State of Washington v. Mark Allan Miller ( 2020 )


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  •                                                                          FILED
    SEPTEMBER 1, 2020
    In the Office of the Clerk of Court
    WA State Court of Appeals, Division III
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION THREE
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,                           )
    )         No. 37351-7-III
    Respondent,               )
    )
    v.                                      )
    )
    MARK ALLAN MILLER,                             )         OPINION PUBLISHED IN PART
    )
    Appellant.                )
    SIDDOWAY, J. — Mark Miller, a former financial advisor, appeals his convictions
    following a jury trial for first degree theft, first degree criminal impersonation, and
    attempted first degree theft. The victim was an almost 87-year-old woman who was a
    client of Mr. Miller’s prior to his June 2016 resignation from J.P. MorganChase (Chase).
    After he resigned, he guided or assisted his elderly former client in withdrawing
    substantial financial assets, some, but not all of which, he succeeded in misappropriating.
    He assigns error to an accomplice liability instruction given over his objection,
    challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support the criminal impersonation and
    attempted theft counts, challenges the criminal impersonation conviction on double
    jeopardy grounds, and points out a scrivener’s error in the judgment and sentence. We
    remand with directions to correct the scrivener’s error but otherwise affirm.
    No. 37351-7-III
    State v. Miller
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Lillian Meador was living in the Brookdale Orchards assisted living facility in
    Vancouver in the summer of 2016 when she suffered an infection and was hospitalized.
    She was discharged for recovery in early August to Prestige Care, a nursing and
    rehabilitation center, where her initial assessment and care plan were assigned to
    Stephanie Williams, a social services director. Mark Miller, who Ms. Williams learned
    was Ms. Meador’s financial advisor and friend, was identified as her emergency contact.
    Ms. Williams phoned Mr. Miller on August 15 because she wanted to set up a care
    conference and determine whether someone held a power of attorney for Ms. Meador.
    Mr. Miller told Ms. Williams that someone did hold a power of attorney, but since
    that person had not been involved for many years, steps were being taken to appoint Mr.
    Miller as Ms. Meador’s attorney-in-fact. In a conversation with Mr. Miller in Ms.
    Meador’s room two days later, Ms. Williams again asked for the name of the existing
    attorney-in-fact, explaining that because Ms. Meador performed poorly on a cognitive
    test, Prestige needed to find someone who could assist with planning for her discharge.
    Mr. Miller became upset, telling Ms. Williams that he needed to be present for any
    cognitive testing of Ms. Meador, to make sure that the questioning was done
    appropriately. He provided Ms. Williams with a name of the existing attorney-in-fact but
    did not provide contact information, telling Ms. Williams that he would contact the
    2
    No. 37351-7-III
    State v. Miller
    woman himself. Concerned that Ms. Meador might be being exploited by Mr. Miller,
    Ms. Williams filed a report that day with Adult Protective Services (APS).
    On August 23, while at a visit at Prestige, Mr. Miller told Ms. Williams that his
    role as Ms. Meador’s financial advisor prevented him from becoming her attorney-in-
    fact, but he would obtain and provide a copy of her existing power of attorney. He never
    did. Lacking an attorney-in-fact who could make decisions for Ms. Meador, personnel at
    Prestige initiated a guardianship proceeding.
    In late August, Max Horn, an APS investigator, met with Ms. Meador. Ms.
    Meador struck Mr. Horn as confused and uncomfortable about answering Mr. Horn’s
    questions about Mr. Miller, saying she “had to speak with Mark first.” Report of
    Proceedings (RP) at 567. She did provide Mr. Horn with Mr. Miller’s cell phone number
    at some point, however, and Mr. Horn phoned Mr. Miller on September 6. Mr. Horn’s
    purpose for calling Mr. Miller was to find out where Ms. Meador banked, and Mr. Miller
    said he did not recall, other than that she had some funds at Chase. Mr. Miller agreed
    during the phone conversation to call Mr. Horn back with a phone number for the woman
    who held Ms. Meador’s power of attorney, but he never did.
    On the afternoon of September 8, Vancouver lawyer James David received a call
    from Mr. Miller. Mr. Miller was with Ms. Meador, who participated in the call. Mr.
    Miller explained that Ms. Meador was seeking legal representation to fight the
    guardianship proceeding commenced by Prestige. Mr. David traveled to meet with Ms.
    3
    No. 37351-7-III
    State v. Miller
    Meador at Prestige the next day, and spoke with her without Mr. Miller present. She
    engaged him as counsel.
    In Mr. David’s second or third meeting with Ms. Meador, which took place at
    Brookdale following her September 12 discharge from Prestige, they opened her mail,
    which included two substantial checks from the Standard Insurance Company (“the
    Standard”), where she had held annuities. Previously, during Ms. Meador’s stay at
    Prestige, Mr. Miller had been stopping at Brookdale to pick up her mail. Mr. David had
    Ms. Meador endorse the $240,000 in value of checks for deposit and arranged for them to
    be deposited into her bank account.
    Mr. David attempted to meet with Mr. Miller twice, because he had questions
    about Ms. Meador’s financial affairs, but Mr. Miller missed both appointments. Mr.
    Miller, who had visited Ms. Meador 18 times and called her room 36 times during the six
    weeks she was at Prestige, also stopped visiting Ms. Meador.
    The investigation by APS led it to refer Ms. Meador’s situation to the Vancouver
    Police Department. An investigation by Detective Michael Day led him to information
    that in August, Mr. Miller persuaded Ms. Meador to withdraw $50,000 in cash from her
    bank accounts with Chase and give it to Eddie Besaw, a former colleague of Mr. Miller’s.
    Ms. Meador was led to understand that Mr. Miller was going to invest the $50,000 on her
    4
    No. 37351-7-III
    State v. Miller
    behalf. Ms. Meador, who used a wheelchair, was able to travel by C-VAN1 to a Fred
    Meyer store with an in-store Chase location suggested to her by Mr. Miller, but on
    arriving, she needed someone to push her to the bank and, following the withdrawal, take
    and deliver the $50,000 cash. Mr. Besaw told Detective Day that Mr. Miller engaged
    him to assist Ms. Meador at the bank and deliver the cash to Mr. Miller, who said he
    would invest it on her behalf. Mr. Besaw delivered $45,000 of the cash to Mr. Miller,
    reduced by $5,000 that Mr. Miller had allowed Mr. Besaw to keep for his trouble.
    The detective also received information that the large checks from the Standard
    that Ms. Meador received in September at Brookdale were the result of a cash-out
    process that had been initiated by Mr. Miller. Mr. Miller had called the Standard and
    requested withdrawal documentation, holding himself out as Ms. Meador’s nephew. His
    call had been recorded. The completed forms, signed by Ms. Meador but apparently
    completed by someone else, had been returned to Standard on September 6.
    Detective Day also learned that Mr. Miller was unemployed, having resigned from
    Chase a couple of months earlier, and was in financial distress.
    Mr. Miller was charged with first degree theft of the $50,000 withdrawn from Ms.
    Meador’s bank accounts, criminal impersonation for the call to the Standard, and
    1
    C-VAN is a paratransit service offered by Clark County’s public transportation
    agency for disabled persons unable to travel on its fixed-route bus service. See Who Is
    Eligible for Paratransit and Application Process, C-TRAN, https://www.c-tran.com/c-
    tran-services/paratransit-service/paratransit-eligibility [https://perma.cc/35JV-9H2P].
    5
    No. 37351-7-III
    State v. Miller
    attempted first degree theft for the steps taken to cash out the Standard annuities. The
    State alleged three aggravating circumstances for the theft and attempted theft counts:
    that the victim was particularly vulnerable or incapable of resistance, Mr. Miller used his
    position of trust, confidence, or fiduciary responsibility to commit the crimes, and the
    crimes were major economic offenses.
    In August 2018, the case proceeded to a jury trial. In opening statements, the State
    described Mr. Miller as someone financially underwater, who charmed Ms. Meador into
    allowing him to assist with her finances after he left Chase. It characterized Mr. Besaw
    as “a fall guy” Mr. Miller engaged to help Ms. Meador make the $50,000 cash
    withdrawal and deliver the cash to him. RP at 256. The prosecutor suggested that after
    Mr. Miller succeeded in causing Ms. Meador to withdraw the $50,000, he took steps to
    obtain the even more substantial value of her annuities, falsely telling the Standard’s
    customer service representative that he was Ms. Meador’s nephew and that the funds
    were needed to pay her mounting medical expenses. “Fortunately,” the prosecutor told
    jurors, “someone intercepts those disbursement checks before they get to Mark Miller.”
    RP at 260.
    Defense counsel responded, telling jurors in opening statement that it was Mr.
    Miller who was the fall guy for Mr. Besaw’s theft of $50,000 cash from Ms. Meador.
    Defense counsel described Mr. Besaw as a person “who’s kind of gone from career to
    career trying to make something of himself.” RP at 266. He said that Mr. Miller had a
    6
    No. 37351-7-III
    State v. Miller
    referral relationship with Mr. Besaw, who sold supplemental Medicare policies and
    annuities, but the relationship soured after clients referred by Mr. Miller were unhappy
    with Mr. Besaw’s services. He told jurors that before the referral relationship ended, Mr.
    Miller had provided Mr. Besaw with Ms. Meador’s name and phone number. He told
    jurors “there’s no question that Eddie Besaw is the one who took $50,000 cash from
    Lillian Meador.” RP at 270. As for the annuities, defense counsel told jurors that Mr.
    Miller simply helped Ms. Meador surrender her annuities because she wanted to make
    other investments, and there was no theft: “The money comes in, goes right into her bank,
    done deal.” Id.
    The jury was instructed on accomplice liability over Mr. Miller’s objection. The
    State requested the instruction at the close of the evidence, and defense counsel argued
    that the State had not charged Mr. Miller as an accomplice and “[t]hat’s a different kind
    of case.” RP at 1269. He also argued:
    The State’s theory, evidence they presented, everything presented is that
    Mr. Besaw was this unwitting guy who just went on a little errand to watch
    this woman do shopping for a little while and got $5,000 for it.
    The evidence is he knew nothing about what Mr. Miller’s plan was.
    This is just a complete shock to him. He’s—we’re not talking about an
    accomplice. To have an accomplice, you have to have two parties to a
    crime. We don’t have that here. We have one person acting innocently, he
    was just basically the instrument of Mr. Miller. That’s the State’s theory.
    He’s not an accomplice. You’ve got to have two people to have
    accomplice liability here. We’ve got one actor, as the State has alleged, not
    an accomplice.
    7
    No. 37351-7-III
    State v. Miller
    RP at 1270. The trial court overruled Mr. Miller’s objection and gave the accomplice
    instruction.
    The jury found Mr. Miller guilty as charged, including finding all of the
    aggravating circumstances charged by the State.
    Mr. Miller had no criminal history. The trial court found his standard range
    sentence for the most serious crime, the first degree theft, was 2 to 6 months. It rejected a
    State request to impose an exceptional 120 month sentence, but did impose an
    exceptional sentence of 27 months.
    Mr. Miller appeals. His appeal was administratively transferred from Division
    Two to Division Three.
    ANALYSIS
    Mr. Miller makes six assignments of error. One, to a scrivener’s error, is
    conceded by the State.2 We will direct the trial court to make the necessary correction.
    In the published portion of this opinion, we address Mr. Miller’s challenge to the
    accomplice liability instruction and the sufficiency of the evidence to support the
    “assumption of a false identity” element of the criminal impersonation charge.
    The judgment and sentence identifies Mr. Miller’s sentence for criminal
    2
    impersonation as “365 months.” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 101. The trial court intended to
    impose 365 days, which was the high end of the standard range. See RP at 1468; CP at
    99.
    8
    No. 37351-7-III
    State v. Miller
    I.     THE TRIAL COURT PROPERLY INSTRUCTED THE JURY ON ACCOMPLICE LIABILITY
    On the charge of first degree theft of the $50,000, the State wished to be able to
    argue that Mr. Miller could be liable as an accomplice if the jury was persuaded by the
    defense that Mr. Besaw was the principal. As defense counsel had told the jury in his
    opening statement, “There’s no question that Eddie Besaw is the one who took $50,000
    cash from Lillian Meador.” RP at 270.
    “Each party in a jury trial is entitled to have his theory or theories of the case
    presented to the jury by proper instructions where there is evidence to support them.”
    Kiemele v. Bryan, 
    3 Wn. App. 449
    , 452, 
    476 P.2d 141
     (1970). The trial court’s choice of
    jury instructions is reviewed for an abuse of discretion. State v. Hathaway, 
    161 Wn. App. 634
    , 647, 
    251 P.3d 253
     (2011).
    The jury was instructed that to prove the charge of first degree theft, the State must
    show that the defendant, at the time charged and in or affecting persons in the State of
    Washington,
    (a) wrongfully obtained or exerted unauthorized control over
    property of another or the value thereof; or
    (b) by color or aid of deception, obtained control over property of
    another or the value thereof; and
    (2) That the property exceeded $5,000 in value;
    (3) That the defendant intended to deprive the other person of the
    property.
    9
    No. 37351-7-III
    State v. Miller
    Clerk’s Papers at 66. Adding an accomplice instruction enabled the State to argue that
    Mr. Besaw rather than Mr. Miller engaged in these acts, but that Mr. Miller acted as an
    accomplice. An accomplice is someone who, knowing that it will promote or facilitate
    the commission of a particular crime, solicits, commands, encourages, or requests another
    person to commit it, or aids or agrees to aid another person in planning or committing it.
    RCW 9A.08.020(3)(a)(i)-(ii).
    Mr. Miller objected to the giving of an accomplice instruction, arguing, “The
    State’s theory, evidence they presented, everything presented is that Mr. Besaw was this
    unwitting guy who just went on a little errand.” RP at 1270. That was a fair
    characterization of Mr. Besaw’s testimony, and Mr. Besaw was a key State witness. But
    a party is not bound by the testimony of its own witness. State v. Winters, 
    54 Wn.2d 707
    ,
    708, 
    344 P.2d 526
     (1959). It may prove or point to evidence that the facts are otherwise.
    See id.; accord State v. Green, 
    71 Wn.2d 372
    , 378, 
    428 P.2d 540
     (1967) (a party may
    impeach its own witness with evidence of a contradictory nature through other
    witnesses).
    Throughout the trial, the State’s theory was that Mr. Miller was the primarily
    culpable actor, but it was faced with defense evidence and argument that Mr. Besaw
    carried out the “actus reus”3 of obtaining control of the cash. It also faced evidence and
    3
    “Actus reus” is “[t]he wrongful deed that comprises the physical components of
    a crime and that generally must be coupled with mens rea to establish criminal liability; a
    10
    No. 37351-7-III
    State v. Miller
    argument that Mr. Besaw’s claim of innocent participation was not credible. Doubt was
    cast on whether Mr. Besaw could reasonably have believed that Mr. Miller needed cash
    to make investments on Ms. Meador’s behalf, or that Mr. Besaw’s serving as Ms.
    Meador’s wheelchair attendant explained why he should be paid $5,000. The defense
    also described surveillance video of Mr. Besaw and Ms. Meador as they approached the
    in-store bank as revealing that Mr. Besaw was wearing sunglasses and was “hiding” and
    “hutching down.” RP at 1377. After leaving the bank, Mr. Besaw could be seen on the
    surveillance video tucking the $50,000 cash under his waistband.
    Well-settled principles control our review of Mr. Miller’s challenge to the
    accomplice liability instruction. One is that an information that charges an accused as a
    principal adequately apprises him or her of potential accomplice liability even though the
    information does not expressly charge aiding or abetting or refer to other persons. State
    v. Trujillo, 
    112 Wn. App. 390
    , 401, 
    49 P.3d 935
     (2002). Another is that “[w]hen
    determining if the evidence at trial was sufficient to support the giving of an instruction,”
    this court views “the supporting evidence in the light most favorable to the party that
    requested the instruction.” State v. Fernandez-Medina, 
    141 Wn.2d 448
    , 455-56, 
    6 P.3d 1150
     (2000).
    forbidden act .” BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 45-46 (11th ed. 2019).
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    No. 37351-7-III
    State v. Miller
    Mr. Besaw could be viewed as the principal, given the undisputed evidence that he
    is the one who took the $50,000 from Ms. Meador and given the circumstantial evidence
    of his criminal intent. The fact that Mr. Besaw delivered $45,000 to Mr. Miller, the
    mastermind who made the theft possible, does not prevent Mr. Besaw from being the
    principal.4 If the jury were to view Mr. Besaw as the principal, substantial evidence
    would support a finding by the jury that Mr. Miller knowingly solicited, commanded,
    encouraged, or requested commission of the crime, or aided or agreed to aid in its
    commission.
    The trial court properly gave the accomplice instruction requested by the State.
    II.    SUFFICIENT EVIDENCE SUPPORTS THE “ASSUMPTION OF A FALSE IDENTITY”
    ELEMENT OF CRIMINAL IMPERSONATION
    Mr. Miller next argues that the State failed to present sufficient evidence to
    support the “assumed a false identity” element of criminal impersonation.
    “‘The test for determining the sufficiency of the evidence is whether, after
    viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the State, any rational trier of fact
    4
    Dean Sanford Kadish has described this type of case, involving a “partly
    culpable principal” as one that presented problems for common law complicity
    doctrine—one in which “a secondary actor’s liability surely should exceed that of the
    primary actor.” Sanford H. Kadish, Complicity, Cause and Blame: A Study in the
    Interpretation of Doctrine, 73 CAL. L. REV. 323, 340 (1985). “The classic instance” he
    cites is “Iago coolly whipping Othello into murderous rage,” leading him to kill
    Desdemona. 
    Id.
     “Othello would be guilty of a culpable homicide, but perhaps only of
    manslaughter in view of the circumstances.” Id. at 385. “[T]here is no reason why Iago
    should not be held accountable as Othello’s accessory.” Id. at 365.
    12
    No. 37351-7-III
    State v. Miller
    could have found guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.’” State v. Witherspoon, 
    180 Wn.2d 875
    , 883, 
    329 P.3d 888
     (2014) (quoting State v. Salinas, 
    119 Wn.2d 192
    , 201, 
    829 P.2d 1068
     (1992)). A defendant’s claim of insufficient evidence admits the truth of the State’s
    evidence and “‘all inferences that reasonably can be drawn [from it].’” State v. Condon,
    
    182 Wn.2d 307
    , 314, 
    343 P.3d 357
     (2015) (alteration in original) (quoting Salinas, 
    119 Wn.2d at 201
    ). Circumstantial evidence is considered just as reliable as direct evidence.
    State v. Delmarter, 
    94 Wn.2d 634
    , 638, 
    618 P.2d 99
     (1980). We defer to the trier of fact
    “on issues of conflicting testimony, credibility of witnesses, and the persuasiveness of the
    evidence.” State v. Thomas, 
    150 Wn.2d 821
    , 874-75, 
    83 P.3d 970
     (2004), aff’d, 
    166 Wn.2d 380
    , 
    208 P.3d 1107
     (2009).
    Mr. Miller was charged with criminal impersonation in the first degree under
    RCW 9A.60.040(1)(a). A person is guilty of the crime under that provision if the person
    “[a]ssumes a false identity and does an act in his or her assumed character with intent to
    defraud another or for any other unlawful purpose.” Mr. Miller argues that in contacting
    the Standard, he provided his true name, and making a false representation that he was
    Ms. Meador’s nephew does not constitute assuming a false identity within the meaning of
    the statute. This presents an issue of statutory construction. Our fundamental objective
    in construing a statute is to ascertain and carry out the legislature’s intent, and if a
    statute’s meaning is plain on its face, we give effect to that plain meaning as an
    13
    No. 37351-7-III
    State v. Miller
    expression of legislative intent. Dep’t of Ecology v. Campbell & Gwinn, 
    146 Wn.2d 1
    ,
    9-10, 
    43 P.3d 4
     (2002).
    The fact that Mr. Miller provided his true name does not take him outside the
    operation of the statute. This court has previously held that “the assumption of a false
    identity” is not the same as using a false name. State v. Donald, 
    68 Wn. App. 543
    , 550,
    
    844 P.2d 447
     (1993). It has further held that “assuming a false identity” does not require
    assuming the identity of an actual person, as is required for identity theft. State v.
    Presba, 
    131 Wn. App. 47
    , 55, 
    126 P.3d 1280
     (2005).
    The statutory terms “false identity” and “assumed character” are not defined, but
    dictionary definitions support their application to someone who misrepresents his
    relationship to another. In the absence of statutory definitions, courts may rely on the
    plain meaning of terms. State v. Kintz, 
    169 Wn.2d 537
    , 547, 
    238 P.3d 470
     (2010). RCW
    9A.60.040(1)(a) speaks of a person who “act[s] in his or her assumed character,” and one
    definition of “character” is
    6 : POSITION, RANK, CAPACITY, STATUS
    
    
    .
    MERRIAM-WEBSTER UNABRIDGED, https://perma.cc/3G5R-6UYP. For purposes of
    construing the statute’s reference to “[a]ssum[ing] a false identity,” among the definitions
    14
    No. 37351-7-III
    State v. Miller
    of identity are “[2]b : the role an individual holds in a social group of society” and “3 :
    the condition of being the same with something described, claimed or asserted or of
    possessing a character claimed.” MERRIAM-WEBSTER UNABRIDGED, https://perma.cc
    /B4XV-4MGF.
    Not only does the plain language of the statute encompass falsely asserting a
    family relationship, but it is easy to foresee that falsely claiming to be someone’s spouse,
    parent, child, or other family member could be used to facilitate a fraud or advance some
    other unlawful purpose. It is consistent with the legislature’s purpose to apply the statute
    to Mr. Miller’s misrepresentation of his relationship to Ms. Meador.
    We remand with directions to the trial court to correct section 4.1, page 5 of Mr.
    Miller’s judgment and sentence to reflect the 365 day sentence intended by the trial court.
    The convictions are affirmed.
    A majority of the panel having determined that only the foregoing portion of this
    opinion will be printed in the Washington Appellate Reports and that the remainder
    having no precedential value shall be filed for public record pursuant to RCW 2.06.040, it
    is so ordered.
    III.   MR. MILLER’S REMAINING EVIDENCE SUFFICIENCY CHALLENGES ALSO FAIL
    Before analyzing Mr. Miller’s remaining evidence sufficiency challenges, we
    describe the trial evidence in more detail.
    15
    No. 37351-7-III
    State v. Miller
    Witnesses Besaw and Miller testified at trial to their dramatically different stories
    of who orchestrated Ms. Meador’s withdrawal of $50,000 and kept all or most of the
    cash. Bank records were presented that were consistent with Mr. Besaw’s claim to have
    received only $5,000. But banking records for Mr. Miller did not provide evidence that
    he possessed $45,000 in late summer or early fall of 2016. The State presented evidence
    that Mr. Miller had a $282,607 judgment entered against him in 2012, had been keeping
    cash in his house for years, and was on notice that his judgment creditor had threatened
    collection action in late 2015 and garnished his bank account in the spring of 2016. Bank
    account statements were admitted showing the Mr. Miller kept little money in his bank
    accounts, and never for long.
    Telephone records revealed a history of text messages and phone calls between
    Mr. Miller and Mr. Besaw in August 2016 that were consistent with Mr. Besaw’s version
    of events. The State also presented cell tower evidence that placed Mr. Miller near the
    place, and at the time, when Mr. Besaw claimed to have delivered the $45,000 cash. The
    defense responded with an expert who testified that Mr. Miller’s call could have been
    made from a location almost 22 miles away from the location suggested by the State’s
    expert.
    Mr. Miller’s recorded call to the Standard was played for jurors. In it, Mr. Miller
    represented himself as being Ms. Meador’s nephew. He also represented that the family
    was exploring the surrender of his aunt’s annuities because she needed resources to pay
    16
    No. 37351-7-III
    State v. Miller
    mounting medical expenses. The State presented evidence that Ms. Meador’s expenses
    were largely covered by insurance and that she had ample assets to cover uninsured
    expenses. The recording of the call also revealed that Mr. Miller was on notice that a
    hasty cash out of the annuities would incur a penalty that could be avoided by going more
    slowly and requesting a penalty waiver.
    The defense countered with evidence that on two occasions a week before Ms.
    Meador withdrew the $50,000, the visitor log at Prestige included a handwritten visitor
    entry for “Ed Besaw” and another for “Edwin Besaw.” It also elicited testimony from
    Ms. Williams that when interviewed, she told defense counsel that she believed she had
    seen Mr. Besaw visit Ms. Meador once or twice. She testified that the man she recalled
    seeing was dressed professionally and had closed the door on entering Ms. Meador’s
    room.
    Mr. Besaw denied that the visitor log entries in his name were made by him or that
    he ever visited Ms. Meador. The State presented evidence that the man Ms. Williams
    saw enter Ms. Meador’s room and close the door might have been Mr. David, who was
    wearing a suit when he visited Ms. Meador and closed the door upon entering her room.
    In closing argument, the State encouraged jurors to compare Mr. Besaw’s supposed
    signature on the visitor log to signatures on his checks, which it characterized as “not at
    all similar.” RP at 1344. It especially encouraged jurors to look at the entries for the two
    “Besaw” visits and focus on the visitor’s handwritten name of the resident being visited.
    17
    No. 37351-7-III
    State v. Miller
    It suggested that the name “Lillian Meador” as handwritten by “Ed” or “Edwin Besaw”
    was identical to how Mr. Miller wrote her name, arguing “This is Mark Miller signing in
    as Eddie Besaw. He’s planning, even back as far as [August] 16th.” RP at 1344.
    A.     Criminal impersonation – intent to defraud or unlawful purpose element
    Mr. Miller next argues there is no evidence that his assumption of a false identity
    was done “with intent to defraud another or for any other unlawful purpose.”
    Criminal impersonation in the first degree, a class C felony, does not require that
    the act of assuming the false identity enabled the actor to accomplish fraud or achieve an
    unlawful purpose; all that is required is the intent. By statute, “[w]henever an intent to
    defraud shall be made an element of an offense, it shall be sufficient if an intent appears
    to defraud any person, association or body politic or corporate whatsoever.” RCW
    10.58.040. Intent to defraud may be inferred from surrounding “conduct that plainly
    indicates such intent as a matter of logical probability.” State v. Brooks, 
    107 Wn. App. 925
    , 929, 
    29 P.3d 45
     (2001) (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting State v.
    Bergeron, 
    105 Wn.2d 1
    , 20, 
    711 P.2d 1000
     (1985)).
    Mr. Miller testified at trial that he “told a fib” about being Ms. Meador’s nephew
    in his call to the Standard “[j]ust to facilitate the call.” RP at 1188. He claimed he knew
    he could get blank forms from the Standard without being a family member, but he
    testified that when you’re a financial advisor, “they put up all kinds of roadblocks for you
    getting anything from them.” 
    Id.
    18
    No. 37351-7-III
    State v. Miller
    By Mr. Miller’s own admission, then, he believed that by lying he was avoiding
    “all kinds of roadblocks” the Standard would have put up had he been honest. But the
    recorded call could also support the inference that he believed deception was necessary to
    get what he needed. It reveals more than a passing misidentification of himself as a
    nephew; it reveals repeated lies:
    NORMA: Hi. This is Norma with the Standard. How can I help
    you?
    MR. MILLER: Yeah. Hi, Norma. My name is Mark Miller. I got
    the—well, my aunt, Lillian Meador, is in the hospital—or in assisted living.
    She has two annuities. And we’re just trying to get assets to make sure we
    can pay for everything.
    NORMA: Okay.
    MR. MILLER: She has two annuities. I’m going to go over to her
    place and get that. But we are—we’re probably going to need to surrender
    these—
    NORMA: Okay.
    MR. MILLER: —and doing that. So I’m just wondering where do
    we get the paperwork to surrender these?
    NORMA: You talk to us, and we send—mail it—mail it, fax it, or
    e-mail it to you.
    ....
    MR. MILLER: (inaudible). And, yeah, just—we’re just trying to
    get things prepared because I know we’ve got—you know, there’s only so
    much Medicare’s going to do.
    NORMA: Yeah.
    MR. MILLER: And—and then we get to pay for the rest. . . .
    ....
    MR. MILLER: Yeah. It’s just that we don’t know how long this is
    going to go on, but we know the costs are going to go much higher—
    NORMA: Yeah.
    MR. MILLER: —then what we were planning for when she did
    these.
    NORMA: Yeah, you know, I understand that. . . .
    ....
    19
    No. 37351-7-III
    State v. Miller
    MR. MILLER: Okay. Do these need—
    NORMA: —(inaudible).
    MR. MILLER: —to be notarized, gold sealed, any of those kind of
    things?
    NORMA: As long as your aunt—it’s your aunt, correct?
    MR. MILLER: Yeah.
    NORMA: As long as your aunt can sign it, we should be good.
    MR. MILLER: She can sign it. She just—she can’t walk right
    now—
    NORMA: Yeah.
    MR. MILLER: —so and doing that, so we’re going to need some
    specialized care, nursing, hire private nurses, those kind of things. I know
    Medicare—we’re just at the beginning of this, so we just want to make sure
    we have the paperwork we need.
    And then at that point you’ll sit there, and I’m assuming under 30
    days. I mean, we’ve got money for probably the next few months but—
    NORMA: All right.
    ....
    MR. MILLER: All right. I’m really concerned about loading up
    my credit card, which she has—she has more than enough to take care of
    this.
    ....
    MR. MILLER: Well, I appreciate your help. Hopefully we don’t
    have to surrender these in any way—
    NORMA: Uh-huh.
    MR. MILLER: —and just keep them, but it’s good to know that we
    have alternatives. Did you find out if that first one does have surrenders?
    NORMA: Yeah, hold on. It probably is the exact same, but I’m
    going to double check that for you. That one’s a (inaudible) 12. It’s a
    seven year. Oh, hold on. Let me get into my—
    MR. MILLER: Yeah, I had a conversation with her. I said something’s
    got to give. Either we got to do the annuities, or we [have to] sell some of the
    property. Well, we’re not selling the property.
    RP at 660-67.
    Mr. Miller argued at the close of the State’s case that there was no evidence of an
    unlawful purpose and the trial court should dismiss the criminal impersonation count.
    20
    No. 37351-7-III
    State v. Miller
    The trial court responded that it “disagree[d] 100 percent.” RP at 1049. It observed that
    jurors could find that Mr. Miller was securing the forms “for the purpose of trying to cash
    in the annuity unlawfully and for an unlawful purpose.” RP at 1049. We agree; the
    evidence was sufficient.
    B.     Attempted Theft
    Mr. Miller challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support his attempted first
    degree theft conviction on the ground that there was no evidence of intent to commit theft
    and, alternatively, that the evidence of his acts did not amount to the “substantial step”
    required to prove attempt.
    His argument that there was no evidence of intent is frivolous. There was
    evidence that following on the heels of his theft from Ms. Meador of $50,000, Mr. Miller
    took steps to hastily cash out her annuities, subjecting her to early withdrawal penalties to
    obtain cash she did not need, lying as needed to facilitate the process, and stopping at
    Brookdale periodically to pick up her mail.
    Alternatively, he argues that requesting blank annuity forms was not a substantial
    step. A person is guilty of an attempt to commit a crime only if, with intent to commit a
    specific crime, “he or she does any act which is a substantial step toward the commission
    of that crime.” RCW 9A.28.020. “A substantial step is an act that is ‘strongly
    corroborative’ of the actor’s criminal purpose.” State v. Johnson, 
    173 Wn.2d 895
    , 899,
    
    270 P.3d 591
     (2012) (quoting State v. Luther, 
    157 Wn.2d 63
    , 78, 
    134 P.3d 205
     (2006)).
    21
    No. 37351-7-III
    State v. Miller
    Mere preparation to commit a crime is not an attempt. State v. Workman, 
    90 Wn.2d 443
    ,
    449, 
    584 P.2d 382
     (1978). “The question of what constitutes a ‘substantial step’ under
    the particular facts of the case is clearly for the trier of fact.” 
    Id.
    Mr. Miller’s self-serving testimony at trial was that he merely obtained the
    surrender forms at Ms. Meador’s request, gave them to her, saw her place them in a
    bureau drawer, and “that’s the last I heard about it.” RP at 1189.
    While Mr. Miller denied completing the forms, the jury could reasonably infer that
    apart from Ms. Meador’s signature, the handwritten completion of the forms was by him.
    He had the required account information and the completed forms were returned to the
    Standard within a week of Mr. Miller requesting that they be e-mailed to him. As the
    prosecutor pointed out in closing argument, the handwriting was “[r]emarkably similar to
    the way that [Mr. Miller] writes her name in the visitor logs.” RP at 1346. And Ms.
    Meador testified that Mr. Miller tried to cash out her annuities, telling her he wanted the
    money to buy a cashier’s check and gold coins.
    Viewed in the light most favorable to the State, evidence amounting to a
    substantial step included telling Ms. Meador she should surrender the annuities, obtaining
    the necessary forms (lying as needed to facilitate the process), completing the forms,
    obtaining her signature, and returning them to the Standard. All that remained was to
    receive and misappropriate the check—and Mr. Miller periodically stopped at Brookdale
    to pick up Ms. Meador’s mail. These acts are sufficient evidence of a substantial step.
    22
    No. 37351-7-III
    State v. Miller
    IV.    CONVICTING MR. MILLER OF ATTEMPTED FIRST DEGREE THEFT AND CRIMINAL
    IMPERSONATION DOES NOT CONSTITUTE DOUBLE JEOPARDY
    Finally, Mr. Miller argues that his convictions for both criminal impersonation and
    attempted theft constituted double jeopardy because the criminal impersonation was the
    substantial step for the attempted theft.
    The federal and state constitutions contain double jeopardy clauses protecting
    against multiple punishments for the same offense. U.S. CONST. amend. V; WASH.
    CONST. art. I, § 9. One aspect of protection against double jeopardy is that a person
    cannot “receive multiple punishments for the same offense.” State v. Villanueva-
    Gonzalez, 
    180 Wn.2d 975
    , 980, 
    329 P.3d 78
     (2014). A claim of double jeopardy can be
    raised for the first time on appeal and is reviewed de novo. State v. Hughes, 
    166 Wn.2d 675
    , 681, 
    212 P.3d 558
     (2009); State v. Adel, 
    136 Wn.2d 629
    , 631-32, 
    965 P.2d 1072
    (1998).
    Where, as here, a defendant’s act supports charges under two criminal statutes, a
    court weighing a double jeopardy challenge “must determine whether, in light of
    legislative intent, the charged crimes constitute the same offense.” In re Pers. Restraint
    of Orange, 
    152 Wn.2d 795
    , 815, 
    100 P.3d 291
     (2004). If legislative intent is unclear,
    courts may use the “Blockburger”5 analysis, which asks “whether the convictions were
    ‘the same in law and in fact.’” Villanueva-Gonzalez, 180 Wn.2d at 980 (quoting Adel,
    5
    Blockburger v. United States, 
    284 U.S. 299
    , 304, 
    52 S. Ct. 180
    , 
    76 L. Ed. 306
    (1932).
    23
    No. 37351-7-III
    State v. Miller
    
    136 Wn.2d at 632
    ). “If each offense contains an element not contained in the other, the
    offenses are not the same; if each offense requires proof of a fact that the other does not,
    the court presumes the offenses are not the same.” In re Pers. Restraint of Borrero, 
    161 Wn.2d 532
    , 537, 
    167 P.3d 1106
     (2007).
    Because proof of the “substantial step” element of an attempt crime has factual
    content only by considering the facts of a particular case, the Blockburger analysis
    requires further refinement when one of two convictions is for an attempt crime. 
    Id.
    “[T]he ‘abstract’ term ‘substantial step’ must be given a factual definition to assess
    whether the attempted crime requires proof of a fact that is not required in proving the
    other crime.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Orange, 
    152 Wn.2d at 818
    ).
    Mr. Miller argues that the two convictions constitute double jeopardy because the
    evidence that he misrepresented himself to the Standard was the State’s proof of the
    “substantial step” element of the attempted theft charge. (We note that this contradicts
    Mr. Miller’s argument that merely obtaining the forms through a ruse could be
    preparation at most, not the required substantial step.)
    Convicting Mr. Miller of both crimes did not constitute double jeopardy because
    to prove attempted theft, the State was not required to prove that Mr. Miller falsely
    identified himself to the Standard as Ms. Meador’s nephew. Cf. State v. Esparza,
    
    135 Wn. App. 54
    , 64, 
    143 P.3d 612
     (2006) (to prove attempted first degree robbery, the
    State was not required to prove second degree assault). Since the charging document
    24
    No. 37351-7-III
    State v. Miller
    filed in this case did not allege a particular substantial step, identifying the substantial
    step requires considering evidence of all the defendant’s acts that could qualify. See id.
    at 63. As discussed in section II.B, the State presented evidence of a number of acts that
    amounted to a substantial step.
    We remand with directions to the trial court to correct section 4.1, page 5 of Mr.
    Miller’s judgment and sentence to reflect the 365 day sentence intended by the trial court.
    The convictions are affirmed.
    Siddoway, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    Lawrence-Berrey, J.
    Fearing, J.
    25