State Of Washington, V Martin A Jones ( 2013 )


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  •                                                                        1=iLED
    COURT OF
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE
    PPEALS
    tA
    OV ASHINGTON
    DIVISION II                JUM — 01
    2013   4
    MfE OF WASHINGTB
    STATE OF      WASHINGTON,                                          No. 4190-
    11- 5
    UT
    Respondent,                 PART PUBLI          D    O PINION
    V.
    MARTIN A.JONES,
    t.
    WIGGINS, J. . Martin A.Jones appeals his jury conviction for attempted first degree
    T. —
    P
    murder. Jones argues that his constitutional right to a public trial and his right to be present were
    violated when, during a court recess off the record, the trial court clerk drew four juror names to
    determine which jurors would serve as alternates. In light of our Supreme Court's recent public
    trial cases that make virtually any courtroom closure structural error, we agree with Jones that
    the trial court violated his public trial rights. Accordingly, we vacate his conviction and remand
    for a new trial.
    In the unpublished portion of this opinion, we address Jones's other contentions. First, he
    challenges his conviction on the basis of improperly suggestive and unreliable photo
    identification procedures. Second, he argues that the trial court, in disallowing certain testimony
    and evidence, violated his constitutional right to present a defense: Finally, in a pro se statement
    of additional grounds (SAG),
    Jones challenges his conviction for several other reasons. Unlike
    the public trial issue, we hold that none of these arguments presents reversible error.
    1
    Justice Charlie Wiggins is serving as a judge pro tempore of the Court of Appeals, Division II,
    pursuant to CAR 21( ).
    c
    2
    RAP 10. 0.
    1
    No. 41902 5 II
    - -
    FACTS
    I.    FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    Early in the morning on February 13, 2010 in Long Beach, Washington State Patrol
    Trooper Jesse Greene pulled over a minivan driven by Susan Jones, Martin Jones's wife, for
    driving in excess of the speed limit. Trooper Greene believed Susan Jones was intoxicated and
    began conducting        field    sobriety tests. During this time, Trooper Scott Johnson arrived as
    backup. Trooper Greene arrested Susan Jones for driving under the influence.
    Trooper Johnson asked Susan Jones if there was someone available who would pick up
    the   minivan, to which         she   replied "Marty" and provided     a   phone   number.   Trooper Johnson
    wrote " arty"and the phone number on his hand. Trooper Greene then took Susan Jones to the
    M
    Long Beach     Police    Department       for   processing. Shortly after being placed into custody, Susan
    Jones sent text messages to Jones informing him of her arrest.
    Before leaving the scene, Trooper Greene requested a towing company to tow the
    minivan. Trooper Johnson began processing the minivan's contents until George Hill, owner of
    Hill Auto   Body & Towing, arrived in short order.
    As the minivan was being prepared for towing, Trooper Johnson noticed a white male
    approaching. This white male was visibly agitated and spoke to Hill, asking him what he was
    doing. Hill indicated that he was preparing the vehicle for towing. As the unidentified white
    male began walking away, Trooper Johnson contacted him and asked if he needed help with
    anything. The white male responded that he did not need help and continued walking away.
    Trooper   Johnson went back to           processing   the minivan's contents. Sometime later, Hill
    saw a white male approach Trooper Johnson from behind and grab him. Hill heard.a gunshot
    3 . For clarity,, will refer to Susan Jones by her first and last name and will refer to Martin
    we
    Jones, the appellant, simply as Jones.
    2
    No. 41902 5 II
    - -
    and smelled   gunpowder. The white male had shot Trooper Johnson in the back of the head.
    Trooper Johnson, still conscious, made eye contact with the man who shot him and returned fire.
    Hill also gave chase, but the man fired upon him; then, Hill returned to assist Trooper Johnson.
    Trooper Johnson watched the shooter flee.
    Hill contacted the Washington State Patrol dispatcher, who notified law enforcement
    personnel. Long Beach police arrived and one of the officers took Trooper Johnson to Ocean
    Beach Hospital in Ilwaco. The physician who initiated treatment arranged for Trooper Johnson's
    transfer to Oregon Health Sciences University Hospital (OHSU)to ensure that Trooper Johnson
    had access to a trauma surgeon.
    At the scene, investigating officers found one .22 caliber short cartridge casing where
    Trooper Johnson had been shot. The cartridge was stamped with the logo for Cascade Cartridge,
    Inc., ammunition manufacturer.
    an
    Officers at the scene employed two K 9 units to track the scent from the shooting scene.
    -
    One of these units led to the block on which Martin and Susan Jones resided. Police realized that
    the dog was approaching Susan Jones's home.
    Police surrounded the Joneses' home.      Jones exited the home and walked toward the
    beach. Police followed him and detained him at gunpoint. Jones told police that he was going
    for a morning walk on the beach and that he had been asleep all night. Police questioned Jones
    but released him during further investigation.
    Meanwhile, Trooper Johnson recuperated at OHSU for about three days following the
    shooting.     During this time he was shown several photographs of potential suspects in
    photomontages, as well as individual photographs. Trooper Johnson did not identify the shooter
    in any of these photos. Trooper Johnson began asking to see a photo of Susan Jones's husband,
    which officers eventually showed him. Trooper Johnson identified Jones as the shooter.
    3
    No. 41902 5 II
    - -
    Following Trooper Johnson's identification, officers arrested Jones, who continued to
    claim he was at home asleep at the time of the shooting. Police obtained warrants to search his
    home and phone records. The phone records disclosed several phone calls exchanged between
    Jones and his neighbor in the early morning hours of February 13, 2010. A search of Jones's
    home disclosed a box of . 2 caliber Cascade Cartridge, Inc. ammunition manufactured in 1999,
    2
    which matched the .22 shell casing found at the scene of Trooper Johnson's shooting.
    II.     PRETRIAL PROCEEDINGS
    The State charged Jones with attempted first degree murder. Jones was initially arraigned
    in Pacific County, but due to pretrial publicity, Jones requested a venue change. The court
    granted Jones's motion and transferred the case to Thurston County Superior Court. Jones filed
    an   affidavit of   prejudice against   Thurston   County Superior   Court   Judge Pomeroy. Unable to
    accommodate the trial in Thurston County following the affidavit, the case was transferred back
    to Pacific County. Pacific County Superior Court then transferred venue to Pierce County.
    The   parties exchanged   several   pretrial evidentiary   motions.   Jones planned to present
    evidence that Trooper Greene had observed a different white male walking past the minivan 40
    minutes before the shooting, just after stopping Susan Jones. The State successfully moved to
    exclude this evidence as impermissible " ther suspect"evidence.
    o
    Jones also moved to suppress Trooper Johnson's eyewitness identification or alternatively
    present expert testimony regarding the questionable reliability of eyewitness identifications. The
    court denied Jones's motion to suppress but allowed his expert to testify.
    III.    TRIAL
    During trial, Jones sought to impeach the testimony of Sara Trejo, the Washington State
    Patrol Crime Lab's fingerprint analyst, with the e mail of Chris Sewell, who had called the
    -
    State's investigation- haphazard" and otherwise had criticized communication breakdowns
    "
    4
    No. 41902 5 II
    - -
    among law enforcement agencies. The trial court denied the use of the e mail for impeachment,
    -
    concluding that the email was a collateral matter. Jones later sought to present the testimony of
    Chris Sewell in his case in-
    - chief, but the court excluded this testimony as unduly prejudicial
    under ER 403.
    At the conclusion of the evidence, the court indicated that the court clerk would randomly
    draw the names of four jurors from a rotating cylinder to determine which jurors would be
    alternates. During the defense's closing arguments, there was a court recess during which the
    court   clerk   randomly pulled four jurors' names. The court announced the names of the four
    alternate jurors following closing arguments and excused these jurors. Jones did not object to
    any aspect of the alternate juror drawing.
    The jury found Jones guilty of attempted first degree murder and returned a verdict that
    included a firearm sentencing enhancement. Following the verdict, Jones moved for a new trial,
    claiming that the random drawing of alternate jurors violated his right to a public trial and right
    to be present and appear and defend. He also asserted that he should have been able to present
    evidence that another suspect shot       Trooper Johnson. The trial court denied Jones's motions.
    Jones appealed.
    ANALYSIS
    1.     JONES'S RIGHT TO A PUBLIC TRIAL WAS VIOLATED BECAUSE THE DRAWING FOR ALTERNATE
    JURORS WAS NOT DONE IN OPEN COURT, ENTITLING JONES TO A NEW TRIAL
    The Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution and by article I,section 22 of the
    Washington Constitution guarantee the right to a public trial. The state constitution also requires
    j]in all
    that "[ ustice          cases   shall be administered                           10.
    openly." CONST. art. I, §         A defendant does
    not waive his public trial right by failing to object to a closure during trial. State a Wise, 176
    Wn. d 1, 9, 288 P. d 1113 ( 2012). Whether
    2              3                 "``                       a criminal accused's constitutional public trial
    5
    No. 41902 5 II
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    right   has been violated is      a   question of law, subject   to   de   novo   review   on   direct   appeal. "' Wise,
    176 Wn. d at 9 (quoting State a Easterling, 
    157 Wn. 4
     167, 173 74, 137 P. d 825 (2006)).
    2                                           2            -        3
    Under our Supreme Court's recent guidance on the public trial right, we first determine
    whether a closure that triggers the public trial right occurred by asking if,under considerations of
    experience and logic, the core values of the public trial right are implicated." State a Sublett,
    "
    176 Wn. d 58, 73, 292 P. d 715 (2012)lead
    2                3              (                 opinion) . If there is a closure, we look to whether
    the trial court properly conducted a Bone Club analysis before closing the courtroom. State u
    -
    Paumier, 176 Wn. d 29, 35, 288 P. d
    2                3                            Wise, 176 Wn. d at 12. If the trial court
    1126 (2012);           2
    failed to do so, then a "per se prejudicial" public trial violation has occurred "even where the
    defendant failed to object at trial."Wise, 176 Wn. d at 18. The remedy is typically a new trial.
    2
    Wise, 176 Wn. d at 19.
    2
    Applying these standards to this case, we conclude that the trial court violated Jones's
    public trial right, so he is entitled to a new trial. The drawing of alternate jurors occurred off the
    record during a court recess. The trial court failed to engage in a Bone Club analysis, resulting in
    -
    an error that is per se prejudicial. We must therefore vacate Jones's conviction and remand this
    case for retrial.
    A. The Experience and Logic Test Indicates that the Alternate Juror Drawing Constituted
    a Closure
    The United States Supreme Court originally developed the experience and logic test to
    determine whether the public's right to access trials attaches under the First Amendment. See
    4
    Although Sublett was a splintered decision, at least five justices voted to adopt the experience
    and     logic   test. See 176   Wn. d at 73 (lead
    2                         136                        I
    concurring) ( "
    opinion), (Stephens, J.,                                     believe
    ...
    considerations of logic and experience appropriately guide the determination of when the public
    trial right attaches. ").
    5
    State a Bone Club, 128 Wn. d 254, 906 P. d 325 (1995).
    -           2             2
    M
    No. 41902 5 II
    - -
    Press -Enterprise Co. a Superior Court, 478 U. . 1, 7, 
    106 S. Ct. 2735
    , 92 L. Ed. 2d (1986)
    S
    Press II).The experience prong of the test "asks ``whether the place and process have
    historically been open to the press and general public."'
    Sublett, 176 Wn. d at 73 (quoting Press
    2
    II,478 U. . at 8). other words, the court engages in an historical inquiry to determine whether
    S        In
    the type of procedure is one that has traditionally been open to the public. "
    The logic prong asks
    whether public access plays a significant positive role in the functioning of the particular
    process in question."'
    Sublett, 176 Wn. d at 73. Relevant to logic inquiry are the overarching
    2
    policy objectives of having an open trial such as fairness to the accused ensured by permitting
    public scrutiny of proceedings. See Richmond Newspapers, Inc. v Virginia, 448 U. . 555, 572,
    S
    
    100 S. Ct. 2914
    , 
    65 L.Ed. 2d 973
     (1980) ( "
    People in an open society do not demand infallibility
    from their institutions, but it is difficult for them to accept what they are prohibited from
    observing. "); State a Brightman, 155 Wn. d 506, 514, 122 P. d 150 (2005) ( " public trial
    2                  3              The
    right serves to ensure a fair trial, to remind the officers of the court of the importance of their
    functions, to encourage witnesses   to   come   forward, and   to   discourage perjury. "). If both prongs
    of the experience and logic test are implicated, the public trial right attaches, and the " one Club
    B     -
    factors must be considered before the proceeding may be closed to the public." Sublett, 176
    Wn. d at 73. We proceed to provide a more detailed experience and logic analysis.
    2
    1. The Washington " experience" of selecting alternate jurors is varied but is
    typically part of voir dire, which is performed in open court
    Although selecting alternate jurors has not received a great deal of attention in
    Washington, our courts' historical and current practices indicate that alternate juror selection is
    largely performed at the same time and in the same way as voir dire, and thus occurs on the
    record in   a   courtroom that is open to the   public. Therefore, the experience of alternate jury
    selection in this state has been one that traditionally the public has been able to witness.
    7
    No. 41902 5 II
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    At common law, if a juror became incapacitated, the entire jury was discharged, a new
    jury was selected, and the case retried. See Recent Cases, 11 WASH. L. REV. 106, 110 (1936)
    citing Dennis a State, 
    96 Miss. 96
    , 
    50 So. 499
     (1909);
    State a Hasledahl, 2 N. . 521, 52 N. .
    D            W
    315 (1892)).
    Washington's variant of the common law rule allowed the trial to continue without
    an incapacitated juror if both parties agreed or to retry the case before a new jury if the parties
    -
    did not agree. 2 HILL'S CODE     OF        ch. II, §
    PROC.,       360. Washington had no rules directly on point
    for juror incapacitation in criminal cases and applied civil jury rules in all cases until 1917. See
    REM. 1915' ODE §
    C             2137 ( uror rules in criminal trials governed by civil rules); S CODE §
    j                                                       PIERCE'
    8511 (1919)civil rules for juror incapacitation unchanged since 1891).
    (
    In 1917, the Legislature passed Senate Bill 136, titled "Alternate Jurors in Criminal
    Actions."LAws     OF   1917, ch. 37, §1. It provided in pertinent part,
    Whenever, in the opinion of a judge of a superior court about to try a [felony]
    defendant ... [ and] the trial is likely to be a protracted one, the court may cause
    an entry to that effect to be made in the minutes of the court, and thereupon,
    immediately after the jury is impaneled and sworn the court may direct the calling
    of one or two additional jurors, in its discretion, to be known as "alternate jurors."
    Such jurors must be drawn from the same source, and in the same manner, and of
    the same qualifications as the jurors already sworn, to be subject to the same
    examination and     challenge ....   If,before the final submission of the case, a juror
    die, or become ill,so as to be unable to perform his duty, the court may order him
    to be discharged and draw the name of an alternate, who shall then take his place
    in the jury box and be subject to the same rules and regulations as though he had
    been elected as one of the original jurors.
    LAws   OF   1917, ch. 37, § 1. Thus, Washington's first enactment regarding alternate jurors not
    only specified a particular procedure for the alternate juror selection, but it specifically instructed
    that alternate jurors be called in the same manner as deliberating jurors and subject to forcause
    -
    and peremptory challenges in open court. This statute remained in effect until 1984. See former
    RCW 10. 9.1950),
    070 (
    4        repealed               by LAws   OF   1984, ch. 76, §30( ).
    6
    8
    No. 41902 5 II
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    Criminal Rule (CrR)6. superseded former RCW 10. 9. It directs that "[ hen the
    5                       070.
    4                    w]
    jury is selected the court may direct the selection of one or more additional jurors, in its
    discretion, to be known     as   alternate   jurors." CrR 6. also states that when "a juror is found
    5
    unable to perform the duties the court shall order the juror discharged, and the clerk shall draw
    the name of an alternate who shall take the juror's place on the jury."
    CrR 6. ,like former RCW
    5
    070,
    10. 9. contemplates that all jurors—
    4                                whether deliberating jurors or alternate jurors are
    —
    selected at the same time through the same process.
    Washington's pattern jury instructions also indicate that alternate juror selection occurs
    before trial   during   voir dire.     11A WASHINGTON PRACTICE:          WASHINGTON PATTERN JURY
    -  3d ed. 2008 &
    INSTRUCTIONS: CRIMINAL APP. C THE CRIMINAL JURY TRIAL, at 787 88 (                               Supp.
    2011) (If alternate jurors are to be empaneled [sic],
    "                                           they should be called, questioned on voir
    dire, and instructed on their duties as alternates at this time. ")
    Another provision instructs the judge to address the alternate jurors by stating, At the
    "
    outset of this trial,you were selected to serve in case one of the jurors became unable to serve on
    the   jury." 11 WASHINGTON PRACTICE: WASHINGTON PATTERN JURY INSTRUCTIONS: CRIMINAL
    4.9, at
    6        137 (3d ed. 2008 &     Supp. 2011).The pattern jury instructions thus indicate that the trial
    courts should handle matters pertaining to alternate jurors in the same manner as their
    deliberating counterparts
    Under Washington's civil rules, a] jurors shall be drawn in the same manner,
    "[ lternate
    shall have the same qualifications, shall be subject to the same examination and challenges, shall
    take the same oath, and shall have the same functions, powers, facilities, and privileges as the
    regular jurors."CR 47( ).
    b Where one to two alternates will be impaneled, each party receives
    one   additional peremptory      challenge.    CR   47( ). the case of three or four alternates, each
    b In
    party may exercise two additional peremptory challenges and in the case of five to six alternates,
    0
    No. 41902 5 II
    - -
    each party receives three additional peremptory challenges. CR 47( ):
    b Thus, Civil Rule 47( )
    b
    also contemplates that alternate jurors are treated in the same manner as regular jurors during
    voir dire.
    Several local superior court rules are consistent with selecting alternate jurors as part of
    the voir dire process. A few local rules refer to the "struck jury"method. A struck jury is "[
    a]
    jury selected by allowing parties to alternate in striking from a list any person whom a given
    party does not wish to have on the jury, until the number is reduced to the appropriate number
    traditionally 12)." S
    BLACK'        LAw DICTIONARY 935 ( 9th ed.          2009). This manner of alternate
    juror selection would occur as part of the voir dire process. This is the jury selection method in
    Whitman, Pacific, Thurston, Asotin, Columbia, and Garfield Counties. See WHITMAN COUNTY
    SUPER. CT. LOCAL CIv. R. 47( );
    a PACIFIC COUNTY SUPER. CT. LOCAL R. 4; THURSTON COUNTY
    STRUCK       JURY     HANDBOOK,        available      at   us superior documents/
    thurston.
    www.    wa.
    co. //
    Struck 20Jury 20Handbook.pdf;
    %       %            HELLS CANYON CIRCUIT LOCAL R.7(3).
    1
    Other local   court rules   provide   more   varying   methods for alternate   juror   selection. In
    Grant County civil cases, jurors are assigned roster numbers and are then eliminated through
    usual forcause and peremptory
    -                          challenges. GRANT COUNTY SUPER. CT. LOCAL CIv. R. 47( ).
    c
    The remaining 12 jurors with the lowest roster numbers become the jury and the remaining
    jurors with the next lowest roster numbers are seated as alternate jurors. GRANT COUNTY SUPER.
    CT. LOCAL CIv. R. 47( ). Okanogan Superior Court, parties may stipulate that an alternate
    c In
    juror be designated by random drawing following closing arguments, i] lieu of the procedure
    "[ n
    designated by    statute." OKANOGAN COUNTY SUPER. CT. LOCAL R.                  9( ). Presumably, the
    b
    procedure designated by statute" is the procedure employed by former RCW 10. 9.
    070,
    4
    discussed above. In Kitsap County, the clerk assigns all jurors random numbers beginning with
    10
    No. 41902 5 II
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    the number    one.    KITSAP COUNTY SUPER. CT. LOCAL CIv. R. 47( ).
    1 Generally             alternates are
    questioned during     voir dire in the   same   way   as   regular jurors. KITSAP COUNTY SUPER. CT.
    LOCAL CIv.R.47( )( —(
    C),
    1 3)
    4).(
    Taken together, both the historic and current practices in Washington reveal that the
    procedure for selecting alternate jurors, like the selection of regular jurors, generally occurs as
    part of voir dire in open court. As our Supreme Court has recognized, voir dire has traditionally
    been and must continue to be open to the.public. See State a Momah, 167 Wn. d 140, 148, 217
    2
    P. d 321 (2009); re Pers. Restraint of Orange, 152 Wn. d 795, 804',100 P. d 291.(
    3             In                                    2                  3      2004);
    see
    also Press -Enters. Co. a Superior Court, 464 U. . 501, 505, 
    104 S. Ct. 819
    , 
    78 L.Ed. 2d 629
    S
    1984).Thus, even though various Washington courts might employ slightly differing methods
    to select alternate jurors, we conclude that the Washington experience of alternate juror selection
    is one connected to the voir dire process for jury selection. Therefore, alternate juror selection,
    under our experience, has been and continues to be publicly open.
    2.   Considerations of logic"indicate that a drawing of alternate jurors implicates the
    "
    core concerns of the constitutional right to public trial
    Turning to the logic prong of the experience and logic test, our inquiry focuses on the
    purposes of the public trial right and the constitutional assurance of courts. Washington
    courts have recognized these purposes as ensuring a fair trial, reminding court officers of the
    importance of their duties, encouraging witnesses to come forward, and discouraging perjury.
    Sublett, 176 Wn. d at 72; Brightman, 155 Wn. d at 514. Two of the purposes of the public trial
    2                           2
    right are implicated in this case: basic fairness to the defendant and reminding the trial court of
    the importance of its functions.
    6
    If the defendant objects to this procedure, the clerk will draw the numbers in open court at the
    beginning of trial. KITSAP COUNTY SUPER. CT. LOCAL CIv.R.47( ).
    1
    11
    No. 41902 5 II
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    At least three times before and during trial, the trial court indicated that it would
    randomly draw alternate jurors at the trial's conclusion. See 1 Verbatim Report of Proceedings
    VRP)at 35 ( " f we are not going to tell [the jurors that they are alternates],then it' random and
    I                                                                         s
    we pull it out of the rotating cylinder, and it' whoever is left is who is eligible to be selected
    s
    23
    out. ");    VRP at 3808 ( The drawing] will be random. The box to be spun looks a little like an
    "[
    old fashioned     bingo, but   it' wooden. [ The
    s                    court clerk] has all 16 of your juror numbers, and
    after all of the closing arguments she will tell me which four numbers have been selected at
    random.     We    don't know     now. "); 25                   flour
    VRP at 4061 ( "[          jurors number [sic] were pulled
    randomly, and     at this   time I   am   temporarily excusing   these four   jurors .... ").   But a court staff
    member conducted the drawing during an afternoon court recess, which was announced to Jones,
    counsel, and the jurors after it occurred. Thus, the alternate juror drawing occurred off the record
    and outside of the trial proceedings.
    Although we do not suggest that the alternate juror drawing in this case was anything but
    random and Jones does not appear to argue otherwisethere is simply no way to tell how the
    —
    drawing     was   performed.         The issue is not that the drawing in this case was a result of
    manipulation or chicanery on the part of the court staff member who performed the task, but that
    the drawing could have been. Where such a drawing occurs during a court recess off the record,
    the defendant and the public lack the assurance of a truly random drawing that they would have
    if the drawing were performed in open court on the record. This lack of assurance raises serious
    questions regarding the overall fairness of the trial, and indicates that court personnel should be
    reminded of the importance of their duties. Accordingly, we conclude that considerations of
    logic "mplicate the core values the public trial right serves."Sublett, 176 Wn. d at 72.
    i                                                                       2
    12
    No. 41902 5 II
    - -
    B. The Trial Court Failed to Perform a Bone Club Analysis, Resulting in an Error that Is
    -
    Presumed Prejudicial, Entitling Jones to a New Trial
    Having determined that both experience and logic require that an alternate juror drawing
    be conducted in open court, Jones's public trial right attaches. Sublett, 176 Wn. d at 73. Thus,
    2
    the trial court was required to consider the Bone Club factors before permitting the alternate
    -
    juror drawing off the record.
    The trial court's failure to consider and apply Bone Club before closing part of a trial
    -
    the   alternate juror drawingwas
    —      error.   Wise, 176 Wn. d at 13. "Violation of the public trial
    2
    right, even when not preserved by objection, is presumed prejudicial to the defendant on direct
    appeal." Wise, 176 Wn. d at 17. Permitting a violation of the public trial right to go unchecked
    2
    would erode our open, public system of justice and could ultimately result in unjust and secret
    trial proceedings." Wise, 176 Wn. d at 18.
    2
    7 Under Bone Club,trial courts must consider five factors prior to closing the proceedings:
    -
    1.   The proponent of closure or sealing must make some showing [ of a
    compelling interest], and where that need is based on a right other than an
    accused's right to a fair trial, the proponent must show a_ "
    serious and imminent
    threat"to that right.
    2.   Anyone present when the closure motion is made must be given an
    opportunity to object to the closure.
    3.   The proposed method for curtailing open access must be the least
    restrictive means available for protecting the threatened interests.
    4. The court must weigh the competing interests of the proponent of closure
    and the public.
    5. The order must be no broader in its application than necessary to serve its
    purpose.
    128 Wn. d at 258 59 (alteration in original) quoting Allied Daily Newspapers of Wash. u
    2          -                           (
    Eikenberry, 121 Wn. d 205, 210 11,848 P. d 1258 (1993)).
    2            -       2
    13
    No. 41902 5 II
    - -
    In Wise, our Supreme Court noted that "[ ] remedy should be appropriate to the
    the
    violation. "   Wise, 176 Wn. d at 19 (alteration in original) quoting Bone Club, 128 Wn. d at
    2                                  (            -           2
    262 (quoting Waller a Georgia, 467 U. .39, 50, 
    104 S. Ct. 2210
    , 
    81 L.Ed. 2d 31
     (1984))).
    S                                                The
    court went on to state that where the violation in question occurs as part of an "easily separable
    part of a trial,"
    remand for a public hearing, rather than for a new trial, might be appropriate.
    Wise, 176 Wn. d at 19. But where "the jury would necessarily be differently composed and it is
    2
    impossible to speculate as to the impact of that on [the] trial," appropriate remedy is a new
    the
    trial. Wise, 176 Wn. d at 19.
    2              Therefore, we hold that the violation of the public trial right
    entitles Jones to a new trial.
    II.    DRAWING ALTERNATE JURORS OUTSIDE OF JONES'S PRESENCE DID NOT VIOLATE HIS
    RIGHT TO BE PRESENT OR TO APPEAR AND DEFEND UNDER THE FEDERAL OR STATE
    CONSTITUTIONS
    In addition to his public trial claims, Jones contends that by allowing the random juror
    drawing to be done outside his presence, the trial court violated his constitutional right to be
    present under the Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment and the Due Process Clause of
    the Fourteenth Amendment and under article I, section 22 of the Washington Constitution.
    Because the random jurors selection was not a critical phase of Jones's trial and did not have any
    effect on his_substantial rights, we hold that no violation of his right to be present occurred.
    Moreover, even if Jones's trial suffered from error on this point, the error was harmless beyond a
    reasonable doubt.
    Like the public trial right, the right to be present is a constitutional question under the
    Confrontation Clause and Due Process Clause of the Sixth and 'Fourteenth Amendments,
    respectively. Article I,section 22 of the Washington Constitution protects a criminal defendant's
    .
    and defend." Constitutional     questions   are   reviewed de   novo.   State u
    right   to " appear
    14
    No. 41902 5 II
    - -
    McCuistion, 174 Wn. d 369, 387, 275 P. d 1092 (2012).We review Jones's right- be-
    2                  3                                      to - present
    claim under the federal constitution and the state constitution in turn.
    A. Jones's Right to Be Present Was Not Violated Under the Due Process Clause of the
    Fourteenth Amendment
    Washington courts apply federal constitutional law to asserted violations of defendants'
    rights to be present at trial. State a Irby, 170 Wn. d 874, 880, 246 P. d 796 (2011); re Pers.
    2                  3             In
    Restraint   of Benn,   134 Wn. d
    2     868, 920, 952 P. d 116. Although the right to be present
    2
    originated in the Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment, the United States Supreme
    Court has applied the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment in situations where
    defendants are not actually confronting witnesses or evidence against them. See United States u
    Gagnon, 470 U. . 522, 526, 
    105 S. Ct. 1482
    , 
    84 L. Ed. 2d 486
     (1985) per curiam);
    S                                                      (          Rushen u
    Spain, 464 U. . 113, 117, 
    104 S. Ct. 453
    , 
    78 L.Ed. 2d 267
     (1983).
    S
    The defendant's presence is constitutionally required "whenever his presence has a
    relation, reasonably substantial, to the fullness of his opportunity to defend against the charge."
    Snyder a Massachusetts, 291 U. . 97, 105- 6,S. Ct. 330, 
    78 L.Ed. 674
     (1934),
    S          0                                  overruled in
    part on other grounds sub nom. Malloy a Hogan, 378 U. . 1, 
    84 S. Ct. 1489
    , 
    12 L.Ed. 2d 653
    S
    1964); also Gagnon,.
    see          470 U. . at 526. Because the defendant's presence must be reasonably
    S
    substantially related to his or her ability to defend, the right is not triggered where "presence
    would be useless, or the benefit but a shadow."Snyder, 291 U. .at 106 07.
    S         -
    The random drawing of jurors' names to determine which would be alternates was not a
    critical phase of the trial. Jones had the opportunity during voir dire to question, challenge, and
    ultimately select all the jurors, including those who were randomly selected as alternates, well
    before the alternate drawing.      Although the initial juror selection is "a critical stage of the
    criminal proceeding, during which the defendant has a constitutional right to be present,"
    Gomez
    15
    No. 41902 5 II
    - -
    v United States, 490 U. . 858, 873, 
    109 S. Ct. 2237
    , 
    104 L. Ed. 2d 923
     (1989),
    S                                                      voir dire vastly
    differs from the administrative function of later randomly selecting alternate jurors. Although
    this selection violated Jones's public trial right, nothing about the alternate juror selection had
    any relation, let alone a reasonably substantial one, to Jones's ability to defend against the
    attempted murder charge.
    Jones relies on Irby for the proposition that any selection of jurors, even alternate jurors
    at the end of trial, implicates his due process rights. In Irby,the judge, prosecution, and defense
    exchanged e mails regarding juror responses to the juror questionnaire, including possible
    -
    dismissals of jurors for    hardship   and for   cause.       170 Wn. d at 878, 884. When these a mails
    2                             -
    were sent, Irby was in jail and his attorneys never communicated with him regarding the contents
    of the e-
    mails. Irby 170 Wn. d at 884. Noting that the right to be present during jury selection
    .     2
    attaches when the work of empanelling the jury begins, the court held that because a mails
    -
    regarding jury selection were part of empanelment, " onducting jury selection [by e mail] in
    c                                -
    Irby's absence was a violation of his right under the due process clause."Irby 170 Wn. d at 884.
    2
    Notably, Irby involves the defendant's right to be present during the initial jury selection,
    not the alternate juror drawing at the trial's end. Unlike Irby,- the time alternates were excused,
    at
    Jones's   jury   had been   empanelled   and present at his trial for more than five weeks. Jones's
    situation simply does not implicate the right to be present addressed in Irby. We hold that the
    .
    alternate juror selection was not a critical stage that triggered Jones's right to be present under
    the Due Process Clause of the United States Constitution.
    B. The Alternate Juror Drawing Did Not Violate Jones's Right to Appear and Defend
    Under Article I,Section 22 of the State Constitution
    Article I, section 22 - of the Washington Constitution provides that "[i] criminal
    n
    prosecutions     the accused shall have the      right   to appear and defend in   person." In Irby, our
    16
    No. 41902 5 II
    - -
    Supreme Court recognized that the state constitutional right to appear and defend is arguably
    broader than the federal due process right to be present. 170 Wn. d at 885 n. . The Irby court
    2           6
    based this determination in part on State a Shutzler, 
    82 Wash. 365
    , 367, 
    144 P. 284
     (1914),
    overruled in part on other grounds by State a Caliguri, 99 Wn. d 501, 664 P. d 466 (1983),
    2             2             in
    which the Supreme Court stated that " t is the right of the accused to be present at every stage of
    i
    the trial when his substantial rights may be affected."Thus, in Washington, the right to appear
    and defend as guaranteed by article I,section 22 of the Washington Constitution is triggered at
    any time during trial that a defendant's substantial rights may be affected.
    The alternate juror drawing in this case is not one of those times. As already discussed,
    Jones had the opportunity to participate in the selection of 16 jurors during voir dire. After the
    excusal of four jurors, any variation in the makeup of the remaining jurors should have been
    satisfactory to Jones, regardless of whether he was present when the selection of alternates
    occurred. See State a Gentry, 125 Wn. d 570, 616, 888 P. d 1105 (1995)holding that because
    2                  2               (
    t] Defendant participated in [the jurors']selection and the entire panel, both regular jurors
    he
    and alternates,was ultimately accepted by the Defendant," fact that an alternate mistakenly
    the
    deliberated in the case caused no prejudice). The trial court's alternate juror selectionn procedure
    therefore did not violate Jones's right to appear and defend under article I,section 22 of the
    Washington Constitution.
    C. Jones's Absence at the Time Alternate Jurors Were Drawn, if Error at All, Was
    Harmless Error Beyond a Reasonable Doubt
    Both the federal due process right to be present and the state constitutional right to appear
    and defend are subject to harmless error analysis. Rushen, 464 U. . at 117 18;Irby, 170 Wn. d
    S          -              2
    at 885 86. "
    -     The burden of proving harmlessness is on the State and it must do so beyond a
    17
    No.41902 5 II
    - -
    reasonable doubt." Caliguri, 99 Wn. d at 509. "Nonetheless, the defendant must first raise at
    2
    least the possibility of prejudice."Caliguri, 99 Wn. d at 509.
    2
    Jones does not demonstrate a possibility of prejudice. He participated in and accepted the
    selection of 16 jurors, knowing that only 12 of them would ultimately deliberate. Because 12 of
    them did actually deliberate and come to a verdict—
    exactly as Jones expectedJones cannot
    —
    now say that the fact that he was not present at the time of the random selection of the 12
    deliberating jurors prejudiced     him.    Even if Jones's absence during the random selection of
    alternate jurors was error, the error was harmless.
    Our Supreme Court's recent decisions on the public trial right have decided this case for
    us.     Because Jones's right to a public trial was violated when alternate jurors were selected
    during a court recess off the record, we must presume Jones was prejudiced. However, we reject
    Jones's claimed error with regard to his right to be present at the time the alternate juror drawing
    occurred. We vacate the trial court's conviction of Jones for attempted first degree murder and
    remand this matter for a new trial.
    A majority of the panel having determined that. nly the foregoing portion of this opinion
    o
    will be printed in the Washington Appellate Reports and that the remainder shall be filed for public
    record in accordance with RCW 2.6.it is so ordered.
    040,
    0
    III.     THE PHOTO IDENTIFICATION PROCEDURE, ALBEIT SUGGESTIVE, WAS RELIABLE AND
    PROPERLY GIVEN TO THE JURY TO WEIGH
    Jones contends that the admission of Trooper Johnson's photo identification of Jones
    violates his due process rights. First, Jones asserts that the photo identification procedure was
    impermissibly suggestive. We agree and hold that the photo identification procedure employed
    by    law. enforcement officers   was   unduly suggestive. Second, Jones asserts that the procedure
    was unreliable because it was substantially likely to result in an irreparable misidentification
    18
    No. 41902 5 II
    = -
    under the   totality   of the circumstances.   On this point, we disagree with Jones and hold that
    Trooper Johnson's photo identification of Jones was reliable enough to be considered by the jury.
    Admission of a photo identification or a photomontage is, reduced to its essence, the
    admission of evidence in a criminal case"and is therefore "
    subject to the sound discretion of the
    trial court." State a Kinard, 
    109 Wn. App. 428
    , 432, 36 P. d 573 (2001). Instead of making
    3
    independent evaluations where constitutional issues are at play, appellate courts determine
    whether substantial evidence supports trial court's findings. State a Hill, 123 Wn. d 641, 647,
    2
    870 P. d 313 (1994).We thus review the trial court's order denying the suppression of Trooper
    2
    Johnson's eyewitness identification for abuse of discretion and substantial evidence.
    A. The Photo Identification Procedure Was Unduly Suggestive
    Jones bears the burden of showing that the photographic identification procedures
    employed by law enforcement were impermissibly suggestive. State a Vickers, 148 Wn. d 91,
    2
    118, 59 P. d 58 (2002).A photographic identification meets the strictures of due process if it is
    3
    not "so impermissibly suggestive as to give rise to a very substantial likelihood of irreparable
    misidentification." Simmons a United States, 390 U. . 377, 384, 
    88 S. Ct. 967
    , 19 L. Ed. 2d
    S
    1247 (1968).The Simmons court provided several factors that may result in a high likelihood of
    misidentification, including where the witness has only a brief chance to observe the criminal,
    sees him under poor conditions, sees "only the picture of a single individual who generally
    resembles the person he saw," sees only "the pictures of several persons among which the
    or
    photograph of a single such individual recurs or is in some way emphasized." Simmons, 390
    U. .at 383.
    S
    8 The trial court denied the suppression of Trooper Johnson's eyewitness identification based on
    stipulated evidence presented by the parties. See App.A to Br. of Appellant.
    19
    No. 41902 5 II
    - -
    Under these statements of the law, we conclude that the procedures employed here were
    impermissibly suggestive..
    The parties stipulated that following the shooting, Trooper Johnson
    made the following statements regarding how well he saw the man who shot him: " got a good
    I
    look at him "; diligent attention "; " id not get
    "                     d              a    good   look at the shooter "; "
    mostly   saw a side
    profile." These stipulated   statements   are   at best inconsistent.     On February 13, 2010, while
    Trooper Johnson was recuperating at OHSU Portland police showed him a single photograph of
    a white male. Trooper Johnson indicated that he could not be "100%
    sure" that this was the
    shooter, but indicated that the photograph resembled the shooter. Police later showed Trooper
    Johnson a sketch based on another witness's description and Trooper Johnson indicated that the
    sketch did not look like the shooter.     About an hour later, police showed Trooper Johnson a
    black- -white, poor quality copy of Jones's Department of Licensing photo; Trooper Johnson
    and
    requested a clearer copy. He was shown another photograph of a different man 45 minutes later.
    Three hours after that, police showed Trooper Johnson a montage with six photos, none of which
    was of Jones, and he responded that none of the men in the photos was the shooter. The next
    day, police showed Trooper Johnson six different photos throughout the day, none of which was
    of Jones; Trooper Johnson did not identify any as the shooter.
    In the two day period during which he was presented with these photographs, Trooper
    -
    Johnson had the name "Marty"and a phone number written on his hand from when he stopped
    Susan Jones's minivan.     Trooper Johnson twice asked to see a photograph of Susan Jones's
    husband.   On the afternoon of February 14, 2010, Trooper Johnson was shown a clear, color
    photo of Jones's Department of Licensing photograph which Trooper Johnson identified as the
    20
    No. 41902 5 II
    - -
    shooter. Later that day, after Trooper Johnson had identified a photograph of Jones as the
    shooter, a sketch artist met with Trooper Johnson to complete a composite sketch of the shooter.
    Sometime later on the same day, detectives who were unaware of Trooper Johnson's previous
    identification of Jones presented another photo montage to Trooper Johnson that included Jones's
    photo. Trooper Johnson indicated that Jones's photo "look[ d] very much similar to the
    e
    gentleman [he] saw."
    Throughout the time that police officers showed Trooper Johnson photographs to
    determine who the shooter was, he repeatedly requested photos of Susan Jones's husband,
    suspecting that Jones was involved in the shooting. He was shown several single photographs,
    including several pictures of Jones. The picture he identified as Jones likely had Jones's name
    printed on it. Then he identified Jones from a photo montage after having already identified him
    from   a    single photograph.    The identifications were made after Trooper Johnson made
    inconsistent statements about his ability to identify Jones. This all leads us to conclude that the
    photo identifications employed by law enforcement in this case were impermissibly suggestive.
    B. Despite Suggestiveness, the Photo Identification Procedure Was Reliable Enough to
    Be Given to the Jury
    Even though several aspects of the photo identification procedures were suggestive, the
    reliability of the identification, considering the totality of the circumstances, controls the
    determination of whether the procedures created a substantial likelihood of irreparable
    misidentification. Manson a Brathwaite, 432 U. . 98, 113 14, 
    97 S. Ct. 2243
    , 
    53 L. Ed. 2d 140
    S           -
    1977); a Biggers, 409 U. . 188, 199 200, 
    93 S. Ct. 375
    , 
    34 L.Ed. 2d 401
     (1972).In other
    Neil              S            -
    9 Based on the photocopy of the Department of Licensing photograph attached to the parties'
    stipulation, it appears that Jones's name and identifying information was printed below the
    photograph.
    21
    No. 41902 5 II
    - -
    words, if the identification is reliable, it cures the suggestive nature of the confrontation
    procedure.
    The United States Supreme Court has provided several factors to determine the
    identification's reliability, includ[ ng]the opportunity of the witness to view the criminal at the
    "    i
    time of the crime, the witness' degree of attention, the accuracy of his prior description of the
    criminal, the level of certainty demonstrated at the confrontation, and the time between the crime
    and the confrontation." Brathwaite, 432 U. . at 114; Biggers, 409 U. . at 199 200. Based on
    S                         S          -
    the facts presented in the parties' stipulation, the trial court carefully weighed each of these
    factors in its order        denying   Jones's motion to suppress   Trooper Johnson's identification.   It
    determined that the there was no substantial likelihood of irreparable misidentification. We hold
    that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by reaching this determination.
    Furthermore, in Brathwaite, the United States Supreme Court indicated that the reliability
    of eyewitness identification was best left to the jury:
    S]ch evidence is for the jury to weigh. We.are content to rely upon the good
    u
    sense and judgment of American juries, for evidence with some element of
    untrustworthiness is customary grist for the jury mill. Juries are not so susceptible
    that they cannot measure intelligently the weight of identification testimony that
    has some questionable feature.
    432 U. . at
    S               116.    The trial court permitted evidence of Trooper Johnson's eyewitness
    identification, noting that any defects in the evidence go to the evidence's weight, not its
    admissibility.        It did not abuse its discretion in    doing   so.   We hold that the trial court
    appropriately allowed the prosecution to present eyewitness identification evidence, leaving for
    10
    the   jury   the   question of how much   credence such evidence deserved.
    io
    The State also asserts that there were exigent circumstances that "necessitated showing
    Trooper Johnson photographs as expeditiously as possible."Br. of Resp't at 38. The trial court
    also found that exigent circumstances required identification procedures that could otherwise
    have been less suggestive. Jones did not assign error to this finding. " nchallenged findings are
    U
    22
    No. 41902 5 II
    - -
    C. The Trial Court Was Not Required to Give a Cautionary Instruction Regarding the
    Unreliability of Eyewitness Identification
    In his SAG, Jones argues that the trial court should have given a cautionary instruction to
    the jury to warn of the problems inherent in eyewitness identifications. He relies on the Court of
    Appeals' discussion of this issue in State a Allen, 
    161 Wn.App. 727
    , 255 P. d 784 (2011), d,
    3             aff'
    Wn. d _,
    2          294 P. d 679 (2013). We
    3                        hold that it was unnecessary to give a cautionary
    instruction in this case.
    The Court of Appeals in Allen recognized the dangers of eyewitness identification, noting
    that "[
    m] istaken eyewitness identification is a leading cause of wrongful conviction." 161 Wn.
    App. at 734. Our Supreme Court echoed these concerns in its Allen opinion noting that the
    vagaries of eyewitness identification are well -known; the annals of criminal law are rife with
    instances of mistaken identification. "'   294 P. d at 682 (quoting United States a Wade, 388 U. .
    3                                              S
    218, 228, 
    87 S. Ct. 1926
    , 
    18 L.Ed. 2d 1149
     (1967)).
    The Supreme Court in Allen discussed how varying jurisdictions address problems in
    eyewitness identification, noting that while some courts leave eyewitness jury instructions to the
    trial court's discretion, others specifically disallow such instructions as impermissible comment
    on the evidence. 294 P. d at 683 84 (
    3          - comparing United States a Sambrano, 505 F. d 284 (9th
    2
    Cir. 1974),
    with State a Valencia, 
    118 Ariz. 136
    , 575 P. d 335 (Ct.App. 1977)).
    2                      Ultimately, the
    court determined that a jury instruction on eyewitness identification is neither inappropriate nor
    required for due process reasons. Allen, 294 P. d at 684 85. Uncertain that such a cautionary
    3          -
    instruction solves the unreliability problem inherent in eyewitness identifications "any more than
    verities on appeal." In re Dependency of M. .174 Wn. d 1, 9, 271 P. d 234 (2012).Thus,
    R., 2
    S                       3
    the issue of exigent circumstances is not before us.
    We note that Allen was primarily concerned with cross -racial identification, which is not at
    issue in this case. See 161 Wn.App. at 735; 294 P. d at 682 87.
    3          -
    23
    No. 41902 5 II
    - -
    would cross -examination, expert evidence, or arguments to the jury,"
    Allen, 294 P. d at 685, the
    3
    Allen court left 'the determination on whether to give a cautionary jury instruction to the trial
    court's discretion. Allen, 294 P. d at 686 87.
    3          -
    In any event, at trial, Jones had an opportunity to present the testimony of Dr. Geoffrey
    Loftus, an expert in experimental psychology, who testified at some length regarding the
    unreliability of eyewitness          identification.   Because this testimony called into question the
    reliability of Trooper Johnson's eyewitness identification of Jones, we hold that a cautionary jury
    instruction on the reliability of eyewitness identification was unnecessary.
    IV.       THE TRIAL COURT DID NOT ERR IN MAKING EVIDENTIARY RULINGS
    We turn next to Jones's challenge to three evidentiary rulings: the trial court's denial of
    Jones's motion to present evidence that another suspect might have shot Trooper Johnson; the
    trial court's exclusion of an e mail sent by a supervisor at the Washington State Patrol Crime Lab
    -
    stating   that the   investigation   was "haphazard "; and the trial court's.
    denial of Jones's motion to
    12
    exclude bunter mark evidence, allowing the State to present expert        testimony   on   the matter.
    We review a trial court's decision on admission or exclusion of evidence for abuse bf
    discretion. In re Det. of Coe, 175 Wn. d 482, 492, 286 P. d 29 (2012);
    2                  3            Diaz a State, 175 Wn. d
    2
    457, 462, 285 P. d 873 ( 2012). Thus, the trial court's decision will be reversed only if no
    3                "
    reasonable person would have decided the matter as the trial court did."State a Thomas, 150
    Wn. d 821; 856, 83 P. d 970 (2004). We may review de novo an alleged denial of the Sixth
    2                 3
    Amendment right to present a defense, but only if the evidence is material and even then only if
    the defendant's need to present the evidence outweighs the State's interest in precluding the
    evidence. State v. Jones, 168 Wn. d 713, 719, 230 P. d 576 (2010).
    2                  3
    12 Bunter mark evidence involves a logo stamped on the shell casing of a bullet using a bunter, a
    metal tool that impresses a letter or character onto the base of a cartridge case.
    24
    No. 41902 5 II
    - -
    A. The Trial Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion by Disallowing Other Suspect Evidence
    Jones argues that the trial court violated his constitutional right to present a defense by
    excluding Trooper Greene's testimony that Greene saw an individual walk by when he stopped
    Susan Jones's car. According to Jones, Trooper Green's description of this individual matched
    the description given by George Hill,the tow truck operator, who was present at the time of the
    shooting. The court ruled that Trooper Greene could not testify about seeing another individual
    unless the defendant was able to show the necessary foundation connecting another suspect to
    c
    the shooting. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in so ruling.
    The Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides in pertinent part that in
    all criminal   prosecutions, the   accused shall   enjoy   the   right ...   to.have compulsory process for
    obtaining witnesses   in his favor ...."   The United States Supreme Court has held that " ust as
    D]
    an accused has the right to confront the prosecution's witnesses for the purpose of challenging
    their testimony, he has the right to present his own witnesses to establish a defense. This right is
    a fundamental element of due process of law."Washington a Texas, 388 U. . 14, 19, 87 S. Ct.
    S
    1920, 
    18 L.Ed. 2d 1019
     (1967).However, this right is not absolute. State a Smith, 101 Wn. d
    2
    36, 41, 677 P. d 100 ( 1984). A criminal defendant has no constitutional right to present
    2
    irrelevant evidence. Thomas, 150 Wn. d at 857; State a Hudlow, 99 Wn. d 1, 15, 659 P. d 514
    2                                2               2
    1983).
    Under Washington law, w]en there is no other evidence tending to connect another
    "[ h
    person with the crime, such as his bad character, his means or opportunity to commit the crime,
    or even his conviction of the crime, such other evidence is irrelevant to exculpate the accused."
    Thomas, 150 Wn. d at 857. Our Supreme Court's decision in State a Downs, 
    168 Wash. 664
    , 13
    2
    P. d 1 ( 1932), instructive. There,the court upheld the exclusion of evidence that a well known
    2            is                                                                          -
    burglar was in Seattle on the night of a burglary. Downs, 
    168 Wash. at
    665 66. The mere fact
    -
    25
    No. 41902 5 II
    - -
    that another burglar was in Seattle on the same night of the subject burglary was not a
    circumstance[]tending in some manner to connect him with the commission of the crime."
    Downs, 
    168 Wash. at 668
    . Defendants must show more than mere opportunity to commit the
    the most remote kind of
    crime because such evidence is "``                                      speculation. "' Thomas, 150 Wn. d at
    2
    857 (quoting Downs, 
    168 Wash. at 668
    ).
    Jones's proposed presentation of Trooper Greene's testimony would have shown only that
    when Trooper Greene stopped Susan Jones's car, Greene saw someone else on the street who
    may have had     an    opportunity         to shoot   Trooper Johnson. But 40 minutes elapsed between
    Trooper   Greene's observation and the           shooting. Thus, Trooper Greene's testimony would not
    demonstrate the required connection between the person Trooper Greene saw and the shooter,
    only   that this other person walked           by     40 minutes earlier.   The trial court did not abuse its
    discretion by excluding Trooper Greene's observation of the unidentified pedestrian. .
    Jones argues that State a Maupin, 128 Wn. d 918, 913 P. d 808 (1996), case involving
    2             2             a
    the constitutional    right   to call witnesses to       support the defense, compels   a   different result. In
    Maupin, the defendant sought to elicit testimony from a witness who saw the girl that the
    defendant allegedly raped and murdered with another person after the rape and murder were
    supposed to have taken place under the State's theory. Maupin, 128 Wn. d at 922. Our Supreme
    2
    Court held that the witness's testimony went beyond speculation about mere motive or
    opportunity that someone else committed the crime because the witness "would have testified he
    saw the kidnapped girl with someone other than the defendant after the time of kidnapping."
    Maupin,    128 Wn. d
    2            at   928 (   emphasis added). Unlike Maupin, in which the defendant
    demonstrated the necessary nexus between another suspect and the crime, here Jones's argument
    boils down to the mere presence of another person on a public street who may have had the
    opportunity   to shoot    Trooper      Johnson.       This other -suspect evidence is irrelevant to exculpate
    26
    No. 41902 5 II
    - -
    Jones.     We hold that the trial court's exclusion of this evidence did not violate Jones's.
    13
    constitutional      right to present   a   defense.
    B. The Trial Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion by Excluding the Testimony of
    Washington State Patrol Crime Lab Supervisor Chris Sewell
    Jones sought to present the testimony of Chris Sewell, a Washington State Patrol Crime
    Lab supervisor, who had sent an e mail calling the police investigation of Trooper Johnson's
    -
    shooting " haphazard." Jones planned to use this e mail to impeach the State crime lab's
    -
    fingerprint analyst. Sewell's general e mail regarding the police investigation being haphazard
    -
    had nothing specifically to do with the fingerprint analysis of various items that was performed
    by    the State's    fingerprint analyst. The e mail was not offered for any purpose pertaining to
    -
    fingerprint analysis. Therefore, if permitted, the e mail would have constituted impeachment on
    -
    a    collateral matter.    See State v Alexander, 
    52 Wn. App. 897
    , 901 02, 765 P. d 321 ( 1988)
    -        2
    Contradictory or impeaching testimony is collateral if it could not be shown in evidence for
    any purpose    independent      of contradiction. "). Thus, we   hold that the trial court's exclusion of this
    impeachment evidence was not an abuse of discretion and did not implicate Jones's Sixth
    Amendment right to present a defense.
    The evidence of Sewell's opinion of the investigation was also properly excluded under
    ER 403 because " its probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair
    prejudice, confusion of the issues, or misleading       the   jury ...."   Although perhaps relevant to the
    general quality of the police investigation, the generality of Sewell's comments minimize their
    probative value. Allowing a crime lab supervisor to openly and generally criticize the entire
    13
    In his SAG, Jones asserts that the State was permitted to state that all other suspects were
    cleared, despite the lack of investigation of all 1600 tips called in from citizens. Even if Jones's
    assertion is true, Jones fails to demonstrate that any of these tips demonstrate the necessary
    connection between another suspect and Trooper Johnson's shooting.
    WA
    No. 41902 5 II
    - -
    police investigation through an opinion that it was haphazard would have elicited an emotional,
    rather than rational, response among the              jurors. Furthermore, after hearing testimony from
    several Washington State Patrol troopers, as well as from forensic 'specialists involved in the
    investigation, Sewell's testimony at a late trial stage could have misled or at best have confused
    the jury. Therefore, we hold that the trial court did not abuse its discretion excluding Sewell's
    testimony. We also hold that this exclusion of evidence did not impinge Jones's ability to present
    a defense. After all,Jones had ample opportunity to cross -examine the State's forensic witnesses
    and present his own forensic witnesses.
    C. The Trial Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion by Admitting Evidence of Bunter
    Marks on the Shell Casings
    At trial,the court permitted the State to present expert testimony comparing bunter marks
    on the base of shell casings found at the crime scene to shell casings found in Jones's home. The
    defense moved to exclude this evidence, arguing that it was pseud6scientific and novel and
    14
    therefore   required   a   Frye        hearing. To the contrary, bunter mark evidence is not a novel science
    under Frye. The trial court did not abuse its discretion by permitting expert testimony on bunter
    mark evidence.
    Under Frye, new and untried scientific procedures will not be admitted into evidence
    unless and until the underlying scientific principles on which the procedures are based are
    sufficiently established to have gained general acceptance in the particular field in which [they]
    belong[]." F. at 1014. The "Frye test is not implicated if the theory and the methodology
    293
    relied upon and used by the expert to reach             an   opinion ...   is generally accepted by the relevant
    scientific community." Anderson v Akzo Nobel Coatings, Inc.,172 Wn. d 593, 597, 260 P. d
    2                  3
    857 (2011).When Frye is not implicated, the trial court simply determines whether the evidence
    14
    Frye a United States, 
    293 F. 1013
     (D. .Cir. 1923).
    C
    28
    No. 41902 5 II
    - -
    is admissible under the two part ER 702 test: (1)
    -                    does the witness qualify as an expert and (2).
    does the witness's testimony assist the trier of fact to understand the evidence..See State u
    McPherson, 
    111 Wn.App. 747
    , 761, 46 P. d 284 (2002).
    3
    Bunter mark evidence and firearm ballistics evidence generallyis hardly novel or
    —                                        —
    untried. Although there is no reported Washington appellate case on this issue, numerous courts
    around the country have permitted firearm ballistic evidence, noting that it is an established
    science.   See, e. .,United States a Williams, 506 F. d 151, 161 ( 2d Cir. 2007) holding that
    g                                  3                            (
    government expert's firearms identification methodology matching particular guns to particular
    bullets was not pseudoscience); United States a Hicks, 389 F. d 514, 526 (5th Cir. 2004)
    3
    holding that matching.ballistics testing of shell cases is accepted methodology);Fleming u
    State, 
    194 Md.App. 76
    , 1 A. d 572, 586, 590 (2010)holding microscopic "[
    3                        (                  fJirearms toolmark
    identification" and analysis is generally accepted in scientific community); Amin a State, 278
    Al
    Ga. 74, 597 S. .332, 344 (2004)holding that ballistic and tool marks evidence is not novel).
    2d
    E                  (
    Because bunter mark evidence, like other firearm ballistics evidence, is generally accepted in the
    relevant scientific community, Frye was not implicated here and the trial court was not required
    to hold a Frye hearing.
    In this case, the trial court determined that the State's expert had the requisite experience
    and knowledge. He was a scientist trained as a firearms examiner who had examined over 3000
    cases in South Africa and the United States. The trial court also determined that bunter mark
    evidence was beyond the general knowledge of laypersons and would thus assist the trier of fact
    in evaluating such evidence. In making this evidentiary ruling under ER 702, we hold that the
    trial court did not abuse its discretion.
    V.     THE ADDITIONAL ISSUES RAISED IN JONES'S SAG LACK MERIT
    Jones raises several other issues in his pro se SAG None has merit.
    29
    No. 41902 5 II
    - -
    A. Affidavit of Prejudice and Disqualification of Judge
    Jones contends that he was denied his right to file an affidavit of prejudice against Judge
    Hogan   at Pierce    County Superior    Court.   He also argues that Judge Hogan should have been
    disqualified because her husband is a retired police officer. These arguments lack merit.
    When Jones sought to file his affidavit of prejudice against Judge Hogan, he had already
    filed another affidavit of prejudice against Judge Pomeroy in Thurston County Superior Court.
    Criminal defendants may file but one affidavit of prejudice. Because Jones had already filed an
    affidavit against Judge Pomeroy, Judge Hogan properly denied Jones's affidavit of prejudice
    against her.
    Jones asserts that Judge Hogan's impartiality is questionable because she is married to a
    retired police officer. Though Judge Hogan's husband was a police officer, he was not a party or
    witness in Jones's trial. In the order denying disqualification, Judge Hogan indicated that she
    had "presided over superior court trials for 18 years, 85% which were criminal cases
    of
    investigated by police" and that she had "no personal bias or interest in the outcome of this
    case." Clerk's      Papers   at 1249.   Jones fails to demonstrate a valid reason for Judge Hogan's
    disqualification.
    B. Speedy Trial
    Jones asserts that the several venue transfers in this case infringed his right to a speedy
    trial. However, when Jones's case was transferred from Pacific County to Pierce County, Jones
    waived his speedy trial right, allowing his trial to begin on or before February 28, 2011.
    Jones's trial started in Pierce County on January 12, 2011, so his speedy trial claim fails.
    1'
    Jones first executed a speedy trial waiver in February 2010 upon the parties' joint motion to
    continue the trial to October 2010. In July 2010, Jones moved for a change of venue; in August
    2010 the court transferred venue to Thurston County on the understanding that Jones would have
    to waive speedy trial,with trial to begin before February 28,2011. Jones executed this waiver.
    30
    No. 41902 5 II
    - -
    C. Excessive Bail
    Jones argues that the court excessively set bail at $ million. The amount of bail is "a
    5
    matter within court discretion to be reversed on appeal only for manifest abuse."State a Reese,
    
    15 Wn. App. 619
    , 620, 550 P. d 1179 (1976); also State a Jakshitz, 
    76 Wash. 253
    , 254 55,
    2              see                                        -
    
    136 P. 132
     ( 1913).      Although $ million is a high amount, the trial court heard arguments
    5
    regarding   the   setting of   bail   on   two   different occasions.   Jones stood accused of shooting a
    trooper and there was some evidence that he posed a flight risk. Thus, Jones fails to demonstrate
    that the trial court's setting of bail at $ million was manifest abuse.
    5
    D. Errors in Warrant
    Jones claims that there were several problems with the warrants issued in this case
    Throughout the police investigation, several search warrants issued allowing police to search
    Jones's homes, his vehicles, his phone records, and his DNA ( eoxyribonucleic acid). Before
    d
    trial, Jones's counsel moved for a hearing under Franks a Delaware, 438 U. . 154, 98 S. Ct.
    S
    2674, 
    57 L. Ed. 2d 667
     (1978),
    arguing that the warrants were based on affidavits that were
    intentionally or knowingly false or made in reckless disregard for the truth. Under Franks, there
    is always " presumption of validity with respect to the affidavit supporting the search warrant."
    a
    438 U. .at 171.
    S
    Jones fails to show that the affidavits supporting the search warrants included information
    that was deliberately false or made in reckless disregard of the truth. We are tolerant of some
    mistaken facts in search warrant applications and have held that perfect descriptions are not
    required. State a Boyer, 
    124 Wn. App. 593
    , 603, 102 P. d 833 (2004).And even if some of the
    3
    statements in the warrant affidavits were deliberately false, Trooper Johnson's eyewitness
    identification of Jones alone established probable cause. Jones was not entitled to an evidentiary
    Franks hearing.
    31
    No. 41902 5 II
    - -
    E. Errors at Probable Cause Hearing .
    Jones also argues that the prosecutor made false or misleading statements at the probable
    cause hearing. Jones bases his argument on objections that his attorney made. But his counsel's
    only objection      was   to   request   a    Gerstein hearing because the initial probable cause statement
    indicated that neither of the shooting's witnesses could identify Jones as the shooter. However,
    Trooper Johnson had identified Jones as the shooter at the time of the probable cause hearing.
    Therefore, we agree with the trial court that no Gerstein hearing was required.
    17
    F. Violations of Miranda                   Rights
    Jones contends that interrogating officers did not honor his requests for an attorney
    during interrogation.           Jones is correct:             officers continued to question Jones after he had
    unequivocally invoked his right to counsel by requesting an attorney in violation of Miranda and
    its progeny. See State v. Radcliffe, 164 Wn. d 900, 906, 194 P. d 250 (2008) ( "
    2                  3              Once waived, a
    suspect may ask for an attorney at any time. If he requests an attorney, all questioning must stop
    until he has   an   attorney    or   starts   talking again on his own. "). But the trial court granted Jones the
    appropriate remedy by suppressing all of Jones's statements after he unequivocally requested an
    attorney. Jones has no error of which to complain.
    G. Evidence Tampering
    Jones makes several             ambiguous           claims in his SAG   These are bald, unsubstantiated
    assertions.
    Jones asserts that the court erred in not allowing the ammunition inventory lists from his
    home to be admitted into evidence when it allowed the State to submit "misleading" phone
    16
    Gerstein v. Pugh, 420 U. . 103, 
    95 S. Ct. 854
    , 
    43 L.Ed. 2d 54
     (1975).
    S
    17
    Miranda v Arizona, 384 U. .436, 
    86 S. Ct. 1602
    , 
    16 L.Ed. 2d 695
     (1966).
    S
    32
    No. 41902 5 II
    - -
    records. Jones has not indicated what, if any, relation the inventory list has to the phone records.
    We decline to consider Jones's argument further.
    Jones also complains that the testimony of Matt Olson, a federal Bureau of Alcohol,
    Tobacco and Firearms agent, who recovered ammunition from Jones's home, demonstrates that
    evidence had been tampered with." Jones says nothing more to indicate how evidence was
    But
    tampered with and Olson's testimony sheds no. additional light on Jones's claim. We need not
    further consider Jones's unsupported assertions.
    H. Time Constraint on Closing Argument
    Jones asserts that the trial court improperly restricted the amount of time his attorney had
    for   closing argument, causing    his attorney to rush and miss   key points. Jones's counsel was
    given at least as much time as he requested for closing arguments and received no pressure from
    the court to finish his closing. Therefore, we reject Jones's argument that his lawyer did not have
    sufficient time to make a closing argument.
    I.    Disqualification of Juror
    Jones contends that a juror should have been disqualified because her husband and the
    trial judge's husband were acquainted. But Judge Hogan asked the juror whether she thought the
    fact that their husbands were friends would affect her ability to be fair. The juror responded that
    she could be fair, and Jones's attorneys did not object or move to disqualify this juror. Thus,
    even if this was error, we decline to review this issue because it was not raised at trial. RAP 2. .
    5
    J.    Instructional Errors Regarding Firearm Sentencing Enhancement
    Jones argues that there was a jury instruction error with regard to sentencing
    enhancements.        He cites State a Bashaw, 169 Wn. d 133, 234 P. d 195 (2010),
    2             3             and State u
    Ryan, 
    160 Wn. App. 944
    , 252 P. d 895 (2011),
    3             ostensibly to argue that the trial court erred in
    instructing the jury that it must decide unanimously whether the firearm sentencing
    33
    No. 41902 5 II
    - -
    enhancements     applied.       However, both Bashaw and Ryan were recently overturned on
    nonunanimity grounds.       State   a   Nunez, 174 Wn. d 707, 718, 285 P. d 21 ( 2012). All jury
    2                  3
    findings on sentencing enhancements require unanimity in Washington. Nunez, 174 Wn. d at
    2
    713. Thus, Jones's challenge to the jury instructions is meritless.
    CONCLUSION
    We reject Jones's claimed error with regard to his right to be present at the time the
    alternate   juror drawing   occurred.    We, however, vacate Jones's conviction for attempted first
    degree murder. Our Supreme Court's recent decisions on the public trial right have decided this
    case for us. Because the trial court violated Jones's public trial right when the trial court clerk
    drew alternate jurors during a court recess off the record, we must presume Jones was prejudiced
    and therefore remand this matter for a new trial.
    We affirm the trial court on all other grounds and reject Jones's claims regarding
    suggestive and unreliable eyewitness and photographic identification procedures, the trial court's
    various evidentiary rulings, and several other arguments Jones raises in his pro se SAG
    WIGGINS, J . T.
    We concur:
    J HA soN,A. .
    J.
    C                 '
    BRIDGEWATER, J. .
    T.
    P
    IM