State of Washington v. Jack Glyn Jones ( 2013 )


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  •                                                               FILED
    MARCH 12,2013
    In the Office ofthe Clerk of Court
    W A State Court of Appeals, Division III
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION THREE
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,                         )         No. 302S3-9-III
    )
    Respondent,             )
    )
    v.                              )         UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    )
    JACK GLYN JONES,                             )
    )
    Appellant.              )
    KULIK, J. -   A jury found Jack Glyn Jones guilty of two counts of first degree rape
    of a child based on incidents involving his granddaughters, J.J. and M.J. On appeal, Mr.
    Jones challenges the unanimity instruction and asserts he received ineffective assistance
    of counsel because defense counsel failed to obtain an expert witness to explain the false
    memory defense. Mr. Jones also filed a statement of additional grounds for review.
    We affirm the convictions because we conclude that the court gave a proper
    unanimity instruction, Mr. Jones's counsel was not ineffective, and the additional grounds
    for review are without merit.
    No.30253-9-III
    State v. Jones
    FACTS
    After his first trial ended in a mistrial, a jury found Mr. Jones guilty of two counts
    of first degree rape of a child involving his granddaughters, J.1. and MJ.
    J.J. 's Testimony. J.1., who was born on June 9, 1989, testified that between the
    ages of 5 and 10, she spent her summers with her grandparents in Ephrata. J.1. stopped
    going to her grandparents because she did not like the way her grandfather touched her.
    JJ. testified that during road trips, Mr. Jones would have J.J. touch his penis or he
    would rub her vagina. JJ. recounted a specific incident when they were driving in Mr.
    Jones's truck out in the middle of nowhere when a police car started to follow them. Mr.
    Jones told J.1. not to turn around or attract the officer's attention. During this time, he
    was having her rub his penis and he was rubbing the inside of her legs and vagina.
    J.J. testified that Mr. Jones took a bath with her when she was approximately 7 or 8
    years old. Mr. Jones had JJ. sit on his lap while he washed her neck, breasts, stomach,
    and vagina with a wash cloth. Mr. Jones did not put anything in JJ. 's vagina on this
    occasion. JJ. told her grandmother about this incident later the same week, but her
    grandmother thought that J J. was joking.
    J.1. also testified about an incident that took place when her grandmother was out
    of the house. On this occasion, Mr. Jones laid J.J. on the bed, pulled down her pants, and
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    No. 30253-9-111
    State v. Jones
    then performed oral sex on her by putting his tongue and mouth around her vagina, and
    licking it, and by rubbing her clitoris. J.1. testified that she was around 6 years old when
    this incident took place.
    J.1. testified about another incident in a recreational vehicle when her grandfather
    stopped his activities because he thought he heard someone coming.
    J.1. stopped going to see her grandparents when she was about 10. At that time,
    she told her Aunt Angel what had been going on. Her aunt told her parents, but they did
    not believe J.J. when they heard her allegations. lJ. stated that after this time she did not
    have any contact alone with her grandfather.
    J.1. began seeing a counselor in 2008 when she was 18 years old because she was
    very upset and she did not understand why no one would believe her when she spoke
    about the molestation committed by her grandfather. The counselor reported the abuse to
    lawenforcement. J.1. was 18 or 19 when she first gave a statement to Detective Dan
    Bohnet.
    J.1. also spoke of the guilt she felt because she failed to prevent what happened to
    her cousin, M.1. It was not until a couple of years before the 2011 trial that J.1. learned
    M.1. was alleging that she too had been sexually abused by her grandfather. J.J. indicated
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    No.30253-9·II1
    State v. Jones
    that the cousins had had little contact over the years, although they had communicated
    after the first trial about matters unrelated to the case.
    MJ 's Testimony. MJ., who was born on April 16, 1992, testified that she stayed
    with her grandparents in Ephrata during the summer from the time she was a baby until
    she was 12 years of age. MJ. testified that she stopped visiting them because of the
    molestation by her grandfather, which she said happened too many times to count.
    M.J. recalled an incident that occurred when she was about 9. MJ. testified that
    they were driving in her grandparents' truck. M.J. was driving, when her grandfather put
    his hand down her pants and pushed his finger in and out of her vagina.
    MJ. recalled another incident when her grandfather performed oral sex on her
    after she had come out of the shower. Her grandfather placed her on the bed after closing
    the blinds, and closing and locking the door.
    MJ. testified that after her Aunt Jeanne found MJ. 's diary, Aunt Jeanne repeatedly
    asked M.J. whether or not she had been sexually abused by her grandfather. MJ. told
    Aunt Jeanne "no," but after being asked more times than she could count, M.J. told her
    aunt, and then her mother, about the abuse. MJ. testified that her Aunt Jeanne never told
    M.J. what to say.
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    No.30253-9-II1
    State v. Jones
    When M.1.'s mother learned about the abuse, she contacted the Ephrata Police
    Department. M.1., who was 12 at the time, was examined at the sexual assault center at
    Providence Hospital in Everett by Paula Skomski, a forensic nurse examiner. Ms.
    Skomski obtained a history from M.1., who told her that this activity had been going on
    with her grandfather as long as she could remember. MJ. had written a poem in her diary
    entitled, "She Just Wants to Die." Report of Proceedings (RP) (May 5, 2011) at 231. Ms.
    Skomski had MJ. sign a safety plan agreeing that she would call someone if she had
    thoughts about harming or killing herself.
    MJ 's Mother's Testimony. M.J.'s mother testified that M.1. began to show a
    reluctance to visit her grandfather about one year before she learned ofMJ.'s allegations.
    M.1. was interviewed by Detective Dave Matney and a prosecutor in 2004 when the
    incidents first came to light. MJ. testified that her contact with her cousin, J.1., was
    sporadic, occurring only when the two of them were in Ephrata. It was not until three or
    four years prior to the 2011 trial that M.1. learned that J.J. had made similar allegations
    regarding their grandfather. M.J.'s mother testified that the only time the two girls spent
    together was when they were at the grandparents' home.
    Verdict. On May 6, 2011, the jury found Mr. Jones guilty of two counts of first
    degree rape of a child.
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    No.30253-9-III
    State v. Jones
    ANALYSIS
    To-Convict Instruction. To ensure jury unanimity in multiple acts cases, the State
    must either (1) elect the particular criminal act upon which it will rely for the conviction;
    or (2) the trial court must instruct the jury that all of the jurors must agree that the same
    underlying criminal act has been proved beyond a reasonable doubt. State v. Kitchen, 110
    Wn.2d 403,411, 
    756 P.2d 105
     (1988).
    When the State fails to make proper identification of the specific act charged, and
    the trial court fails to instruct the jury on unanimity, there is constitutional error. "The
    error stems from the possibility that some jurors may have relied on one act or incident
    and some another, resulting in a lack of unanimity on all of the elements necessary for a
    valid conviction." Id.
    Mr. Jones asserts the State elected a particular criminal act to form the basis of the
    charge of first degree child rape of JJ. However, Mr. Jones also contends that there were
    two acts that could have formed the basis of the child rape conviction relating to MJ.
    Specifically, Mr. Jones claims the State argued that the incident where Mr. Jones
    allegedly put his finger in MJ. 's vagina constituted intercourse and that a second act
    could have formed the basis for the same charge-the 2002 incident where he allegedly
    performed oral sex on MJ.
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    No.30253-9-II1
    State v. Jones
    Election by the State. The first question is whether the State elected a particular
    act upon which it would rely for the conviction. See id. Here, Mr. Jones contends that in
    closing argument, the State elected the particular criminal act of first degree rape by
    describing the incident where Mr. Jones allegedly put his finger in MJ.'s vagina when
    she was 9 years old. Mr. Jones maintains that the State relied on this particular act to
    prove intercourse.
    To support his argument, Mr. Jones relies on the portion of the State's closing
    where the deputy prosecutor argued that instruction 10, the to-convict instruction for the
    first degree child rape ofMJ., does not specifY the act forming the basis for the charge.
    The State argued:
    You heard from [MJ.], the same thing, [MJ.] loved her
    grandparents. She told you about an incident in 2008 when they were in the
    truck, the defendant was driving, they were about 20 minutes from the
    house, the defendant grabbed her hand and had the victim squeeze his penis.
    That's molestation, ladies and gentlemen.
    She told you about an act when she was nine years old when she was
    driving, her stepbrother was in the truck, the defendant was between the
    two of them, leaned forward, and put his finger in her vagina and moved it
    in and out. And that's intercourse.
    She told you about an incident in 2002 when she was ten, when she .
    came out of the shower, the defendant locked-closed and locked the door,
    closed the blinds, put her legs up, ... licked and kissed her vagina. And she
    was scared.
    RP (May 6, 2011) at 378-79 (emphasis added).
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    No. 30253-9-111
    State v. Jones
    Based on this argument, Mr. Jones claims the State elected the particular criminal
    act of first degree rape against J.J. According to Mr. Jones, the State relied only on the
    incident where Mr. Jones allegedly put his finger in MJ.'s vagina to prove intercourse
    between Mr. Jones and J.J.
    The State points out that there is no support for Mr. Jones's argument that the State
    made an election of one act of intercourse over another. In the State's view, such election
    must be accomplished through amendment of the information. Here, the information had
    not been amended and Mr. Jones was charged with having committed the act of rape ofa
    child in the first degree or, in the alternative, child molestation in the first degree for each
    of the two victims with an allegation that the unlawful conduct spanned a number of
    years.
    Because the State did not make an election between multiple acts, we must
    examine the adequacy of the court's instructions.
    Jury Instructions. In State v. Petrich, 
    101 Wash. 2d 566
    , 572-73, 
    683 P.2d 173
    (1984), a multiple acts case, the Washington Supreme Court overturned Mr. Petrich's
    convictions because the State should have been required to elect the act(s) upon which it
    was relying for conviction or, in the alternative, that the jury should have been instructed
    that all 12 of them were required to agree that the same underlying criminal conduct had
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    No.30253-9-III
    State v. Jones
    been proved beyond a reasonable doubt. This type ofjury instruction is known as a
    Petrich instruction. See, e.g., 11 WASHINGTON PRACTICE: WASHINGTON PATTERN JURY
    INSTRUCTIONS: CRIMINAL 4.25, at 110 (3d ed. 2008) (WPIC).
    Mr. Jones contends that a Petrich instruction was needed because the State relied
    on two different acts to establish first degree child rape. He maintains the trial court erred
    by giving instruction 10, the to-convict instruction for the first degree rape ofMJ. In Mr.
    Jones's view, instruction 10 did not specify the act forming the basis of the charge.
    Instruction 10 reads:
    To convict the defendant of the crime of rape of a child in the first
    degree as charged in count three, each of the following elements of the
    crime must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt:
    (1) That on or between April 16, 1997, to April 15, 2004, the
    defendant had sexual intercourse with MJ., dob 4116/92;
    (2) That MJ., dob 4116/92 was less than twelve years old at the time
    of the sexual intercourse and was not married to the defendant;
    (3) That MJ., dob 4116/92 was at least twenty-four months younger
    than the defendant; and
    (4) That this act occurred in the State of Washington.
    If you find from the evidence that each of these elements has been
    proved beyond a reasonable doubt, then it will be your duty to return a
    verdict of gUilty.
    On the other hand, if, after weighing all the evidence, you have a
    reasonable doubt as to anyone of these elements, then it will be your duty
    to return a verdict of not guilty.
    Clerk's Papers (CP) at 216 (emphasis added).
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    No.30253-9-III
    State v. Jones
    Instruction 10 does not specifY the act forming the basis for the charge. Instead,
    the instruction gave a time frame between April 16, 1997, and April 15, 2004, when the
    act of intercourse allegedly occurred. Although defense counsel raised no exception to
    instruction 10, the issue may be raised for the first time on appeal because the failure to
    provide a unanimity instruction in cases with multiple acts can be manifest constitutional
    error. State v. Kiser, 
    87 Wash. App. 126
    , 129,940 P.2d 308 (1997).
    Mr. Jones relies on instruction 10, the to-convict instruction, but this court must
    examine the Petrich instruction that was given, instruction 7. Significantly, instruction 7
    is based on WPIC 4.25, which is described as "Jury Unanimity-Several Distinct
    Criminal Acts-Petrich Instruction." WPIC 4.25 reads as follows:
    The [State] [County] [City] alleges that the defendant committed acts
    of            on multiple occasions. To convict the defendant [on any
    count] of           , one particular act of           must be proved beyond
    a reasonable doubt, and you must unanimously agree as to which act has
    been proved. You need not unanimously agree that the defendant
    committed all the acts of            . [The blanks are for the indentified
    crime.]
    Jury instruction 7 reads, in part, as follows:
    The State alleges that the defendant committed acts of rape of a child
    in the' first degree or in the alternative, child molestation in the first degree
    involving M.I. on multiple occasions in counts 3, and 4. To convict the
    defendant of rape of a child in the first degree or in the alternative, child
    molestation in the first degree in counts 3 and 4, one particular act ofrape
    ofa child in the first degree or in the alternative, one particular act ofchild
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    No.30253-9-II1
    State v. Jones
    molestation in the first degree must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt,
    and you must unanimously agree as to which act has been proved. You
    need not unanimously agree that the defendant committed all the acts of
    rape of a child in the first degree or in the alternative, child molestation in
    the first degree.
    CP at 213 (emphasis added).
    Generally, a unanimity instruction will cure the failure of the State to elect a
    particular act. See State v. Vander Houwen, 
    163 Wash. 2d 25
    , 38, 
    177 P.3d 93
     (2008).
    Here, the jury heard testimony regarding multiple acts and was appropriately presented
    with a Petrich unanimity instruction.
    Examining the record here, we conclude that the court gave a proper Petrich
    instruction to the jury. The instruction required the jury to "unanimously agree as to
    which act has been proved."
    Ineffective Assistance ofCounsel. Mr. Jones asserts that trial counsel's
    perfonnance was ineffective because he failed to secure an expert witness to support the
    defense's theory that multiple interviews of J.1. and M.1. created false memories of the
    alleged abuse.
    To prove ineffective assistance of counsel, a defendant must show by a
    preponderance of the evidence that his counsel's perfonnance was objectively
    unreasonable and that the deficient performance prejudiced him. Strickland v.
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    No.30253-9-III
    State v. Jones
    Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 687-88, 104 S. Ct. 2052,80 L. Ed. 2d 674 (1984). A
    reviewing court is not required to address both prongs of the test if the appellant makes an
    insufficient showing on one prong of the test. Id. at 697.
    In State v. Willis, 
    151 Wash. 2d 255
    ,87 P.3d 1164 (2004), the court held that the
    admissibility of an expert regarding the use of child witnesses was not an abuse of
    discretion. In Willis, the court followed its conclusion in State v. Swan, 
    114 Wash. 2d 613
    ,
    656, 
    790 P.2d 610
     (1990), that the fact that younger children were more susceptible to
    suggestion was well within the understanding of the jury. Willis, 151 Wn.2d at 261. But
    Willis also acknowledges that in sexual abuse cases, specialized knowledge regarding the
    effects of specific interviewing techniques and protocols in sexual abuse cases would not
    be within the common experience ofajury. Id. (quoting State v. Willis, 113 Wn. App.
    389,394,54 P.3d 184 (2002), rev'd in part by 
    151 Wash. 2d 255
    ). Willis concluded that the
    trial court did not abuse its discretion by excluding the expert testimony because the
    witness was highly equivocal and his testimony would not help the trier of fact given the
    consistent assertions made by the child. Id. at 264.
    In State v. Downing, 
    151 Wash. 2d 265
    , 274, 
    87 P.3d 1169
     (2004), the trial court
    applied the abuse of discretion standard and the due process standard to the trial court's
    denial of a continuance. The motion in question was Mr. Downing's motion for a
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    No. 30253-9-111
    State v. Jones
    continuance in order to obtain expert testimony for the express purpose of reconsidering
    the trial court's ruling that the victim was competent to testify. The court determined that
    the trial court did not abuse its discretion by denying the motion. The court also
    concluded that the trial court's decision did not violate due process. In Downing, the
    court determined that the expert's testimony would not change the fact that the victim's
    statements before or after the potentially tainting contacts were consistent. Jd. at 274.
    Moreover, reconsideration of competency to testify would not likely have led to a
    different result upon the expert's testimony. Jd. at 276.
    Here, the disclosure of each victim's report of sexual abuse by Mr. Jones came
    about in different ways. J.J., who had been sexually abused between 1994 and 1999,
    when she was between the ages of 5 and 10, first disclosed the sexual abuse to her
    grandmother. This disclosure took place after the incident when J.J. was 7 or 8 and her
    grandfather had contact with her in the bathtub. According to 1.J., her grandmother had
    not believed her and thought she was joking. J.J. then told her Aunt Angel about the
    incident. Aunt Angel told J.J.'s parents who also failed to believe her. It was not until
    2007, when J.J. was 18 and seeing a counselor, that the report of her abuse was made
    public, and J.J. spoke to police.
    M.J. testified that she first disclosed information about the sexual abuse to her
    13
    No. 302S3-9-II1
    State v. Jones
    Aunt Jeanne who had repeatedly asked her ifher grandfather had sexually abused her.
    According to M.J., this disclosure occurred when she was about 12 years of age. M.1. did
    not tell school counselors about the abuse, but she did tell the sexual assault nurse when
    her mother took her to the hospital in 2004. M.1. testified that her Aunt Jeanne had asked
    her repeatedly whether her grandfather had abused her, but her Aunt Jeanne had not told
    her what to say.
    Each of the two young women made their disclosure to different adults. They both
    testified that they were not particularly close to each other while these events were taking
    place and that they did not learn of each other's abuse by their grandfather until 2007.
    Even so, the young women testified to very similar scenarios. They each testified to an
    act involving their grandfather performing oral sex on them after having bathed. Each
    young woman also testified to inappropriate sexual contact during drives in their
    grandfather's truck. Both young women were older when they disclosed the information.
    There were no repeated interviews of either young woman. An expert's testimony
    explaining the theory of false memory would not have helped the trier of fact.
    Significantly, Mr. Jones is unable to articulate what this expert could have testified to that
    would have assisted the jury in this case.
    Even if we assume counsel's performance was deficient, Mr. Jones has failed to
    14
    No.30253-9-III
    State v. Jones
    establish how he was prejudiced when the jury heard similar accounts from two victims
    who had had little contact with each other and were 12 and 18 at the time of their first
    interview, and who had been interviewed only a few times by completely different
    people.
    Mr. Jones's claim of ineffective assistance of counsel fails.
    Volunteer Bailiff Mr. Jones asserts that David Matney acted as a volunteer bailiff
    in this matter even though he had previously been employed by the Grant County
    Sheriffs Office and had interviewed MJ.
    The record shows that Mr. Matney was removed as a volunteer bailiff to avoid
    even the appearance of unfairness.
    Speedy Trial. Mr. Jones complains that his trial was continued 25 times during a
    period of almost four years. He, asserts that the continuances were based on (1) changes
    in the personnel of the public defender's office, (2) personnel changes in the prosecutors'
    office, (3) MJ.'s and JJ.'s vacations, and (4) MJ.'s and J.J.'s illnesses. Mr. Jones
    contends that he requested his attorney to ask for the charges to be dismissed prior to the
    grant of each continuance.
    15
    No.30253-9-III
    State v. Jones
    Mr. Jones maintains that his speedy trial rights were violated but points to no place
    in the record where he objected to a continuance. Without greater specificity, this court
    cannot conclude that a speedy trial violation occurred.
    We affirm the convictions for two counts of first degree rape.
    A majority of the panel has determined this opinion will not be printed in the
    Washington Appellate Reports, but it will be filed for public record pursuant to
    RCW 2.06.040.
    Kulik, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    Brown, J.                                 Sil?:6tfu-               I
    v
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