull up the Google Map used for our deliberations?"
    The court then discussed the jury's question with the parties, noting first that
    "I mean, the answer is ``no." The court asked the parties whether they preferred
    to give the jury the one word answer "no," or to give them a longer answer
    communicating the same message. Defense counsel replied that the defense
    "would be satisfied with a simple 'no," although he preferred, generally, to simply
    refer the jury back to the instructions. The court noted that the jurors had been
    instructed on the first day of trial that they were allowed to use their electronic
    devices only when the court was in recess, not in the courtroom and not while
    deliberating. This instruction was not, however, included in the court's final written
    instructions to the jury. The prosecutor also agreed with answering the question
    "no." The court wrote the answer and signed and dated it at 1:46 p.m.
    In general, a trial court should not communicate with the jury in the absence
    of the defendant. State v. Caliguri, 
    99 Wash. 2d 501
    , 508, 664 P.2d 466(1983). The
    bailiff is in a sense the "alter-ego" of the judge, and is therefore bound by the
    same constraints. State v. Bourgeois, 
    133 Wash. 2d 389
    , 407, 945 P.2d 1120(1997)
    (quoting O'Brien v. City of Seattle, 
    52 Wash. 2d 543
    , 547-48, 
    327 P.2d 433
    (1958)).
    RCW 4.44.300 specifically provides that the court bailiff
    shall not allow any communication to be made to [the jury], nor make
    any himself or herself, unless by order of the court, except to ask
    them if they have agreed upon their verdict, and the officer shall not,
    before the verdict is rendered, communicate to any person the state
    of their deliberations or the verdict agreed on.
    11
    No. 78524-9-1/12
    We have held that a bailiff is forbidden to communicate with the jury during
    deliberations except to inquire if it has reached a verdict, or to make innocuous or
    neutral statements. State v. Booth, 
    36 Wash. App. 66
    , 68, 
    671 P.2d 1218
    (1983).
    When an ex parte communication takes place, the trial judge should disclose the
    communication to all parties. 
    Bourgeois, 133 Wash. 2d at 407
    . The purpose of the
    statute is to insulate the jury from out-of-court communications that may prejudice
    its verdict. State v. Christensen, 
    17 Wash. App. 922
    , 924, 
    567 P.2d 654
    (1977).
    Even though an improper communication between the bailiff and the jury is
    an error of constitutional dimensions, the communication               may be so
    inconsequential as to constitute harmless error. 
    Bourgeois, 133 Wash. 2d at 407
    .
    Once a defendant raises the possibility an improper communication between the
    court and the jury has caused prejudice, the State bears the burden of showing
    that the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. 
    Id. CrR 6.15(0(1)
    provides that the jury shall be instructed that any question it
    wishes to ask the court about the instructions or evidence should be signed, dated
    and submitted in writing to the bailiff. The court must then notify the parties of the
    contents of the question and provide them an opportunity to comment on an
    appropriate response. 
    Id. Brown argues
    that the court failed to (a) immediately notify the parties of the
    jury's question,(b) provide the parties an opportunity to respond or object before
    any answer was given to the jury, and (c) answer the jury's question only in writing
    or in open court on the record, as required by CrR 6.15(0(1). We disagree with
    Brown that the court's procedure here deprived him of a fair trial.
    12
    No. 78524-9-1/13
    The bailiff's response to the jury's question was a simple negative, entirely
    consistent with the court's oral instructions to the jury, and the bailiff reported the
    communication to the judge directly after it occurred. The jury put the question in
    writing at 10:56 a.m. and reconvened at 1:43 p.m. The court's notification to
    counsel possibly could have been more prompt, but it was not untimely. Cf.
    
    Bourgeois, 133 Wash. 2d at 398
    , 408 (where court failed to notify parties that, during
    trial, there was contact between a juror and the bailiff until a hearing on the
    defendant's motion for a new trial, notification was untimely). The court here
    appropriately engaged with counsel to decide how to respond to the jury in writing.
    Defense counsel participated in this process, agreed with the court's proposed
    written instruction, and did not object to the bailiff's communication. Under these
    circumstances, the defendant was not prejudiced, and the error was harmless. Cf.
    State v. Russel, 
    25 Wash. App. 933
    , 948, 
    611 P.2d 1320
    (1980) (citing State v.
    Safford, 
    24 Wash. App. 783
    , 794, 
    604 P.2d 980
    (1979) (holding there was no
    prejudice to the defendant where judge responded to jury's written request for a
    legal definition of assault with a note saying "read the instructions," without
    consulting with the parties)).
    Brown further argues that the error was prejudicial because there is no way
    of knowing exactly what was said by the jurors, or exactly how the bailiff
    responded. In essence, Brown asks the court to presume that the bailiff engaged
    in a discussion with the jurors that influenced their deliberations or was otherwise
    prejudicial. We decline to make such a presumption. See State v. Smith, 
    43 Wash. 2d 307
    , 310, 
    261 P.2d 109
    (1953)(holding that the court cannot presume a
    13
    No. 78524-9-1/14
    sworn officer of the court has engaged in improper communication with the jury);
    State v. Yonker, 
    133 Wash. App. 627
    , 635, 
    137 P.2d 888
    (2006) (declining to
    presume a judicial assistant acted improperly where the jury returned a verdict
    against the defendant shortly after the assistant took the jury to lunch.)
    IV.   DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) Collection Fee
    Brown appeals the DNA collection fee imposed as part of his sentence.
    Pursuant to RCW 43.43.7541, Brown is subject to a fee of $100,"unless the state
    has previously collected the offender's DNA as a result of a prior conviction."'
    Brown contends, and the State concedes, that the fee should be stricken in this
    case because the State has previously collected Brown's DNA. We agree.
    We affirm Brown's conviction and remand for the trial court to strike the DNA
    , collection fee from the judgment and sentence.
    WE CONCUR:
    9
    1 This provision of RCW 43.43.7541 was not effective until June 7, 2018, a
    month following Brown's conviction. LAWS OF 2018, ch. 269, § 18. However, as
    both parties note, the amendment applies to defendants whose appeals were
    pending when the bill was enacted. State v. Ramirez, 
    191 Wash. 2d 732
    , 746-50,
    
    426 P.3d 714
    (2018).
    14