State Of Washington v. Soeun Sun ( 2015 )


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  •                                                                                                ILEO
    COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION II .
    2015 AUG 26       PM 12: 53
    STATE OF WASHINGTON
    BY
    E UTY
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION II
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,                                                                  No. 45058 -5 -II
    Respondent,
    v.
    SOEUN SUN,
    I1
    JOHANSON, C. J. —             A jury found Soeun Sun guilty of first degree burglary, first degree
    conspiracy to commit first degree burglary, and several related firearm and trafficking offenses
    with    accompanying firearm              enhancements.       Soeun Sun appeals his convictions, arguing that ( 1)
    the State unlawfully seized evidence, (2) there was insufficient evidence that Soeun Sun was armed
    with    a    firearm, ( 3)     the trial     court    committed    several    instructional    errors, (   4)   counsel   was
    ineffective,       and (   5) the trial   court violated     Soeun Sun'   s   speedy trial   right.   He also appeals his
    sentence,         arguing that ( 6)       imposition of the Persistent Offender Accountability Act of the
    Sentencing Reform Act of 1981, ch. 9. 94A RCW, violated Soeun Sun' s right to due process and
    right   to   equal protection.          We   reject   his   arguments   that ( 1)   insufficient evidence supports his
    convictions, (       2) the trial court improperly instructed the jury, and ( 3) his speedy trial right was
    violated. In addition, we decline to reach his ineffective assistance of counsel claim and the several
    sentencing issues he          raises.     However,    we    hold that Soeun Sun     was   unlawfully   seized and    that the
    No. 45058 -5 -II
    fruits   of   the unlawful seizure must         be   suppressed.   Accordingly we vacate the trial court' s order
    denying        Soeun Sun' s       motion   to   suppress,   reverse   his   convictions,   and remand for further
    proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    FACTS
    I. BACKGROUND
    On December 17, 2011, Fife Police Officer Thomas Vradenburg investigated a burglary at
    Sportco, a Fife sporting goods store. An inventory revealed that a total of 42 guns had been stolen.
    Detective Jeff Nolta reviewed surveillance videos captured by Sportco' s security system showing
    a white vehicle driving back and forth and stopping near the Sportco several times between 3: 00
    AM and        3: 30   AM.   Sportco surveillance videos showed two people entering the store and running
    toward the gun display cases.
    Coincidentally, Fife Police Officer Ryan Micenko ran the license plate information of the
    suspicious white vehicle            approximately 20        minutes   before the Sportco    alarms   triggered.   The
    vehicle, a white Honda, was registered to Phalay Soeung at a Tacoma address on Yakima Avenue.
    Later, Detective Nolta received information that an individual named David Bunta had
    been involved in the Sportco burglary. Fife police surveilled Bunta' s home, workplace, and car.
    On December 27, Fife police officers followed Bunta to the same Yakima Avenue address where
    the   white     Honda       was registered.     Outside the Yakima Avenue home, police observed the white
    Honda that was. seen near Sportco on the night of the crime.
    The following day, police arrested Bunta and searched his car and person incident to that
    arrest. Police found two black ski masks, a 9 mm pistol, a global positioning system unit, two rolls
    2'
    No. 45058 -5 -II
    of duct tape, and four pairs of gloves. Bunta confessed to participating in the Sportco burglary and
    admitted that others were involved, but he refused to identify his cohorts.
    Later that day, 11 days after the burglary took place, police surveilled the white Honda at
    the Yakima Avenue address.            That evening, police observed a man approach the white Honda
    carrying   a small object   that   appeared   to be     wrapped   in   a   blanket.   According to the officers, the
    man, later identified as Soeun Sun, looked around suspiciously before opening the trunk and
    placing the unknown item inside. Officers then followed Soeun Sun as he drove from the residence
    in the   white -Honda:   Soeun Sun arrived at a nearby gas station, parked, and began to pump gas.
    Officers approached Soeun Sun with drawn guns and handcuffed him.
    Detectives frisked Soeun Sun for weapons and asked him to identify himself. Soeun Sun
    initially gave false names and dates of birth. Officers continued to ask questions, suspecting that
    Soeun Sun was not telling the truth because the false information he provided was not found in the
    computer system. Police established Soeun Sun' s true identity when one ofthe officers recognized
    him from previous encounters. Police determined that Soeun Sun had an outstanding Department
    of Corrections warrant and arrested him.
    After officers read Miranda' rights, Soeun Sun admitted that he lived at the Yakima
    Avenue     address.   Police obtained and executed a search warrant for the white Honda where they
    found    a pistol wrapped   in   a   towel inside   a   backpack in the       vehicle' s   trunk.   A former Sportco
    employee identified the gun found in Soeun Sun' s vehicle as one stolen during the burglary.
    1 Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
    , 
    86 S. Ct. 1602
    , 
    16 L. Ed. 2d 694
    ( 1966).
    3
    No. 45058 -5 -II
    Officers also found ammunition and gloves in the car along with various documents
    featuring Soeun Sun' s. name. And a search of Soeun Sun' s cell phone revealed several messages
    relating to   potential    firearms transactions.       A search of the Yakima Avenue address revealed
    another 9 mm pistol. This pistol was also one of the guns stolen in the Sportco burglary.
    II. PROCEDURE
    By amended information, the State charged Soeun Sun with one count of first degree
    unlawful possession of a firearm, one count of theft of a firearm, one count of first degree burglary,
    one count of conspiracy to commit first degree burglary, one count of first degree trafficking in
    2
    stolen   property,    and one count of      conspiracy to     commit   first degree trafficking in   stolen   property.
    Before trial, the trial court denied Soeun Sun' s motion to suppress all evidence *obtained as a result
    of what he deemed an unlawful Terry stop.
    During trial, the State presented the testimony of several witnesses who were related to
    Soeun Sun and who were connected to the alleged burglary and subsequent distribution of the
    stolen firearms. The State also called T.J. Wells, a former gun salesman at Sportco. Wells recalled
    seeing three suspicious individuals wearing hoods and dark clothing on the day before the burglary.
    Wells remembered seeing the suspicious men examining the guns in the display case from which
    they   were   later   stolen.    According to Wells, one of the men had a visible tattoo of writing or
    scripture on   his    neck.     Soeun Sun has such a tattoo. Wells also testified that all of the guns were
    operable firearms. Soeun Sun did not testify.
    2
    See RCW 9. 41. 040( 1)(      a);   RCW 9A. 56. 300( 1);    RCW 9A.52. 020( 1)( a); RCW 9A.28. 040; RCW
    9A.82. 050( 1).
    3
    Terry v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
    , 
    88 S. Ct. 1868
    , 
    20 L. Ed. 2d 889
    ( 1968).
    M
    No. 45058 -5 -II
    The jury found Soeun Sun guilty of all counts and answered "yes" to the four special verdict
    forms finding that Soeun Sun or an accomplice was armed with a firearm during the commission
    of those offenses.4 The trial court sentenced Soeun Sun to life in prison without the possibility of
    parole   as a persistent offender on     the   burglary,   conspiracy,   and   trafficking   counts.   Soeun Sun
    appeals.
    ANALYSIS
    I. UNLAWFUL SEIZURE
    Soeun Sun contends that the evidence obtained as a result of his seizure and subsequent
    arrest should have been suppressed because police did not have reasonable suspicion to conclude
    that Soeun Sun was involved in any criminal activity. We agree. We hold that the trial court erred
    as a matter of law by denying Soeun Sun' s motion to suppress because the officers lacked a
    reasonable, particularized suspicion that Soeun Sun was involved in criminal activity.
    A. LEGAL PRINCIPLES
    We review conclusions of law in an order pertaining to suppression of evidence de novo.5
    State   v.   Arreola, 
    176 Wash. 2d 284
    , 291, 
    290 P.3d 983
    ( 2012). Warrantless disturbances of private
    affairs are subject to a high degree of scrutiny. Our Supreme Court has explained that Washington
    4 The jury determined that Soeun Sun was anned with a firearm at the time he committed the first
    degree burglary, conspiracy to commit first degree burglary, first degree tracking in stolen
    property, and conspiracy to commit first degree trafficking in stolen property.
    5 The record does not contain written findings of fact or conclusions of law regarding the
    suppression motion. Although failure to enter findings of fact and conclusions of law is error, such
    error is harmless if the trial court' s oral findings are sufficient to permit appellate review. State v.
    Weller, 
    185 Wash. App. 913
    , 923, 
    344 P.3d 695
    , review denied, No. 91406- 1 ( Wash. July 8, 2015).
    Here, the trial court provided a detailed oral ruling from which we can identify the findings it used
    to support its conclusion.
    5
    No. 45058 -5 -II
    State Constitution           article   I,   section   7   protects "``     those privacy interests which citizens of this state
    have held, and should be entitled to hold, safe from governmental trespass absent a warrant."'
    State   v.   Ladson, 
    138 Wash. 2d 343
    , 34% 
    979 P.2d 833
    ( 1999) (                          quoting State v. Myrick, 
    102 Wash. 2d 506
    , 511, 
    688 P.2d 151
    ( 1984)).                  Thus, we presume that a warrantless search or seizure violates
    article   I,   section   7   unless    the State      shows      that the     search or seizure   falls "`` within certain narrowly
    and   jealously     drawn      exceptions       to the     warrant requirement."'         
    Arreola, 176 Wash. 2d at 292
    ( internal
    quotation marks omitted) ( quoting                    State   v.   Day,   
    161 Wash. 2d 889
    , 894, 
    168 P.3d 1265
    ( 2007)). The
    State must establish an exception to the warrant requirement by clear and convincing evidence.
    State v. Garvin, 
    166 Wash. 2d 242
    , 250, 
    207 P.3d 1266
    ( 2009).
    The categories of narrow exceptions recognized by our courts include investigative stops.
    
    Arreola, 176 Wash. 2d at 292
    . To be constitutional under article I, section 7 as an investigative stop,
    a warrantless stop must be based on at least a reasonable articulable suspicion of criminal activity.
    
    Arreola, 176 Wash. 2d at 292
    - 93. Specifically, an investigatory stop is lawful if the officer possesses
    specific and articulable facts which, taken together with rational inferences from those facts,
    reasonably        warrant     that intrusion."         Terry v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
    , 21, 
    88 S. Ct. 1868
    , 
    20 L. Ed. 2d 889
    1968).        We evaluate the totality of the circumstances known to the officer at the time when passing
    on   the propriety of this            warrantless         stop   and search.       State v. Glover, 
    116 Wash. 2d 509
    , 514, 
    806 P.2d 760
    ( 1991).           If a Terry stop is unlawful, the fruits obtained as a result must be suppressed.
    See 
    Garvin, 166 Wash. 2d at 254
    .      The exclusionary rule mandates the suppression of evidence
    gathered        through      unconstitutional means.                
    Garvin, 166 Wash. 2d at 254
    ( quoting State v. Duncan,
    
    146 Wash. 2d 166
    , 176, 
    43 P.3d 513
    ( 2002));                         see also Wong Sun v. United States, 
    371 U.S. 471
    , 485,
    
    83 S. Ct. 407
    , 
    9 L. Ed. 2d 441
    ( 1963).
    2
    No. 45058 -5 -II
    B. REASONABLE SUSPICION
    Soeun Sun     relies on     State   v.   Doughty,   
    170 Wash. 2d 57
    , 
    239 P.3d 573
    ( 2010), and State v.
    Martinez, 135 Wn.         App.    174, 
    143 P.3d 855
    ( 2006), in support of his claim that he was seized
    unlawfully. We find these cases and another recent case from our Supreme Court instructive.
    In Doughty, our Supreme Court reversed Doughty' s conviction when a police officer
    conducted a Terry stop on Doughty after observing him approach and return from a home about
    which officers     had previously        received complaints        regarding   suspected   drug   
    activity. 170 Wash. 2d at 60
    .   The Doughty court reasoned that there was no articulable suspicion to conduct a stop
    because there was no indication that Doughty interacted with anyone in the house, no informant' s
    tip existed specifically regarding Doughty, and the officers observed no furtive 
    movements. 170 Wash. 2d at 62
    - 64.
    In Martinez, Division Three of this court held that police lacked the particularized
    suspicion necessary to conduct an investigatory stop when officers stopped Martinez after they
    observed him walking briskly and acting nervously in a high crime 
    area. 135 Wash. App. at 177
    - 78.
    The Martinez court stated that " there must be some suspicion of a particular crime or a particular
    person, and some connection             between the two."        135 Wn. App..at 182.
    Recently, in   State   v.   Fuentes, 
    183 Wash. 2d 149
    , _              P. 3d (    2015), our Supreme Court
    again examined the parameters of lawful Terry stops. 6 There, the court held that the totality of the
    circumstances      did   not   justify   an    investigatory    stop   when   the arresting   officer   felt "`` the entire
    circumstance was suspicious."'                 
    Fuentes, 183 Wash. 2d at 161
    .   The Fuentes court conducted its
    6 Fuentes is a consolidated case. Here, we rely on the facts from only State v. Sandoz, No. 90270-
    4 ( Wash.    May   7, 2015), the case with which it was consolidated.
    7
    No. 45058 -5 -II
    analysis. by considering each of the facts that the arresting officer relied on to justify the initial
    
    stop. 183 Wash. 2d at 159
    .        The court noted that although we evaluate the totality of the
    circumstances to determine whether reasonable suspicion exists, we do so in part by examining
    each of the facts that contributed to the alleged suspicion. 
    Fuentes, 183 Wash. 2d at 159
    .
    The officer involved in that case relied on five facts to stop Steven Sandoz at an apartment
    building that had       experienced a              high   number of criminal          incidents: ( 1) Sandoz' s surprise when he
    saw     the    officer, (   2) conflicting stories between Sandoz and the driver of the vehicle in which
    Sandoz        was   a passenger, (           3)   Sandoz'    s    pale   appearance      and   shaking, ( 4) the presence of an
    unfamiliar vehicle, and ( 5) the officer' s. alleged authority to prevent loitering by nonoccupants.
    
    Fuentes, 183 Wash. 2d at 159
    .
    Considering all of these facts, the Fuentes court concluded that the officer who stopped
    Sandoz lacked reasonable suspicion that was sufficiently individualized to Sandoz to justify his
    
    stop. 183 Wash. 2d at 159
    .   Central to the court' s determination was the fact that, after considering
    Sandoz' s conduct and all the accompanying circumstances, nothing suggested that Sandoz
    specifically was engaged in criminal activity. 
    Fuentes, 183 Wash. 2d at 161
    . According to the court,
    the officer' s hunch did not justify the stop. 
    Fuentes, 183 Wash. 2d at 161
    .
    C. SOEUN SUN WAS STOPPED WITHOUT A REASONABLE ARTICULABLE SUSPICION
    Here, Fife police suspected that the white Honda vehicle was involved in the Sportco burglary
    because police knew that the vehicle was in the Sportco parking lot, having been seen on the store' s
    surveillance video           driving back          and    forth   at   3: 00   AM.   Second, Detective Nolta obtained credible
    information that Bunta was involved in the burglary and efforts to conduct surveillance on Bunta
    further       connected     the   white      Honda to the        crime   because     police observed   Bunta   driving to   and   from
    No. 45058 -5 -II
    the home where the Honda was parked and, at some point, an unidentified male passenger from
    the Honda made contact with an unidentified passenger in Bunta' s vehicle.
    Third, police arrested Bunta and confirmed his involvement in the crime along with the fact
    that Bunta did     not act alone.   And fourth, 11 days after the burglary, police observed Soeun Sun
    approach the Honda and place a relatively small, concealed item into the trunk. Police made this
    observation knowing that the crime involved the theft of dozens of firearms.7 But like Fuentes,
    the police here had no information that Soeun Sun specifically was or had been involved in any
    criminal activity.
    The circumstances surrounding the arresting officers' suspicion of Soeun Sun consisted
    entirely of (1) knowledge that a particular vehicle may have been associated with a crime and ( 2)
    observing Soeun Sun placing an unidentified object into that vehicle and driving away 11 days
    after the crime. Moreover, during the course of both the CrR 3. 5 and 3. 6 hearings, Detective Nolta
    admitted that there was no reason to suspect Soeun Sun other than his connection and proximity
    to the Honda.      Detective Nolta further admitted that police had seen the Honda being driven on
    several occasions before Soeun Sun' s arrest, but he could not definitively say who was driving.
    Accordingly, like Fuentes, the totality of the circumstances here did not give rise to a
    particularized suspicion     that Soeun Sun    was connected   to the   burglary.   An officer' s suspicion
    must be reasonable and a hunch, without more, does not justify a stop. 
    Doughty, 170 Wash. 2d at 63
    .
    Here, the officers had nothing more than a hunch that Soeun Sun may have been involved in the
    The record establishes that no facts were in dispute at the time of the suppression hearing.
    G
    No. 45058 -5 -II
    burglary. This falls far short of the clear and convincing evidence the State must produce to justify
    the investigative stop exception to the warrant requirement.
    D. FRUIT OF THE POISONOUS TREE
    If a Terry stop is unlawful, the fruits obtained as a result must be suppressed. See 
    Garvin, 166 Wash. 2d at 254
    . The exclusionary rule mandates the suppression of evidence gathered through
    unconstitutional means.     
    Garvin, 166 Wash. 2d at 254
    ( quoting Duncan, ,146 Wn.2d      at      176);   see also
    Wong 
    Sun, 371 U.S. at 485
    .
    Because the trial court here ruled that officers seized Soeun Sun pursuant to a lawful Terry
    stop, it did not suppress evidence obtained as a result of that stop, nor did it consider whether any
    evidence was gathered      through     constitutional means.$     We hold that Soeun Sun was unlawfully
    seized and that the fruits of the unlawful seizure must be suppressed. We reverse the trial court' s
    order   denying    Soeun Sun' s   motion   to   suppress.     Accordingly, we reverse his convictions and
    remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    II. SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE
    Soeun Sun next contends that the State presented insufficient evidence 'to establish the
    9
    existence of   the   requisite nexus   between the   weapon,     Soeun Sun,   and   the   crime.       Accordingly,
    Soeun Sun argues that his convictions for first degree burglary, conspiracy to commit first degree
    I The State did not argue and the trial court did not consider the effect of Soeun Sun' s arrest warrant
    or the validity of the subsequently obtained search warrants.
    9 Although we reverse his convictions without prejudice because of the unlawful seizure as
    discussed above, we address Soeun Sun' s insufficiency argument because, if successful, it would
    result in dismissal with prejudice.
    10
    No. 45058 -5 -II
    burglary,   and   the firearm       enhancements       must    be    vacated.    We hold that the State presented
    sufficient evidence that Soeun Sun was armed with a firearm.
    Evidence is sufficient to support a finding of guilt if, after viewing the evidence in the
    light most favorable to the State, a rational trier of fact could find the essential elements of the
    crime   beyond    a reasonable      doubt."    State   v.   Rose, 
    175 Wash. 2d 10
    , 14, 
    282 P.3d 1087
    ( 2012). " A
    claim of insufficient evidence admits the truth of the State' s evidence and all inferences that
    reasonably    can   be drawn from that        evidence."      State v. Caton, 
    174 Wash. 2d 239
    , 241, 
    273 P.3d 980
    2012).   We consider circumstantial and direct evidence to be equally reliable. State v. Delmarter,
    
    94 Wash. 2d 634
    , 638, 
    618 P.2d 99
    ( 1980).
    A person can be guilty of first degree burglary if the State proves, among other elements,
    10
    that the defendant     was armed with a           deadly     weapon.         RCW 9A.52. 020( 1)(      a).   The statutory
    definition for " deadly weapon" provides,.
    Deadly weapon" means any explosive or loaded or unloaded firearm, and shall
    include any other weapon, device, instrument, article, or substance, including a
    vehicle" as defined in this section, which, under the circumstances in which it is
    used, attempted to be used, or threatened to be used, is readily capable of causing
    death or substantial bodily harm.
    RCW 9A. 04. 110( 6).         This definitional     statute creates     two   categories of   deadly   weapons:     deadly
    weapons per se and deadly weapons in fact. A firearm, whether loaded or unloaded, is a deadly
    weapon per se.       State   v.   Hernandez, 172 Wn.          App.   537, 543, 
    290 P.3d 1052
    ( 2012) (       citing In re
    io " A person is guilty of criminal conspiracy when, with intent that conduct constituting a crime
    be performed, he or she agrees with one or more persons to engage in or cause the performance of
    such conduct, and      any   one of them      takes a substantial step       in pursuance   of such agreement."     RCW
    9A.28. 040.  But we decline to address the conspiracy charge specifically because Soeun Sun
    provides no meaningful argument related to that charge. For purposes of his sufficiency challenge,
    Soeun Sun relies entirely on the nexus argument that we address in this section.
    11
    No. 45058 -5 -II
    Pers. Restraint of Martinez, 
    171 Wash. 2d 354
    , 365, 
    256 P.3d 277
    ( 2011)), review denied, 
    177 Wash. 2d 1022
    ( 2013).
    For purposes of first degree burglary, defendants are armed with a deadly weapon if a
    firearm is easily accessible and readily available for use by the defendants for either offensive or
    defensive    purposes.         State   v.   Brown, 
    162 Wash. 2d 422
    , 431, 
    173 P.3d 245
    ( 2007). When a defendant
    has actual possession of a firearm, sufficient evidence supports a first degree burglary conviction
    despite the firearm being unloaded and no evidence showing that the defendant intended to use it.
    
    Hernandez, 172 Wash. App. at 543
    - 44.
    Soeun Sun relies entirely on Brown in support of his argument that the State was required
    to   prove   that   a nexus existed,           In Brown, two men burglarized a residence but did not have the
    opportunity to actually remove any property because the occupant returned home during the 
    crime. 162 Wash. 2d at 425
    - 26. Brown and the other man had, however, moved the homeowner' s rifle from
    a closet onto       a   bed.    
    Brown, 162 Wash. 2d at 426
    .   Our Supreme Court vacated the first degree
    burglary conviction and firearm enhancement, holding _that application of a firearm sentence
    enhancement required a nexus                   among the defendant, the     weapon, and   the   crime.   
    Brown, 162 Wash. 2d at 435
    .
    But Brown involved the question of constructive possession and the vast majority of its
    analysis, including its holding regarding the required nexus, related to being " armed" for purposes
    of the firearm sentencing enhancement. 
    See 162 Wash. 2d at 434
    n.4 ( stating that the dissent ignores
    the fact that the vast majority of courts conclude that a defendant is armed when he enters a
    building and acquires a firearm as " loot")
    12
    No. 45058 -5 -II
    This court' s decision in Hernandez offers a more apt comparison to the facts here. There,
    a group of burglars committed a series of burglaries, during one of which they took a 20 gauge
    shotgun.      Hernandez, 172 Wn.           App.    at   540.    The Hernandez court was not persuaded by the
    argument that the State must prove a nexus between the firearm and the crime because there is no
    nexus requirement, either for the purpose of first degree burglary or for a firearm enhancement
    where      there   is   actual possession of a    firearm,     rather   than   constructive 
    possession. 172 Wash. App. at 544
    .
    Here there is no dispute that firearms were taken in the course of the burglary and therefore
    either Soeun Sun or his accomplices were in actual possession of the firearms during the
    commission of the           burglary.   Soeun Sun    states    in his   own    brief that "[ t] here was evidence here that
    the Sportco        store was     broken into   at night and     firearms   were stolen."     Br. of Appellant at 24; see
    also Ex. 31 ( video surveillance evidence clearly showing two men running from the Sportco
    carrying firearms).          This fact is sufficient evidence to support the first degree burglary conviction
    and the firearm enhancement for the burglary.
    Aside from his nexus argument, Soeun Sun asserts only that no evidence. suggested that
    anyone involved in the burglary intended or was willing to use the stolen firearms in furtherance
    of   the   crime.       But "[   w]hen first degree burglary involves deadly weapons per se, specifically
    firearms taken in the            course of a   burglary, `` no analysis of willingness or present ability to use a
    firearm     as a   deadly    weapon"'    is necessary. 
    Hernandez 172 Wash. App. at 543
    ( internal quotation
    marks omitted) (          quoting 
    Martinez, 171 Wash. 2d at 367
    ).
    13
    No. 45058 -5 -II
    Accordingly, we hold that the State presented sufficient evidence that Soeun Sun or an
    accomplice was armed with a deadly weapon for purposes of first degree burglary and the
    accompanying firearm enhancements.
    III. FAILURE To INSTRUCT REGARDING " NEXUS" REQUIREMENT
    We address Sun' s " nexus" instructional error argument. due to the possibility that this issue
    may recur in case of retrial. Soeun Sun argues that even if sufficient evidence did exist to present
    the burglary and conspiracy charges to the jury, reversal is nevertheless required because the court
    failed to instruct the jury as to the nexus requirement for purposes of the first degree burglary
    charge.    We hold that for the burglary charge, no instruction regarding nexus is required because
    Soeun Sun or an accomplice had actual, rather than constructive, possession of the guns.
    Alleged errors of law injury instructions are reviewed de novo. State v. Willis, 
    153 Wash. 2d 366
    , 370, 
    103 P.3d 1213
    ( 2005).         Jury instructions are proper when they permit the parties to argue
    their.theories of the case, do not mislead the jury, and properly inform the jury of the applicable
    law. 
    Willis, 153 Wash. 2d at 370
    .
    The trial court' s instruction provided,
    Armed    with a    firearm",   for the charge of Burglary in the First Degree only means
    that the defendant or an accomplice had a firearm in his possession or control and
    that the firearm, whether loaded or not, was readily available for offensive or
    defensive use."
    Clerk'   s Papers   at   230. Soeun Sun requested that the instruction also include a ".nexus" definition
    similar to that contained in the firearm enhancement instruction.
    The trial court refused to alter its proposed instruction to include any mention of a nexus
    requirement because, in its view, the instructions as written allowed both sides to argue their
    respective theories of the case and were consistent with current case law. As explained previously,
    14
    No. 45058 -5 -II
    the trial court ruled correctly because there is no additional nexus requirement when the evidence
    suggests that defendants in first degree burglary cases have actual possession of firearms.
    
    Hernandez, 172 Wash. App. at 544
    .
    Soeun Sun again argues that the instruction was inadequate because evidence of intent or
    willingness       to    use   the firearm is       required    to    prove    that   a   defendant is       armed.   But again, as
    explained above,          Soeun Sun is incorrect because "``                no analysis of willingness or present ability to
    use a   firearm        as a   deadly   weapon"'     is necessary when a first degree burglary involves a deadly
    weapon per se,           specifically firearms taken in the                course of     that   burglary.    Hernandez, 172 Wn.
    App:    at   543 ( quoting 
    Martinez, 171 Wash. 2d at 367
    ). We hold that Soeun Sun' s claim fails.
    IX. STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL GROUNDS ( SAG)
    In his SAG, Soeun Sun appears to argue that the trial court violated his right to a speedy
    trial, he received ineffective assistance of counsel, and testimony from witnesses against him
    should not have been used as evidence. We disagree that the trial court violated his right to speedy
    trial and decline to reach his other additional grounds.
    Under CrR, 3. 3( b)( 1)( i),     an individual held in custody pending trial must be tried within 60
    days    of arraignment.           But certain time periods are excluded from the computation of time,
    including       continuances granted          by   the trial   court.      CrR 3. 3(   e).   With regard to continuances, CrR
    3. 3( f)(2) explains,
    On motion of the court or a party, the court may continue the trial date to a specified
    date when such continuance is required in the administration of justice and the
    defendant will not be prejudiced in the presentation of his or her defense.... The
    court must state on        the   record or   in writing the        reasons         for the   continuance.   The
    bringing of such motion by or on behalf of any parry waives that party' s objection
    to the requested delay.
    15
    No. 45058 -5 -II
    Here, Soeun Sun'       s   trial did not    begin for   well over a year after       his      arrest.   But all of the orders
    granting continuances in the record on appeal were made either by Soeun Sun' s trial counsel on
    his behalf or by one of Soeun Sun' s codefendants with the agreement of his trial counsel. We hold
    that no time for trial violation occurred for that reason.
    Regarding his claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, Soeun Sun states that, in his view,
    his attorney did     not provide effective representation          because Soeun Sun' s attorney did               not "[ put]
    forth   what [   Soeun Sun]         consider[ ed sufficient] effort."    SAG   at   1.    And concerning his challenge
    to the use of the testimony of Witnesses against him, Soeun Sun claims that " many if not all
    witness[ es]     against [   him] have      a record of   dishonesty."    SAG       at   1.    We need not address these
    issues because we reverse on other grounds.
    We vacate the trial court' s order denying Soeun Sun' s motion to suppress, reverse his
    convictions, and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    A majority of the panel having determined that this opinion will not be printed in the
    Washington Appellate Reports, but will be filed for public record in accordance with RCW 2. 06. 040,
    it is so ordered.
    H     SON, C. J.
    We concur:
    a.
    WOOWI—
    CCK, J.
    MELNICK, J.
    16