State of Washington v. Gordon James Ennis ( 2021 )


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  •                                                                            FILED
    MARCH 18, 2021
    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. 36359-7-III
    Respondent,               )
    )
    v.                                      )
    )
    GORDON JAMES ENNIS,                            )         UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    )
    Appellant.                )
    SIDDOWAY, J. — K.S.,1 a probationary officer with the Spokane Police
    Department, attended a small party at the home of Douglas and Heather Strosahl in
    October 2015 at which she claims she consumed too much alcohol and, while
    incapacitated, was raped by a superior officer, Gordon Ennis. A trial that began in June
    2017 was declared a mistrial when pretrial publicity about the charge and alleged
    1
    Initials are used to protect the victim’s identity, consistent with a general order of
    this court. See General Order of Division III, In re the Use of Initials or Pseudonyms for
    Child Victims or Child Witnesses (Wash. Ct. App. June 18, 2012) available at
    https//www.courts.wa.gov/appellate_trial_courts/?fa=atc.genorders&div=III.
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    evidence destruction prevented selection of a jury. The parties agreed to seek a change of
    venue but in February 2018 decided to try again to empanel a jury in Spokane.
    A jury was selected and following a nine-day trial, it found Ennis guilty of second
    degree rape. He replaced his lawyer and moved for a new trial, alleging instructional
    error, prosecutorial misconduct, and ineffective assistance of counsel, including on the
    basis that his trial lawyer failed to develop evidence about Doug Strosahl that Ennis
    argued would have been helpful to his defense. The motion was denied.
    Ennis appeals, renewing the arguments made in his new trial motion and making
    new allegations of ineffective assistance of counsel and prosecutorial misconduct. We
    affirm.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    K.S. was working as a probationary police officer for the Spokane Police
    Department in October 2015 when she was invited to a party to be held on Saturday
    night, October 24, at the home of Doug and Heather Strosahl.2 K.S. had graduated from
    Freeman High School in 2008 and obtained a criminal justice degree from Spokane
    Community College in 2012, with a view to becoming a police officer like her father.
    2
    The Strosahls were engaged at the time of the party and had married by the time
    of trial. We refer to Heather Strosahl by her married name, and given the common last
    name, we frequently identify the Strosahls by their first names to avoid confusion. We
    intend no disrespect.
    2
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    After working security jobs and volunteering as a reserve officer, she had been hired full-
    time by the police department in spring 2014.
    Doug Strosahl had worked for 20 years in the Spokane Police Department and
    taught and mentored K.S. when she attended community college and participated in a
    reserve officer training program. Doug invited K.S. and Gordon Ennis to the party.
    Ennis was a Spokane police sergeant who had been a friend of both Strosahls for over 20
    years. Ennis had served as a firearm instructor and taught K.S. while she was in training.
    Other guests at the Strosahls’ party included Heather Strosahl’s sister and several of her
    friends and coworkers. K.S. attended the party with her roommate, Callie Roseland.
    Roseland did not consume alcohol at the party, but K.S. did, and like several
    others, became very intoxicated. She brought a six-pack of hard cider and estimated that
    she finished three of the hard ciders, each mixed with a shot of Fireball whiskey. She
    joined others in another shot of Fireball and vaguely recalls being offered a sip of Ennis’s
    drink late in the evening, when guests had moved outside to the Strosahls’ hot tub.
    Ennis was one of the only people K.S. knew at the party. K.S. behaved warmly,
    and some guests would later say flirtatiously, toward him. Although K.S. has no
    recollection of it, at one point, she and Heather danced before Ennis, after which K.S.
    gave him a hug. Both she and Ennis would later testify that they had never had anything
    3
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    but a professional relationship, however, and K.S. testified that she had “zero interest” in
    anything else. Report of Proceedings (RP)3 at 835.
    At around 11:00 p.m., most of the partiers moved out to the hot tub, where people
    continued to drink. By the time they came inside an hour or more later, alcohol
    consumption had taken its toll on several. Heather’s coworker, Melissa Beaver, became
    ill and lay down on the floor of a bedroom in the basement. With the help of another of
    Heather’s coworkers, Megan Weese, Heather got Beaver out of her swimsuit and into
    some dry clothes. Heather did not see Beaver again until the next morning. Beaver
    would later testify that her last recollection of the party was of being in the hot tub.
    When she awakened the next morning, she did not immediately know where she was.
    She was sick until around 7:00 on Sunday night.
    Doug Strosahl had gone from the hot tub to his bedroom to change into dry clothes
    when he realized how intoxicated he was. He was lightheaded and nauseous, and when
    he lay down, the room was spinning. He fell asleep for a couple of hours and was hung
    over the next day.
    K.S. does not recall leaving the hot tub but has a snapshot “vision” of throwing up
    into something. RP at 847. She had borrowed a swimsuit from Heather that she
    evidently removed, because she wandered naked into the living room, where Roseland,
    3
    “RP” references are to the verbatim report of proceedings of the trial, unless
    otherwise indicated.
    4
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    who was looking for her, saw her, stopped her, and led her to a bathroom. After K.S. lay
    naked on the bathroom floor, “completely incoherent” and “mumbling” according to
    Roseland, Roseland obtained help from Heather and Weese caring for K.S. as she
    vomited into the toilet. RP at 1063. Heather and Weese dressed K.S. in sweatpants and a
    T-shirt belonging to Heather and led her to a bedroom where Heather described the two
    women as “hoist[ing]” her into the bed. RP at 593. For clarity, we refer to this bedroom
    in which K.S. was intended to stay as “her” bedroom.
    K.S. threw up again in her bedroom, using a bowl or bucket that Heather had left
    next to the bed. As Roseland sat with her, waiting for her to calm down and fall asleep,
    Ennis came in. Roseland describes K.S. as mostly incoherent and mumbling. The one
    thing she said to Roseland and Ennis that made sense was, “I don’t want you guys to
    think I’m a bad cop.” RP at 1068-69. Roseland and Ennis assured her they did not think
    she was a bad cop. The two of them conversed while they waited for K.S. to fall asleep.
    When she dozed off, they left her bedroom and joined Heather and Weese in the kitchen.
    Heather told Roseland that K.S. could spend the night, for which Roseland was grateful.
    K.S. thereafter left her bedroom on two occasions that she does not recall. The
    first time she wandered into a nearby bedroom where Heather’s sister, Gina Watkins,
    planned to spend the night. K.S. stumbled into the room holding the bowl she was
    supposed to use if she vomited again. Watkins called to her sister and Heather and
    Roseland responded to help. K.S. lay on the bed and vomited into the bowl. Heather and
    5
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    Roseland walked K.S. back to her bedroom and put her back in bed. Ennis was aware
    that K.S. needed help being returned to her bedroom from Watkins’s room.
    Roseland left for home a little after 1:00 a.m. Weese called her husband at 1:08
    a.m. to let him know she was taking care of a couple of “drunk girls” and would be home
    shortly. RP at 766.
    Sometime around 2:30 a.m., K.S. left her bedroom again, wandering into the
    kitchen where Heather, Ennis, and Doug, who had awakened and come downstairs, were
    the last partiers standing. A few minutes earlier, Heather, Ennis, and Doug had looked in
    on K.S. and teased her about not being able to hold her liquor. Heather, Ennis, and Doug
    would later testify that when K.S. wandered into the kitchen, she walked up to Ennis, put
    her arms around his neck, and lay her head on his shoulder. The Strosahls left to go to
    bed and Heather told Ennis to help K.S. get back to bed. The Strosahls saw Ennis and
    K.S. walk back toward her bedroom. Heather recalls it being 2:38 a.m. when she got in
    bed.
    According to K.S., she awakened to the feeling of fingers in her vagina, thrusting
    aggressively. She was not sure where she was. Ennis was on the bed next to her. When
    she realized what was happening, she started crying and tried to move away. Ennis
    pulled his hand away, said, “I got to go” and quickly got up and left. RP at 853. K.S.
    waited a few moments and then took her cell phone and locked herself in an adjacent
    bathroom.
    6
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    She tried to call Spenser Rassier, a fellow police officer, friend, and occasional
    date. He was out of town for military training. Her phone records reveal that she tried to
    call him four times between 3:05 a.m. and 3:07 a.m., and he answered the fourth call. He
    would later describe her as “very upset” and crying during the call. RP at 962. She told
    him she was at a party at the Strosahls, that she had too much to drink, and that she woke
    up in a bedroom to someone fingering her, which Rassier understood to mean fingering
    her vagina. She would not tell Rassier who it was, but he was left with the impression
    that it was a police officer and someone he would know. K.S. and Rassier spoke for 54
    minutes. After getting off the phone with him, she went back to her bedroom and went to
    sleep.
    She awakened again shortly after 7:00 Sunday morning and called Roseland,
    asking her to pick her up. She told her what had happened. On Roseland’s arrival, they
    spoke further and agreed they should tell Doug what had occurred. K.S. texted Doug at
    8:22 a.m., asking him to come chat with her. He came to her bedroom, where K.S. told
    him, in Roseland’s presence, what Ennis had done. K.S. was surprised at his reaction,
    which she characterized as “downplay[ing] it.” RP at 876. He asked if she needed any
    water and left the room. When he did not return, K.S. found and changed into her own
    clothing, and she and Roseland left. Upon arriving home, she threw up again, showered,
    and, feeling ill, crawled into bed. She would later explain that she showered because she
    “felt . . . gross,” and “wasn’t thinking about evidence collecting.” RP at 880, 894.
    7
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    That morning, Heather Strosahl laundered the clothing that she and Weese had
    dressed K.S. in the night before. She later testified she was unaware of K.S.’s allegation
    of assault and was simply cleaning up bath towels, swimsuits, and other laundry from the
    party.
    On Sunday afternoon, K.S. contacted her former field training officer, Kyle
    Heuett, for help, telling him what had happened. He informed her sergeant. At 8:44 p.m.
    that night, Detective Brandon Armstrong was called and assigned to investigate K.S.’s
    allegation. K.S. went to the hospital to have a sexual assault kit done that night after
    speaking with her sergeant. She then traveled to the public safety building and sometime
    around midnight provided a statement to Detective Armstrong and Sergeant Jack
    Rosenthal.
    Arrangements were made to serve a search warrant for deoxyribonucleic acid
    (DNA) on Ennis at his lawyer’s office on the afternoon of October 26. The intention had
    been to collect fingernail clippings from Ennis, but it was not possible because his nails
    had been trimmed so short that trying to cut any further could have injured him.
    Detective Armstrong directed close up pictures to be taken of Ennis’s hands.
    Armstrong obtained a warrant to search Ennis’s car, and among the evidence that
    was collected were DNA swabs of the driver’s seat belt. DNA obtained from the seat
    belt included Ennis’s DNA, that of his wife, and that of a third person, which proved to
    be a match for K.S. The crime lab’s forensic examiner concluded that the estimated
    8
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    probability of selecting an unrelated individual at random from the United States
    population with a matching profile was 1 in 1.4 million. It was undisputed that K.S. had
    never been in Ennis’s car.
    In early December 2015, the State charged Ennis with second degree rape for
    “engag[ing] in sexual intercourse with [K.S.] when [she] was incapable of consent by
    reason of being physically helpless or mentally incapacitated.” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 1.
    Ennis waived his speedy trial rights and a first trial was not undertaken until June 2017.
    Pretrial proceedings
    In pretrial proceedings in May 2017, both counsel raised questions about what
    testimony by or about Doug Strosahl might be offered in the upcoming trial. Doug had
    retained his own lawyer, Chris Bugbee. Ennis’s lawyer, Robert Cossey, and the
    prosecutors each questioned what the other knew or had planned when it came to Doug,
    including whether the defense might offer him as an alternative suspect. Asked directly
    by the judge if there were potential suspect issues with Doug Strosahl, Cossey responded,
    “I gave my word to Mr. Bugbee I would not disclose that.” RP (May 19, 2017) at 15.
    The trial court concluded, “I need to know what’s going on with the Strosahl issue” and
    set a hearing for May 25, saying, “I want Bugbee here.” RP (May 19, 2017) at 18-19.
    Doug Strosahl appeared at the May 25 hearing not with Bugbee, but with a new
    lawyer, Joseph Sullivan. Cossey represented that after speaking with Sullivan, any issues
    raised by his conversation with Bugbee were moot because Doug would be testifying
    9
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    consistent with the police report. Sullivan said the same thing, and that Doug would not
    be asserting a Fifth Amendment privilege, which was one of the court’s concerns.
    Whatever Bugbee told Cossey remained, for the time being, a mystery. But the State’s
    concerns were assuaged by Cossey’s assurance on May 25, and even more adamantly on
    June 7, that information he received from Bugbee “is not going to be used by me in any
    shape or form in this trial.” RP (June 7, 2017) at 80.
    Also discussed on June 7 was a State in limine motion preventing Doug Strosahl
    from testifying that he did not report what K.S. told him the morning after the party
    because he did not think her story made sense, something he evidently said at one point.
    Cossey told the court he was not opposed to that being excluded.
    Mistrial
    A mistrial was declared during jury selection for the June 2017 trial. Not only did
    venire members report on a juror questionnaire that they had seen pretrial publicity, but a
    number read or watched news coverage during the voir dire process, contrary to
    admonitions from the judge. A defense motion for a mistrial was granted. In August
    2017, the parties filed a joint recommendation for a change of venue.
    The change of venue recommendation was never noted for hearing. The State was
    no longer advancing it when, in early February 2018, a new trial judge presided at a
    status conference for a trial set to begin a few weeks later in Spokane. Cossey told the
    court that Ennis was not withdrawing his venue change motion but wanted to see if it was
    10
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    possible to seat a Spokane jury. He told the court, “I will tell you my client and I have
    discussed this; and we would prefer this case to stay in this county, in our courthouse, and
    with you.” RP at 11-12. The court agreed to treat the motion as reserved until after voir
    dire.
    Voir dire was completed and a jury was successfully empaneled without any
    renewal by the defense of a request for a venue change.
    The State’s evidence at trial was consistent with the facts recounted above. The
    State relied substantially on K.S.’s testimony and that of Roseland, as well as testimony
    from all of the testifying party guests that K.S. had been very intoxicated at points during
    the evening. It was undisputed that she had wandered through the house naked, was at
    one point passed out on the bathroom floor, vomited multiple times, and had to be
    dressed and delivered to bed by others. The State relied on her 3:07 a.m. call to Rassier
    and her conversations with Roseland and Doug Strosahl early Sunday morning. When
    Ennis testified on his own behalf in the defense case, the State took the opportunity in
    cross-examination to establish that he had violated written conditions of his pretrial
    release that he not have contact with Doug Strosahl and not discuss his case with any
    member of local law enforcement. He admitted that in violation of those conditions he
    had seen and spoken with Strosahl twice and had also used a Spokane police officer and a
    Spokane dispatcher in an attempt to get information to Doug.
    11
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    In addition to Ennis, Heather Strosahl in particular, and some of the other partiers,
    testified that as the evening passed, K.S. sobered up and was not incapacitated by 2:30
    a.m., when she was left to return to her bedroom with Ennis. The State sought to
    impeach some of their testimony with statements they had provided to detectives shortly
    after the party. Heather, for instance, had told detectives in 2015 that when she, Ennis,
    and Doug checked on K.S. at around 2:15 a.m., it was at her suggestion that they do a
    sweep and “make sure everybody’s still alive.” RP at 599. Heather also told detectives
    that when they looked in on her, K.S. “kind of moaned,” and then, “reached out and was
    saying, ‘Sarge, Sarge,’” to which “Gordon’s like, ‘Okay, you’re all right. Go back to
    sleep.’” RP at 601.
    Called as a defense witness, Beaver testified that she did not notice K.S. exhibiting
    intoxicated behavior, saying “[s]he seemed to be walking normal” and “talking just fine.”
    RP at 1354. When cross-examined, however, Beaver acknowledged telling detectives
    that when first introduced to K.S., she thought K.S. was “a little wasted.” RP at 1360.
    The defense waived opening statement at the outset of trial and even at the
    beginning of the defense case, so Ennis’s testimony, which came on the final day of trial
    testimony, was the first the jury heard about his defense. He admitted to engaging in
    sexual intercourse with K.S. at around 2:45 a.m. on October 25, but testified it was
    consensual.
    12
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    Ennis testified that after K.S. came into the kitchen at around 2:30 a.m. and
    hugged him, she pulled on his waist toward her bedroom and they walked down the hall
    together. He testified she was not stumbling, swaying, or slurring her words. He testified
    that when he and she were about halfway down the hall, K.S. “leaned against the wall . . .
    [a]nd she grabbed me around the—the butt, and she pulled my hips in close to her and
    embraced me.” RP at 1426. Once in her bedroom, he testified that K.S. put her legs
    around him, stroked his thigh and they engaged in mutual touching. When he began to
    rub her vagina through the outside of her sweatpants he testified that she pushed down
    her pants, grabbed his wrist and moved his hand between her legs. He inserted a finger in
    her vagina, which he said “continued for a little bit of time.” RP at 1429.
    Although testifying he was “lik[ing] it,” he said he realized it was moving toward
    “full sex” and began thinking about the implications for his personal life (he was married)
    and his professional life. RP at 1429-30. He testified he told K.S. he needed to go home,
    but she wanted him to stay. When he insisted he could not stay, he testified K.S. pulled
    up her sweatpants and her demeanor changed. Ennis told her it was not her fault and if
    she wanted to talk about it they could at work, but he “need[ed] to go.” RP at 1430.
    Asked by Cossey if he cut his fingernails short in preparation for the evidence
    collection meeting, Ennis denied it, testifying he had cut them a few days earlier. Later,
    in redirect examination by Cossey, Ennis testified that he offered to clip his fingernails
    for law enforcement during the DNA collection meeting, but his offer was declined.
    13
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    The State called Detective Armstrong in rebuttal, eliciting his testimony that he
    had no recollection of Ennis ever offering to cut his own fingernails. The prosecutor then
    asked, “Did you indicate in your report that he remained silent during the contact and
    conversations?” RP at 1472. The detective responded, “I indeed did.” Id. The defense
    did not object.
    In surrebuttal, the defense called Shirley Vanning, Cossey’s investigator, who
    testified she was present for the DNA collection meeting and Ennis had offered to clip
    his fingernails. In cross-examination, she agreed that she had created no record of what
    took place at that meeting.
    The jury began its deliberations at 11:10 a.m. It took slightly less than three hours
    to return its verdict finding Ennis guilty as charged.
    Postverdict events
    Following the verdict, Ennis changed counsel, hiring attorney Mark Vovos, who
    filed a motion for a new trial on several grounds. One was ineffective assistance of
    counsel by Cossey, who Ennis now claimed had a conflict of interest that adversely
    affected his defense. In support of his new trial motion, Ennis submitted declarations of
    himself and his wife, both of whom claimed that in a meeting at Cossey’s office on
    November 2, 2015, Cossey told them that Doug Strosahl’s lawyer, Bugbee, had informed
    him that Doug had consensual sexual contact with K.S. at the Strosahls’ party, prior to
    the contact that took place between K.S. and Ennis. They claim they were told that the
    14
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    contact Doug had was manual stimulation and insertion of fingers, and that K.S. had
    believed Doug to be Ennis. They claim they were told by Cossey not to tell anyone.
    They nonetheless believed the information would be used in Ennis’s defense.
    Bugbee retained a lawyer who promptly obtained orders that temporarily
    prevented the clerk’s office from making public the new trial motion and its supporting
    declarations, pending hearing of a motion by Bugbee to seal the records. While the trial
    court temporarily protected the materials from public disclosure, it ultimately denied the
    motion to seal, noting that the media had objected and finding that the Ishikawa4 factors
    were not met.
    The State filed a motion for leave to depose Cossey, arguing that by filing the
    declarations, the Ennises had waived attorney-client privilege. The trial court agreed
    with the State in part, and, in a letter ruling, authorized the State to interview Cossey,
    identified the scope of the privilege waiver, and granted Ennis’s request for a protective
    order preventing disclosure of the information obtained. Cossey was interviewed about
    information he received from Bugbee, his decision not to use the information, and his
    conversations with the Ennises. Cossey disputed important aspects of the Ennises’
    declarations. The State’s opposition to Ennis’s new trial motion, which attached a
    4
    Seattle Times Co. v. Ishikawa, 
    97 Wn.2d 30
    , 
    640 P.2d 716
     (1982).
    15
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    transcript of Cossey’s interview, was sealed pending completion of Ennis’s criminal case,
    including appeal and any retrial.
    The court denied the motion for a new trial. Ennis appeals. Further details about
    the trial evidence and procedure are provided in addressing Ennis’s assignments of error.
    ANALYSIS
    Ennis identifies four categorical issues on appeal and identifies over a dozen sub
    issues. We address them in the order presented.
    I.     CORROBORATION INSTRUCTION
    The Washington criminal code provides, with respect to the sex offenses
    proscribed by chapter 9A.44 RCW, that “[i]n order to convict a person of any crime
    defined in this chapter it shall not be necessary that the testimony of the alleged victim be
    corroborated.” RCW 9A.44.020(1). In June 2017, before Ennis’s first aborted trial and
    nine months before his second trial, the State proposed the following jury instruction:
    In order to convict a person of Second Degree Rape, it is not necessary that
    the testimony of the alleged victim be corroborated.
    Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 89. Ennis did not object to the instruction, which was given.
    Ennis now argues that the instruction was a judicial comment on the evidence and
    interfered with his constitutional right to present a defense. RAP 2.5 generally precludes
    an appellant from complaining of error for the first time on appeal, but Ennis argues that
    16
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    the giving of the instruction qualifies as “manifest constitutional error” reviewable under
    RAP 2.5(a)(3).
    Before 1913, corroboration of the complaining witness in a rape case was required
    by statute. See State v. Morden, 
    87 Wash. 465
    , 467, 
    151 P. 832
     (1915). That changed
    with repeal of the statute in 1913, and the challenged corroboration instruction accurately
    states Washington law as it has existed since the 1913 repeal. See 
    id.
     For a time, it might
    have been important to communicate to a jury that there was no longer a requirement for
    corroboration. Today, a corroboration instruction is at best anachronistic; depending on
    the case, it can be problematic.5 It is not problematic in this case.
    Comment on the evidence
    In State v. Clayton, 
    32 Wn.2d 571
    , 573, 
    202 P.2d 922
     (1949), the defendant
    challenged the giving of a corroboration instruction not unlike the one given here
    5
    Ennis cites as persuasive State v. Steenhard, an unpublished decision from this
    court in which the giving of a corroboration instruction (timely objected to) was a factor
    in the majority’s decision to reverse and remand child molestation charges for a new trial.
    No. 35578-1, slip op. at 16 (Wash. Ct. App. Jul. 23, 2019) (unpublished), https://www
    .courts.wa.gov/opinions/pdf/355781_unp.pdf.
    In Steenhard, sexual misconduct allegations that were fantastical in some respects
    were made by two young girls. Given defense evidence of the number of people at the
    times and places where the misconduct allegedly occurred, the absence of corroboration
    was an issue. The State elicited testimony vouching for the girls’ truthfulness from two
    witnesses.
    No error was found in the giving of the corroboration instruction; rather, viewed in
    light of improper vouching, the instruction contributed to prejudicial error. 
    Id.
     It was a
    confluence of factors that created a risk that the jury would not subject the victims’
    testimony to the even-handed examination it deserved.
    17
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    upon the ground that it constitutes a comment on the evidence, violative of
    Article IV, § 16, of the state constitution, in that the instruction singles out
    the prosecutrix from all the other witnesses and tells the jury that the weight
    of her testimony is such that a conviction can be based upon it alone.
    Judicial comments on the evidence are explicitly prohibited by the constitution and a
    challenge to a comment on the evidence can be raised for the first time on appeal. State
    v. Levy, 
    156 Wn.2d 709
    , 719-20, 
    132 P.3d 1076
     (2006).
    In Clayton, the Supreme Court observed that article IV, section 16’s language that
    “[j]udge[s] shall not charge [juries] with respect to matters of fact, nor comment
    thereon,” “means no more than that the judge is forbidden to convey or indicate to the
    jury, by word or act, his personal opinion as to the truth or falsity of any evidence
    introduced upon the trial.” 
    32 Wn.2d at 573
    . The Court acknowledged that with the
    corroboration instruction it had given in Clayton’s trial
    the trial court in a sense singled out the testimony of the prosecutrix.
    However, what the court thereby told the jury was not that the
    uncorroborated testimony of the prosecutrix in the instant case was
    sufficient to convict the appellant of the crime with which he was charged,
    but, rather, that in cases of this particular character, a defendant may be
    convicted upon such testimony alone.
    
    Id. at 574
     (some emphasis added). It observed that “the trial court expressed no opinion
    as to the truth or falsity of the testimony of the prosecutrix, or as to the weight which the
    court attached to her testimony, but submitted all questions involving the credibility and
    weight of the evidence to the jury for its decision thereon.” 
    Id. at 573-74
    .
    18
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    The same is true of the instruction given in Ennis’s trial. The instruction
    accurately stated the law as provided by RCW 9A.44.020(1). It expressed no view as to
    the truth or falsity of K.S.’s testimony or the weight to be given it. The instructions
    submitted those matters to the jury.
    Ennis points out that a member of our court expressed sympathy with the view that
    a corroboration instruction is a comment on the evidence in State v. Chenoweth, 
    188 Wn. App. 521
    , 538, 
    354 P.3d 13
     (2015) (Becker, J., concurring). As Judge Becker conceded,
    however, we do not write on a clean slate. See 
    id.
     On the issue of whether a
    corroboration instruction is an unconstitutional comment on the evidence, Clayton is
    binding on us. See State v. Gore, 
    101 Wn.2d 481
    , 487, 
    681 P.2d 227
     (1984) (once the
    Washington State Supreme Court has decided an issue of state law, its conclusion is
    binding on lower courts).
    Ennis also points out that in State v. Johnson, 
    152 Wn. App. 924
    , 936, 
    219 P.3d 958
     (2009), it was suggested that perhaps a corroboration instruction should always
    incorporate in the court’s instruction elsewhere that the jury is to resolve all issues of
    credibility and weight. If instructions on the jurors’ role in assessing credibility and
    weighing evidence were often overlooked in closing arguments, we might agree. But in
    criminal cases, instructions about the jurors’ responsibility to assess credibility and
    weight are among a few that the State or the defense, and ordinarily both, consistently
    19
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    address during closing argument. That happened in the closing arguments in Ennis’s
    trial. The State never mentioned the corroboration instruction.
    In his briefing on appeal, Ennis argues that he should have been as free as K.S. to
    argue that his testimony did not need to be corroborated. We agree. It might have been a
    strange argument to make in his case because, as the trial court pointed out in denying
    Ennis’s new trial motion, this was a case in which both sides presented quite a bit of
    corroborative-type evidence on the issue in dispute: K.S.’s capacity. Nonetheless, Ennis
    could easily have made the argument that his testimony did not have to be corroborated
    by pointing to the trial court’s instructions. It is unimaginable, if defense counsel had
    argued that Ennis’s testimony did not have to be corroborated, that the State would have
    objected. If the State did the unimaginable and objected, it is inconceivable that the trial
    court would not have overruled the State’s objection. And if both the unimaginable and
    inconceivable happened, with the jury led to believe that the defense, but not the State,
    must present corroborating evidence, we would reverse any conviction and order a new
    trial.
    There is no need for a corroboration instruction, and it would be better not to give
    one.6 If the instruction is given, however, standard instructions will generally enable the
    6
    Ennis points out that the Washington Supreme Court Committee on Jury
    Instructions recommends against giving such an instruction, and this court has shared the
    committee’s misgivings in published and unpublished decisions. As the committee
    points out, “[t]he matter of corroboration is really a matter of sufficiency of the evidence”
    20
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    defense to put the instruction in a proper perspective. This is probably what the Supreme
    Court had in mind in Clayton, when, having rejected the argument that a corroboration
    instruction is a judicial comment on the evidence, it made the further observation that
    judgments will not be reversed for an error that could not reasonably be presumed to have
    prejudiced the appellant. 
    32 Wn.2d at 574, 577
    . Given the jury instructions available to
    a criminal defendant, it will be the rare case where the giving of a corroboration
    instruction is reversible error.
    Deprivation of the constitutional right to present a defense
    Citing Chambers v. Mississippi, 
    410 U.S. 284
    , 294, 
    93 S. Ct. 1038
    , 
    35 L. Ed. 2d 297
     (1973), and State v. Jones, 
    168 Wn.2d 713
    , 720, 
    230 P.3d 576
     (2010), Ennis also
    characterizes the giving of the corroboration instruction as violating his due process right
    to a meaningful opportunity for his defense to be heard. Despite the breadth of
    Chambers’s reference to a “right to a fair opportunity to defend against the State’s
    accusations,” 
    410 U.S. at 294
    , the right to present a defense is not implicated by anything
    happening at trial that a defendant later contends was unfair. In Chambers and Jones, the
    rights at issue were the right to confront and cross-examine witnesses and call witnesses
    and “[w]hether a jury can or should accept the uncorroborated testimony of the
    prosecuting witness or the uncorroborated testimony of the defendant is best left to
    argument of counsel.” 11 WASHINGTON PRACTICE: WASHINGTON PATTERN JURY
    INSTRUCTIONS: CRIMINAL § 45.02, cmt. at 917 (4th ed. 2016). As Judge Becker observed
    in her concurrence in Chenoweth, “Many correct statements of the law are not
    appropriate to give as instructions.” 188 Wn. App. at 537.
    21
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    on one’s own behalf. Id.; Jones, 
    168 Wn.2d at 720
    . Ennis does not identify any evidence
    he was prevented from presenting as a result of the unobjected-to corroboration
    instruction.
    He instead makes a conclusory argument that the corroboration instruction, in
    conjunction with instruction on the defense of reasonable belief that he requested,
    “misled” and “confus[ed]” the jury. Appellant’s Opening Br. at 52-53. Even if that were
    so, he cites no authority that clear and consistent jury instructions are one of the
    minimum guarantees of due process. And he fails to provide an example of any
    argument he was entitled to make, but was prevented from making, by virtue of the two
    instructions. No violation of his right to present a defense is shown.
    II.    PROSECUTORIAL MISCONDUCT AND RELATED INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF
    COUNSEL
    Ennis alleges seven instances of prosecutorial misconduct on appeal. One of the
    instances of alleged misconduct was argued as a basis for a new trial, so we have the
    benefit of the trial court’s view. After an overview of the applicable law, we first address
    the misconduct alleged in the new trial motion and then turn to the misconduct alleged
    only on appeal.
    A.      OVERVIEW
    Prosecutorial misconduct is not attorney misconduct in the sense of violating rules
    of professional conduct. State v. Fisher, 
    165 Wn.2d 727
    , 740 n.1, 
    202 P.3d 937
     (2009).
    22
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    It is, instead, a term of art that refers to “prosecutorial mistakes or actions [that] are not
    harmless and deny a defendant [a] fair trial.” 
    Id.
     To succeed on a prosecutorial
    misconduct claim, an appellant has the burden of establishing that the prosecutor’s
    conduct was improper (as being at least mistaken) and was prejudicial. State v. Stenson,
    
    132 Wn.2d 668
    , 718-19, 
    940 P.2d 1239
     (1997).
    When a defendant fails to object in the trial court to a prosecutor’s statements, he
    waives his right to raise a challenge on appeal unless the remark was so flagrant and ill
    intentioned that it evinced an enduring and resulting prejudice that could not have been
    neutralized by an admonition to the jury. Id. at 719. “Defense counsel’s decision not to
    object or request a curative instruction ‘strongly suggests to a court that the argument or
    event in question did not appear critically prejudicial to an appellant in the context of the
    trial.’” State v. Gauthier, 
    189 Wn. App. 30
    , 38-39, 
    354 P.3d 900
     (2015) (quoting State v.
    Swan, 
    114 Wn.2d 613
    , 661, 
    790 P.2d 610
     (1990)).
    The hurdles to obtaining relief based on prosecutorial misconduct are purposefully
    high. In re Pers. Restraint of Richmond, No. 37057-7-III, slip op. at 3-4 (Wash. Ct. App.
    Mar. 18, 2021), https://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions/pdf/370577_pub.pdf.
    Inconsequential prosecutorial missteps do not merit remand. See 
    id.
     Deference is owed
    to the trial court’s ability to oversee the administration of justice, defense counsel’s
    judgment about whether an objection was worth raising, and a jury’s ability to
    independently assess the merits of the case. 
    Id.
    23
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    When a defendant has alleged prosecutorial misconduct in the trial court, we will
    give deference to the trial court’s ruling on the matter. Stenson, 
    132 Wn.2d at 719
    . The
    trial court is in the best position to most effectively determine if prosecutorial misconduct
    prejudiced a defendant’s right to a fair trial. 
    Id.
    B.     MISCONDUCT ALLEGED IN SUPPORT OF NEW TRIAL MOTION: COMMENT ON
    THE RIGHT TO SILENCE
    Ennis relied in moving for a new trial on one allegation of prosecutorial
    misconduct: the following statements made by the prosecutor in closing argument (the
    emphasis is Ennis’s):
    Part of what you will do in this case is to look at the testimony and examine
    it. We heard the defendant’s statement for the first time yesterday when he
    took the stand. The defendant is presumed innocent . . . . He is not
    presumed credible.
    CP at 412 (see RP at 1496).
    And again, this applies equally to the defendant’s statement. You can look
    at the timing and accuracy of a statement, and you can also consider how
    someone testifies and what motive or bias they may have.
    
    Id.
     (see RP at 1497).
    You can look at the timing of statements in this case and the testimony that
    contradicts not only the claim by the defendant that [K.S.] was flirting, but
    also that by the time this occurred she had suddenly been ridden all of the
    effects of being intoxicated.
    
    Id.
     at 413 (see RP at 1499).
    The defendant spoke to you the other day after having two years and four
    months and access to reports and being seated in the courtroom throughout
    24
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    this, and he gave you a version of events that you must analyze. And it’s
    a version of events, ladies and gentlemen, that was driven by the fact that
    despite the defendant’s efforts, DNA was discovered in this case. The
    defendant had hoped first that he would go undetected because [K.S.] was
    not in any condition he thought to remember the report.
    
    Id.
     (see RP at 1500).
    That took away some options from the defendant as to what he would
    testify to. His testimony was full of justifications, not taking responsibility.
    Ladies and gentlemen, actions can speak louder than words.
    
    Id.
     (see RP at 1510). Ennis contends that this argument improperly commented on his
    exercise of his right to silence.
    The Washington and United States Constitutions protect a defendant’s right
    against self-incrimination, which includes the right to silence. U.S. CONST. amend. V;
    WASH. CONST. art. I, § 9. When silence is protected, we distinguish between comments
    on silence and mere references to silence. State v. Burke, 
    163 Wn.2d 204
    , 221-22, 
    181 P.3d 1
     (2008). “A comment on an accused’s silence occurs when used to the State’s
    advantage either as substantive evidence of guilt or to suggest to the jury that the silence
    was an admission of guilt.” State v. Lewis, 
    130 Wn.2d 700
    , 707, 
    927 P.2d 235
     (1996).
    Analyzing how the reference is used—its “imputation”—“examines the prosecutor’s
    intent and whether the jury would naturally and necessarily take the comments as
    referring to the defendant’s silence.” Burke, 
    163 Wn.2d at 222
     (citation and internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    25
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    In responding to Ennis’s motion for a new trial, the prosecutor argued that her
    statements challenged by Ennis did not comment on silence; they concerned the
    credibility of Ennis’s testimony and included a permitted “tailoring” argument. Sealed
    CP at 1349-54. A tailoring argument calls the jury’s attention to the fact that a criminal
    defendant who chooses to testify has had the opportunity to hear all other witnesses and
    can tailor his testimony accordingly. Portuondo v. Agard, 
    529 U.S. 61
    , 63, 
    120 S. Ct. 1119
    , 
    146 L. Ed. 2d 47
     (2000). In Portuondo, the United States Supreme Court rejected
    an argument that its decision in Griffin v. California, 
    380 U.S. 609
    , 
    85 S. Ct. 1229
    , 
    14 L. Ed. 2d 106
     (1965), should be extended to foreclose tailoring arguments under the Fifth
    Amendment to the United States Constitution. In Griffin, the Supreme Court had held
    that the Fifth Amendment forbad comment by the prosecution or instruction by the court
    that an accused’s silence is evidence of guilt. 
    Id. at 615
    .
    In Portuondo, the Supreme Court held that the principles and reasoning that
    prohibit comments suggesting that silence is evidence of guilt do not apply to a
    prosecutor’s comments that a defendant who testifies has tailored his testimony.
    Comments about tailoring, the Court reasoned,
    concern[ the defendant’s] credibility as a witness, and [are] therefore in
    accord with our longstanding rule that when a defendant takes the stand,
    “his credibility may be impeached and his testimony assailed like that of
    any other witness.” Brown v. United States, 
    356 U.S. 148
    , 154, 
    78 S. Ct. 622
    , 
    2 L. Ed. 2d 589
     (1958). “[W]hen [a defendant] assumes the role of a
    witness, the rules that generally apply to other witnesses—rules that serve
    the truth-seeking function of the trial—are generally applicable to him as
    26
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    well.” Perry v. Leeke, 
    488 U.S. 272
    , 282, 
    109 S. Ct. 594
    , 
    102 L. Ed. 2d 624
     (1989).
    
    529 U.S. at 69
     (third and fourth alterations in original).
    Washington courts have construed the Washington Constitution as placing limits
    on tailoring arguments. Tailoring arguments are permitted under article I, section 22 of
    the Washington Constitution, but only when the argument of tailoring can be inferred
    from a defendant’s testimony: either direct, or in cross-examination.
    State constitutional protections against tailoring arguments were first addressed in
    State v. Martin, 
    171 Wn.2d 521
    , 
    252 P.3d 872
     (2011), in which our high court undertook
    a Gunwall7 analysis and concluded that article I, section 22 of the Washington
    Constitution is more protective than the Sixth Amendment to the United States
    Constitution, which was also at issue in Portuondo. Martin adopted the position of
    Justice Ginsburg’s dissent in Portoundo. Justice Ginsburg agreed that a criminal
    defendant’s opportunity to tailor could be relevant credibility evidence, but in her view,
    allowing tailoring arguments to be made in every case, absent any evidence developed on
    the issue, went too far. It “transforms a defendant’s presence at trial from a Sixth
    Amendment right into an automatic burden on his credibility.” Portuondo, 
    529 U.S. at 76
     (Ginsburg, J., dissenting).
    7
    State v. Gunwall, 
    106 Wn.2d 54
    , 
    720 P.2d 808
     (1986).
    27
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    Martin quoted the following language from Justice Ginsburg’s dissent as
    “compatible with the protections provided by article I, section 22”:
    “The truth-seeking function of trials may be served by permitting
    prosecutors to make accusations of tailoring—even wholly generic
    accusations of tailoring—as part of cross-examination. Some defendants
    no doubt do give false testimony calculated to fit with the testimony they
    hear from other witnesses. If accused on cross-examination of having
    tailored their testimony, those defendants might display signals of
    untrustworthiness that it is the province of the jury to detect and interpret.
    But when a generic argument is offered on summation, it cannot in the
    slightest degree distinguish the guilty from the innocent. It undermines all
    defendants equally and therefore does not help answer the question that is
    the essence of a trial’s search for truth: Is this particular defendant lying to
    cover his guilt or truthfully narrating his innocence?”
    
    171 Wn.2d at 535-36
     (quoting Portuondo, 
    529 U.S. at 79
     (Ginsburg, J., dissenting)).
    Martin continued, “In other words, Justice Ginsburg distinguished a comment in closing
    argument that is ‘tied only to the defendant’s presence in the courtroom and not to his
    actual testimony’ from accusations made during cross-examination of the defendant . . . .
    The latter, she concluded, do not violate the Sixth Amendment.” 
    Id.
    In State v. Berube, 
    171 Wn. App. 103
    , 117, 
    286 P.3d 402
     (2012), this court held
    that the State can argue tailoring in closing without having explored it in cross-
    examination if the defendant’s testimony in direct examination provides a basis for the
    argument. It was argued in closing in Berube that the defendant tailored his direct
    testimony to conform to his mother’s testimony, which conflicted with his own earlier
    statement to police. This court rejected Berube’s argument that the closing argument was
    28
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    improper because he was not cross-examined about tailoring, holding that the State’s
    argument was nonetheless “a logical attack on the defendant’s credibility and does not
    burden the right to attend or testify. And it makes no sense to require the State to raise
    the issue again on cross-examination in order to make its credibility argument in closing.”
    
    Id.
    In defending against Ennis’s new trial motion, the State contended it made a
    tailoring argument that had a basis in Ennis’s trial testimony. See Sealed RP at 1711. In
    direct examination, Ennis’s trial lawyer repeatedly asked, and Ennis repeatedly agreed,
    that his recollection of events was consistent with a time line compiled and testified to by
    Detective Armstrong. See, e.g., RP at 1390-91, 1396, 1406, 1423, 1427.
    After this direct testimony tying Ennis’s recollection of events to Detective
    Armstrong’s testimony, the prosecutor led her cross-examination of Ennis with the
    following questions, receiving the following answers:
    Q.     Mr. Ennis, you’ve had an opportunity to review Detective
    Armstrong’s timeline and the reports in this matter prior to testifying,
    correct?
    A.     Some of the reports and the timeline, yes, ma’am.
    Q.     And you’ve had access to those things for over two years before
    today, correct?
    A.     Off and on, yes.
    29
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    RP at 1435. Later, she questioned him about his ability to provide almost two
    hours’ worth of trial testimony to “a variety of details down to the minutiae.”
    RP at 1437. Ennis responded:
    A.     Well, it’s something that I’ve thought about, all the details of that
    party as soon as the allegation was made.
    Q.     So—
    A.     I started thinking back to everything that I had seen, everything that I
    had heard at that party. For two years and four months it’s all I’ve thought
    about every single day. So yeah, I have some pretty good recall of what
    happened that night.
    Q.     And you thought about how to explain your actions to your wife?
    A.     Yes, ma’am.
    RP at 1437-38.
    One issue, then, is whether the prosecutor’s challenged statements were a
    comment on Ennis’s exercise of his right to remain silent or, instead, a permitted
    argument that his opportunity to tailor was a reason to doubt his credibility.
    In refusing to grant a new trial on account of the prosecutor’s statements in
    closing, the trial court explained in her oral ruling that she had broken the challenged
    statements into three comments. The first, that “[w]e heard the defendant’s statement for
    the first time yesterday when he took the stand,” she found to be brief and “somewhat
    ambiguous.” RP at 1779. She observed that “it was in the midst of a discussion with
    regard to credibility.” Id. at 1780. As the trial court pointed out, the prosecutor made no
    specific reference to silence or to any exercise of Ennis’s Fifth Amendment rights.
    30
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    Recognizing that no objection was made, she said, “[t]he comment would have to have
    been a comment on silence; and it would have to have been flagrant, ill-intentioned, or
    unable to be cured by instruction. And it was none of those things.” Id.
    Second, as analyzed by the trial court, were the prosecutor’s challenged statements
    suggesting that jurors consider the timing of statements. These challenged statements
    appear at pages 1497 and 1499 of the report of proceedings. At this point in the
    prosecutor’s argument, she directed the jurors’ attention to their instruction on assessing
    witness testimony (apparently displaying it on a screen), specifically pointing out that
    “[p]art of what you consider is the reasonableness of the testimony in the context of the
    entirety of the case and other witnesses. You can look at the timing and accuracy of a
    statement, and you can also consider how someone testifies and what motive or bias they
    may have.” RP at 1497.8 These challenged comments occurred in the course of the
    8
    The verbatim report of proceedings reports the prosecutor as referring to
    instruction 12, but it is apparent that the instruction being displayed, which the prosecutor
    described as a “multiple-page instruction,” with the language she was discussing “at the
    top of page 2,” must have been instruction 1. RP at 1496. Language at the top of page 2
    of instruction 1 states, in part:
    In considering a witness’s testimony, you may consider these things: the
    opportunity of the witness to observe or know the things he or she testifies
    about; the ability of the witness to observe accurately; the quality of a
    witness’s memory while testifying; the manner of the witness while
    testifying; any personal interest that the witness might have in the outcome
    or the issues; any bias or prejudice that the witness may have shown; the
    reasonableness of the witness’s statements in the context of all of the other
    31
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    prosecutor’s attack on the plausibility of Ennis’s version of events. See RP at 1497-99.
    The trial court construed references to “timing” in this context to be references to
    statements made at the party at around the time of commission of the crime, adding “and
    again, there was no objection. So I don’t believe that that was even a subtle comment on
    silence.” RP at 1781.
    The last category was the prosecutor’s reference to Ennis’s testimony about the
    two years he had to think about events on the night and morning of the party. The trial
    court said these statements “come[ ] the closest to tailoring that you get.” RP at 1781.
    She did not view them as tailoring, however, because Ennis had not made prior
    statements that he was now correcting with the benefit of having heard the testimony of
    others. She did not view them as a comment on silence, however, and observed that, here
    again, there was no objection.
    With respect to the last category of statements, we view tailoring differently and
    are satisfied that the prosecutor had a basis in Ennis’s testimony for making a tailoring
    argument.
    Beyond that, the trial court, having been present for the closing arguments,
    assessed this claim of prosecutorial misconduct from a superior vantage point. Her
    evidence; and any other factors that affect your evaluation or belief of a
    witness or your evaluation of his or her testimony.
    CP at 314.
    32
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    conclusions that the prosecutor’s statements were not comments on silence and were not
    so flagrant and ill intentioned that any resulting prejudice could not have been cured by
    instruction are reasonable. We defer to them.
    C.       OTHER ALLEGED PROSECUTORIAL MISCONDUCT
    Ennis alleges six other instances of prosecutorial misconduct for the first time in
    his opening brief.
    Eliciting improper testimony on Ennis’s exercise of his right to silence
    Recall that Ennis testified that during the evidence collection meeting he offered to
    cut his own fingernails, and that the prosecutor questioned Detective Armstrong about
    that in its rebuttal case. Ennis does not challenge the prosecutor’s question to the
    detective about whether he remembered Ennis making such a statement, or the
    detective’s answer that he did not. He does challenge the prosecutor’s follow-up
    question, which he characterizes as whether Ennis “‘remained silent during the [DNA
    collection] contact and conversations?’” and the detective’s response that Ennis did, in
    fact, remain silent. Appellant’s Opening Br. at 73-74 (alteration in original) (quoting RP
    at 1472). Ennis argues that the question concerned silence after Ennis had received
    Miranda9 warnings and was “completely unnecessary,” since the detective had already
    testified to not recalling such an offer. Id. at 74.
    9
    Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
    , 
    86 S. Ct. 1602
    , 
    16 L. Ed. 2d 694
     (1966).
    33
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    Ennis’s brief does not fully reproduce the prosecutor’s follow-up question. The
    prosecutor asked, “Did you indicate in your report that [Ennis] remained silent during the
    contact and conversations?” thereby drawing the detective’s attention to his
    contemporaneous report. RP at 1472 (emphasis added). Evidence of a contemporaneous
    record that Ennis did not say anything carries weight that goes beyond the detective’s
    testimony that, two years later, he did not recall such a statement.
    “If an accused elicits evidence pertaining to post-arrest silence, then the State can
    introduce rebuttal evidence on the same subject under the open door rationale.” State v.
    Rushworth, 12 Wn. App. 2d 466, 475, 
    458 P.3d 1192
     (2020); State v. Holmes, 
    122 Wn. App. 438
    , 443, 
    93 P.3d 212
     (2004) (“[W]here a defendant claims to have provided
    information to the officers at the time of arrest” the State may introduce “evidence that
    actually the defendant remained silent.”).
    Ennis argues that the State went too far when it couched the question “us[ing]
    Miranda language.” Appellant’s Reply Br. at 11. But inquiring about the report was
    legitimate rebuttal and the prosecutor might have wanted to remain true to the report
    language she was asking about. In context, reasonable jurors would have understood the
    question and answer as rebutting Ennis’s testimony that he made the offer, not as a
    comment on his exercise of a Fifth Amendment right.
    34
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    Vouching
    It is improper for a prosecutor to personally vouch for or against a witness’s
    credibility. State v. Brett, 
    126 Wn.2d 136
    , 175, 
    892 P.2d 29
     (1995). “Improper vouching
    generally occurs (1) if the prosecutor expresses his or her personal belief as to the
    veracity of the witness or (2) if the prosecutor indicates that evidence not presented at
    trial supports the witness’s testimony.” State v. Ish, 
    170 Wn.2d 189
    , 196, 
    241 P.3d 389
    (2010). “Prosecutors may, however, argue an inference from the evidence, and
    prejudicial error will not be found unless it is ‘clear and unmistakable’ that counsel is
    expressing a personal opinion.” Brett, 
    126 Wn.2d at 175
     (quoting State v. Sargent,
    
    40 Wn. App. 340
    , 344, 
    698 P.2d 598
     (1985)).
    Mr. Ennis contends the following comments in the prosecutor’s closing argument
    were improper vouching (the emphasis is Ennis’s):
    [K.S.] never stopped Officer Heuett from making that report, because she
    knew the truth. And [K.S.] has abided by that truth for two years and four
    months.
    Appellant’s Opening Br. at 82 (alterations in original) (quoting RP at 1513).
    [K.S.] refused to give up on a job she loves, and she has abided by the truth
    in this courtroom under oath in front of each of you and everyone else here.
    Id. at 83 (alteration in original) (quoting RP at 1514).
    And ladies and gentlemen, when you find [K.S.]’s credibility to be such that
    her statement to you is nothing more and everything that includes the truth,
    you will realize under the law that the state has met its burden.
    35
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    Id. (alteration in original) (quoting RP at 1543).
    [T]he defendant in his—in his statement suggested to you that this was a
    woman that had an agenda; that she was so jilted by this experience and her
    sexual aggressiveness being stopped by a defendant that she began a
    vendetta; that she stayed with that for two years and four months; that she,
    committed to a profession that supposed to be about the truth, stayed with
    that truth.
    Id. (alteration in original) (quoting RP at 1543).
    [W]hen you look at the facts in this case . . . the truth and the reality of
    what occurred will be clear. Not based on emotion, not based on games by
    the state, not based on anything else than the truthful word of [K.S].
    Id. (alterations in original) (quoting RP at 1543-44). No objection was made to this
    argument.
    The complained-of statements are not vouching because they do not indicate the
    prosecutor’s personal opinion as to K.S.’s veracity. They are inferences tied to the
    evidence. During K.S.’s testimony, she was asked about some of the things she had to
    deal with as a result of reporting being raped by Ennis:
    I’ve had friends not talk to me ever again; you have—yeah, I’ve had a lot
    of that; a lot of I walk in the room and people glare at me; people see me in
    public and immediately duck to avoid me; a lot of hearing rumors; just
    everything in the media.
    RP at 935. Although K.S. testified that she was still working as a police officer
    “[b]ecause I love the job,” she said her work life was “pretty shit—it’s pretty bad.” Id. at
    935-36. Asked about what had changed, she answered:
    36
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    [J]ust not being able to trust anybody there has been the biggest thing. Um,
    I had—I had my job like up on this pedestal, that it was the greatest thing
    ever and I’m so thankful to be a police officer and work for the city, and
    then just like that I—I never wanted to go to work again, because very
    quickly it was evident that people I thought had my best interests didn’t
    and people that I thought I could trust my life with I can’t even trust my
    emotions with.
    Id.
    It was fair argument to ask jurors which made more sense: That K.S. put herself
    through all of this out of anger that Ennis cut off a one-time consensual sexual encounter?
    Or because she had been raped?
    There was no clear and unmistakable statement of personal opinion. The
    argument was proper.
    Commenting on a witness’s credibility and impugning defense counsel
    In addition to it being improper for a prosecutor to personally vouch for or against
    a witness’s credibility, it is improper for a prosecutor to disparagingly comment on
    defense counsel’s role or impugn defense counsel’s integrity. State v. Thorgerson, 
    172 Wn.2d 438
    , 451, 
    258 P.3d 43
     (2011). A prosecutor improperly impugns defense
    counsel’s integrity when she states that defense counsel is using deception or dishonesty.
    E.g., State v. Lindsay, 
    180 Wn.2d 423
    , 433, 
    326 P.3d 125
     (2014) (stating that defense
    counsel’s argument was a “crock” implied the use of deception and dishonesty);
    Thorgerson, 
    172 Wn.2d at 452
     (referring to the defense case as “sleight of hand” was
    37
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    improper because the phrase implied the use of “wrongful deception or even
    dishonesty”).
    During Beaver’s testimony in the defense case, she testified that she did not
    observe any intoxicated behavior by K.S. The State’s cross-examination included the
    following exchange:
    Q.    Do you recall being interviewed by detectives Jeffery Mitchell and
    Rob Satake?
    A.        Yes.
    ....
    Q.     Okay. And do you recall them talking about, or asking you about
    being introduced to [K.S.] and Callie in the kitchen?
    A.        Yes.
    Q.    Do you recall telling them, “I don’t know if they were trying to be
    funny. I think they were just a little wasted at that point in time”?
    A.        Um, I do recall that. However—
    Q.        Okay. I know you told Mr. Cossey just now that they weren’t, but—
    A.        Right.
    Q.        —you did tell detectives back then that?
    A.        Correct.
    Q.        Okay.
    A.        But wasted—
    Q.    No, that’s fine. Mr. Cossey can clean that up, and you can explain
    why you’re changing it now.
    MR. COSSEY: Objection, your Honor.
    THE COURT: Okay, sustained.
    38
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    RP at 1360-61 (emphasis added). Because an objection was timely made, Ennis must
    demonstrate only that the prosecutor’s statement was improper and prejudicial.
    The State properly concedes that the prosecutor’s objected-to statement
    improperly, argumentatively, impugned Beaver’s credibility. But it argues the error was
    harmless. We agree. The court sustained the defense objection, signaling that the
    statement was improper. Whether Beaver was changing her report of events was
    something that was legitimately explored and that the jury could assess for itself. And
    Beaver was not a key witness on the disputed issue in the case, since she became
    intoxicated and was dressed and put to bed by others even before K.S. was.
    Whether the statement impugned counsel is questionable, but arguable. When a
    witness is asked to confirm having made a prior inconsistent statement, it is not unusual
    for the witness to try to offer an unresponsive explanation. The questioner is permitted to
    cut that off. It is possible, but not clear, that jurors would view the prosecutor’s
    statement, “Mr. Cossey can clean that up” differently than the more typical, “Counsel
    will have an opportunity to ask you about that.” Here again, however, any error was
    harmless. The statement was fleeting and it was far from a clear implication that for
    defense counsel to “clean up” Beaver’s testimony would be deceptive and dishonest.
    And again, the trial court sustained the objection, signaling that the question was
    improper.
    39
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    Questioning about “assault”
    Ennis next argues that the prosecutor impermissibly expressed an opinion on guilt
    by questioning K.S. nine times about being “assaulted”: e.g., “‘Why didn’t you tell him
    who assaulted you?’” and “‘Had you told him at that point who assaulted you?’”
    Appellant’s Opening Br. at 89 (quoting RP at 862, 866). No objection was made until the
    ninth question, when the following exchange occurred:
    Q. Okay. You’d been up—you’d suffered a sexual assault, been up until
    midnight—
    MR. COSSEY: Judge, I’m going to object on that. She’s doing it
    constantly. It’s not appropriate. She’s constantly making that statement.
    It’s not appropriate.
    MS. FITZGERALD: Your Honor, I’m stating the fact that there was
    an assault where fingers were placed inside this woman’s vagina. That’s
    why we’re here.
    MR. COSSEY: It’s an allegation, and she’s making it as a fact that
    she’s—when she’s asking questions.
    THE COURT: Okay. Why don’t you rephrase.
    MS. FITZGERALD: Okay.
    RP at 933-34.
    The nine questions that are challenged followed K.S.’s testimony, in describing
    her call to Rassier, that “I was telling him I was scared and what happened. Um, I didn’t
    tell him who, but I told him that I was just assaulted.” RP at 862 (emphasis added). The
    first two questions by the prosecutor that are challenged sought more detail about what
    K.S. told Rassier about being assaulted. In asking for more details, there was nothing
    40
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    improper about the prosecutor asking those questions using the verbiage K.S. testified she
    used. The prosecutor was not required to ask, e.g., “Why didn’t you tell him who did that
    thing you told him had just happened?”
    As for the next seven questions, six unobjected to, Ennis cites no authority that
    asking questions using a victim’s shorthand for what happened automatically amounts to
    expressing the prosecutor’s personal opinion. In the case on which he relies, State v.
    Reed, the court found that the prosecutor asserted his personal opinion about the
    credibility of witnesses and Reed’s guilt where
    he called [Reed] a liar no less than four times. Next, the prosecutor stated
    that the defense counsel did not have a case, and that the petitioner was
    clearly a “murder two”. Finally, he implied that the defense witnesses
    should not be believed because they were from out of town and drove fancy
    cars.
    
    102 Wn.2d 140
    , 145-46, 
    684 P.2d 699
     (1984). The prosecutor’s questioning in this case
    comes nowhere near the misconduct present in Reed.
    The prosecutor’s use of K.S.’s shorthand in asking questions is not reasonably
    understood as a clear and unmistakable expression of a personal opinion. Particularly
    where the defense did not move in limine for a blanket prohibition on use of the term, and
    there was no defense objection, we find no misconduct.
    In his reply brief, Ennis argues that “the most egregious” part of the prosecutor’s
    misconduct was her response to the defense objection, when she said, “I’m stating the
    41
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    fact that there was an assault where fingers were placed inside this woman’s vagina.
    That’s why we’re here.” Appellant’s Reply Br. at 18; RP at 934.
    The statement was atypical of this prosecutor’s conduct in the trial, and we wonder
    if she misspoke. We agree with Ennis that this response to the objection was
    objectionable, but the fact remains that defense counsel did not object. Nor did he ask the
    court to strike the prosecutor’s response or request a curative instruction. He did take
    what was arguably a more effective step—he pointed out, “It’s an allegation.” RP at 934.
    The objection defense counsel had made was implicitly sustained, and the prosecutor did
    not thereafter refer to an “assault” in her questioning. Ennis does not demonstrate that
    the prosecutor’s response to the objection was so flagrant and ill intentioned that an
    instruction could not have cured any resulting prejudice.
    Violating motion in limine
    Ennis next argues that the State violated an in limine order. The State, not the
    defense, moved to “[p]rohibit Doug Strosahl from expressing an opinion as to the
    credibility of [K.S.’s] disclosure on October 25, 2015.” CP at 51 (boldface omitted). The
    State was concerned about Doug saying he did not report K.S.’s allegations because he
    believed her version of events “did not ‘make sense.’” 
    Id.
     It based its motion on “ER
    608, which prohibits a witness from commenting on the credibility of another witness.”
    
    Id.
     The defense did not object and the motion was granted.
    42
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    During trial, the State made several references to the fact that Doug did not report
    K.S.’s allegations. Those references did not violate the terms of the in limine order nor
    did they implicate the ER 608 basis for the order. There was no misconduct. If Ennis
    believed the State opened the door to an explanation of why Doug did not report, his
    remedy was to ask the court to revisit the in limine order.
    Using impeachment evidence as substantive evidence
    Ennis next complains that the State relied on impeachment evidence as substantive
    evidence when it argued in closing that “at two o’clock” Heather Strosahl “was so
    worried about how intoxicated [K.S.] was she wanted to go check on her. She talked
    about doing the rounds, checking to make sure everybody was alive.” RP at 1494.
    Heather testified when questioned by the prosecutor that by the time Doug got out
    of bed and joined her and Ennis in the kitchen, she was no longer concerned about K.S.
    The prosecutor then had Heather read to the jury part of the statement Heather provided
    to detectives in 2015, in which she said that she, Ennis and Doug decided to “go check on
    [K.S.], make sure she’s doing okay,” and that Heather had “wanted to do, you know, a
    sweep of—make sure everybody’s still alive.” RP at 599. The defense did not object or
    ask for a limiting instruction.
    A witness may be impeached with a prior out-of-court statement of a material fact
    that is inconsistent with her testimony in court, even if such a statement would otherwise
    be inadmissible as hearsay. State v. Clinkenbeard, 
    130 Wn. App. 552
    , 569, 
    123 P.3d 872
    43
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    (2005). Impeachment evidence reflects on the witness’s credibility but is not probative of
    the substantive facts encompassed by the evidence. 
    Id.
     (citing State v. Johnson, 
    40 Wn. App. 371
    , 377, 
    699 P.2d 221
     (1985)). When prior inconsistent statements are admitted as
    impeachment evidence, an instruction cautioning the jury to limit its consideration of the
    statement to its intended purpose is necessary and proper. Johnson, 
    40 Wn. App. at 377
    .
    But the limitation on use of the evidence is waived if no objection to the introduction of a
    prior inconsistent statement is made and no limiting instruction is sought. See State v.
    Myers, 
    133 Wn.2d 26
    , 36, 
    941 P.2d 1102
     (1997). Here, there was no objection or request
    for a limiting instruction, so the State was free to rely on the evidence as substantive
    evidence.
    Ennis’s reliance on Clinkenbeard to argue otherwise is misplaced. Clinkenbeard,
    a prosecution for first degree sexual misconduct with a minor, recognized that absent an
    objection or request for a limiting instruction, a defendant ordinarily waives objection to
    the State’s use of impeachment evidence as substantive evidence. 130 Wn. App. at 571.
    The court “decline[d] to deem [the] issue waived” on the particular facts of
    Clinkenbeard’s case, however. Id. This was in part because the minor victim’s prior
    inconsistent statements were the only evidence that she and the victim had engaged in
    sexual intercourse. Id. at 570. Additionally, there were serious problems with the record.
    The court could not be sure that there had not been an objection or limiting ruling. Id. at
    571.
    44
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    Here, there is no reason not to find a waiver of the limitation on use of the
    evidence.
    III.   INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL
    Ennis argues he was denied effective assistance of counsel because Cossey made
    multiple errors, including by representing him despite an actual conflict of interest.
    When adjudging ineffective assistance of counsel, we look at the entirety of
    counsel’s performance. E.g., State v. Ciskie, 
    110 Wn.2d 263
    , 284, 
    751 P.2d 1165
     (1988).
    Alleged deficiencies by counsel are viewed cumulatively when assessing prejudicial
    impact. E.g., Turner v. Duncan, 
    158 F.3d 449
    , 457 (9th Cir. 1998); Harris v. Wood, 
    64 F.3d 1432
    , 1438 (9th Cir. 1995).
    To prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, a defendant must
    demonstrate (1) that defense counsel’s representation was deficient, i.e., it fell below an
    objective standard of reasonableness; and (2) counsel’s deficient representation
    prejudiced the defendant, i.e., there is a reasonable probability that, except for counsel’s
    unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different. State v.
    McFarland, 
    127 Wn.2d 322
    , 334-35, 
    899 P.2d 1251
     (1995). If a defendant fails to
    establish one prong, we need not consider the other. State v. Hendrickson, 
    129 Wn.2d 61
    , 78, 
    917 P.2d 563
     (1996).
    In order for the court to find deficient performance, the defendant must establish
    “‘that counsel made errors so serious that counsel was not functioning as the ‘counsel’
    45
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    guaranteed the defendant by the Sixth Amendment.’” State v. Grier, 
    171 Wn.2d 17
    , 32-
    33, 
    246 P.3d 1260
     (2011) (quoting State v. Thomas, 
    109 Wn.2d 222
    , 225, 
    743 P.2d 816
    (1987)). “The threshold for the deficient performance prong is high” and there is “‘a
    strong presumption that counsel’s performance was reasonable.’” Id. at 33 (quoting
    State v. Kyllo, 
    166 Wn.2d 856
    , 862, 
    215 P.3d 177
     (2009)). “When counsel’s conduct can
    be characterized as legitimate trial strategy or tactics, performance is not deficient.”
    Kyllo, 
    166 Wn.2d at 863
    .
    A defendant must affirmatively prove the required prejudice. Strickland v.
    Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 693, 
    104 S. Ct. 2052
    , 
    80 L. Ed. 2d 674
     (1984). “It is not
    enough for the defendant to show that the errors had some conceivable effect on the
    outcome of the proceeding. Virtually every act or omission of counsel would meet that
    test, and not every error that conceivably could have influenced the outcome undermines
    the reliability of the result of the proceeding.” 
    Id.
     (citation omitted).
    Ineffective assistance of counsel claims are reviewed de novo. State v. Sutherby,
    
    165 Wn.2d 870
    , 883, 
    204 P.3d 916
     (2009).
    Conflict-free representation
    Ennis first renews the argument made as a part of his motion for a new trial that an
    agreement by Cossey not to use the information provided to him by Bugbee violated his
    duty of loyalty and created an actual conflict of interest.
    46
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    The State’s opposition to the conflict of interest argument relied on its interview of
    Cossey. It attached a transcript of Cossey’s interview to its opposition. The State’s
    opposition and the Cossey interview both remain sealed. In announcing her denial of the
    new trial motion in open court, the trial court made public the matters material to her
    conclusion that Ennis had not demonstrated that Cossey had a conflict of interest. We
    confine our discussion of sealed materials to matters the trial court made public, finding
    them sufficient to explain our decision as well. We quote at length from the trial court’s
    ruling:
    So the crux of the conflict and the facts that gave rise to the conflict
    that’s been alleged start with some declarations that Mr. and Mrs. Ennis
    presented to the court, and they discuss a meeting that they had in Mr.
    Cossey’s office back in November of 2015. And at that time both Mr. and
    Mrs. Ennis in their declarations contend that Mr. Cossey told them that he
    had had a conversation with homeowner Doug Strosahl’s counsel, Mr.
    Bugbee, and that Mr. Cossey had advised them that he had learned from
    Mr. Bugbee that Mr. Strosahl had had consensual sexual contact with
    [K.S.] during the party; that the contact was prior to any contact with Mr.
    Ennis; that the contact was similar in nature to that had between [K.S.] and
    Mr. Ennis; and that when Mr. Strosahl and [K.S.] had contact, that [K.S.]
    believed that Mr. Strosahl was actually Mr. Ennis.
    That was all contained in those declarations. And Mr. Ennis’s
    declaration indicates that he was told by Mr. Cossey not to tell anyone. Mr.
    Ennis’s declaration also indicates that he believed that this particular
    information would be used in his defense and would help him defend his
    case.
    Mrs. Ennis’s declaration is similar, but it adds that Mr. Strosahl had
    told Mr. Bugbee that [K.S.] had called Mr. Strosahl “Gordon”; that she also
    believed that that information would be used in defending her husband and
    she also believed that it was going to be used in the state’s direct
    47
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    examination of Mr. Strosahl. We know, of course, that the state never
    called Mr. Strosahl.
    So part of the conflict is, of course, the fact that it’s alleged that Mr.
    Cossey told Mr. Bugbee—or Mr. Bugbee asked Mr. Cossey not to tell
    anybody about it; Mr. Cossey said, “Okay, but I’m going to tell my client
    about it.” So that’s really in a nutshell what the conflict is: that there’s
    some divided loyalties; that Mr. Cossey failed to use that information to
    mount a full defense; and that there were some restrictions placed upon Mr.
    Cossey by virtue of his promise to Mr. Bugbee not to use it.
    So again, we know that Mr. Strosahl was never called as a state’s
    witness; he was called by the defense, however. And I went back through
    Mr. Strosahl’s testimony. And he answered all of Mr. Cossey’s questions,
    talked about where he was that evening, talked about [K.S.]’s level of
    intoxication and the fact that he himself, Mr. Strosahl, was very intoxicated.
    And as I recall, he had indicated that midway through the party he went to
    bed because he’d had so much to drink he didn’t feel well, he eventually
    got up out of bed, he went into the kitchen, made some observations and
    went right back to bed.
    Now, Mr. Cossey was interviewed by the parties. And, of course,
    this is key. He recalls the conversation that he had with Mr. Bugbee. And
    his recollection of that conversation was that it was—it was given to him or
    spun to him in the hypothetical along the lines of Mr. Strosahl may have
    engaged in the same type of contact with the victim. But Mr. Cossey’s—
    Mr. Cossey indicated that at no time was he ever told that this contact
    between the two was consensual; and in fact Mr. Cossey believed that the
    opposite was true, that it was not consensual. And he firmly believed that
    that’s what Mr. Bugbee told him. So that changes things a bit, and I’ll get
    to that in just a minute.
    Mr. Cossey confirmed that he was asked by Mr. Bugbee to keep it
    confidential. Mr. Cossey told Mr. Bugbee, “I’m going to tell my client, of
    course.” And again, key to this also is the fact that Mr. Cossey was told
    that Mr. Strosahl would not testify to this; “If you question him, he’s not
    going to admit that this behavior ever happened.”
    Mr. Cossey denies that Mrs. Ennis was present at that November
    meeting. But importantly, Mr. Cossey also indicates that Mr. Ennis was
    very, very involved in his defense and that Mr. Ennis stated unequivocally
    that he didn’t want to implicate Mr. Strosahl in any of this; that his defense
    48
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    was consent; that this was a consensual act between himself and [K.S.] and
    that that’s the way the defense was going to turn.
    Mr. Cossey opines that because the defense was consent, that this
    type of testimony would not be of assistance to Mr. Ennis. There would be
    some very significant evidentiary issues with regard to Mr. Strosahl
    admitting to a nonconsensual act of this nature, that being Fifth
    Amendment considerations, hearsay considerations, that sort of a thing.
    But again, Mr. Bugbee at least as far as Mr. Cossey was concerned made
    clear that Mr. Strosahl was not going to testify, he wasn’t going to allow
    Mr. Strosahl to testify. And as I recall, Mr. Strosahl’s second attorney
    reiterated the same thing.
    RP at 1774-77.
    At this point in her oral ruling, the trial court commented on hearings that took
    place in 2017, when the case was assigned to a different judge. As she observes, and as
    the record bears out, in the hearings taking place on May 25 and June 7, 2017, there was
    veiled discussion of Bugbee sharing information with Cossey. What was not veiled at all,
    however, and was stated with Ennis present, was that Cossey would not be using the
    information obtained from Bugbee “in any shape or form” at trial. RP (June 7, 2017) at
    80.
    The trial court then continued with her oral ruling:
    We know that Mr. Strosahl was eventually interviewed sometime, I
    believe, in May of 2017. [K.S.] was interviewed, and according to Mr.
    Cossey, was very clear and very definite that Mr. Ennis was the perpetrator
    of this crime.
    I will note too that typically when I see motions like this I oftentimes
    will have something from the witness that will say, “I was ready, willing,
    and able to come in and testify, yet nobody asked me to do that, nobody
    asked me these certain questions.” I don’t have anything from Mr. Strosahl
    49
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    indicating that he would have testified. What I’ve got is a hearsay or
    double hearsay kind of a situation, again, with some very particular
    evidentiary problems if that was going to be attempted to be admitted.
    So in order to find a conflict of interest here, I’ve got to find that Mr.
    Cossey failed to pursue the other suspect defense based upon the fact that
    he had loyalties or promises to somebody else. And that conflict has to
    cause a lapse in representation, it has to be contrary to Mr. Ennis’s interests,
    and it has to affect Mr. Cossey’s advocacy.
    I considered all of the case law that was presented. I can’t ignore the
    fact that Mr. Ennis is involved in law enforcement; he’s specially trained;
    he’s involved in the criminal justice system; he was involved in this case
    from day one. I don’t doubt that he had an equal role in or a very
    significant role in determining strategy in how this case was going to
    proceed. And I have no doubt in finding that Mr. Ennis knew that Mr.
    Strosahl’s testimony would not be admitted or even admissible. So based
    upon all of that, I’m going to find that there was no conflict of interest here
    that affected Mr. Cossey’s representation of Mr. Ennis.
    RP at 1778-79.
    When an ineffective assistance claim is raised on appeal, the reviewing court may
    consider only facts within the record. Grier, 
    171 Wn.2d at
    29 (citing McFarland, 
    127 Wn.2d at 335
    ). Before we could begin to consider whether evidence of consensual
    sexual contact between Doug Strosahl and K.S. on the night of the party would have had
    a reasonable probability of changing the outcome of trial, we would first have to see the
    evidence and a demonstration that it was admissible. If demonstrating ineffective
    assistance depends on evidence outside the trial record, a defendant must file a personal
    restraint petition supported by the necessary evidence. 
    Id.
     (citing McFarland, 
    127 Wn.2d at 335
    ; Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 691
    ).
    50
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    Ennis cannot establish ineffective assistance on the existing record. His remedy is
    to file a personal restraint petition supported by Doug Strosahl’s sworn testimony about
    the contact and that he would have testified to the contact at trial had he been asked.10
    Failure to request change of venue
    Ennis next argues Cossey was ineffective by failing to pursue a change of venue.
    He argues the court would have granted a motion for a change because the judge
    presiding at the first trial granted a mistrial on account of pretrial publicity.
    Any decision to change venue rests largely within the discretion of the trial court.
    State v. Clark, 
    143 Wn.2d 731
    , 756, 
    24 P.3d 1006
     (2001). Pretrial publicity is not a
    sufficient basis, itself, to require a change of venue. “[A] defendant must show a
    probability of unfairness or prejudice from pretrial publicity.” State v. Hoffman, 
    116 Wn.2d 51
    , 71, 
    804 P.2d 577
     (1991).11 Conducting voir dire is a means to determine
    10
    Assuming such evidence is provided in support of a personal restraint petition, a
    reference hearing might be required, given Cossey’s position that he was led to believe
    the contact was not consensual and Doug Strosahl would refuse to testify.
    11
    When deciding whether to grant a motion to change venue, courts consider:
    “(1) the inflammatory or noninflammatory nature of the publicity; (2) the degree to which
    the publicity was circulated throughout the community; (3) the length of time elapsed
    from the dissemination of the publicity to the date of trial; (4) the care exercised and the
    difficulty encountered in the selection of the jury; (5) the familiarity of prospective or
    trial jurors with the publicity and the resultant effect upon them; (6) the challenges
    exercised by the defendant in selecting the jury, both peremptory and for cause; (7) the
    connection of government officials with the release of publicity; (8) the severity of the
    charge; and (9) the size of the area from which the venire is drawn.” State v.
    Munzanreder, 
    199 Wn. App. 162
    , 181, 
    398 P.3d 1160
     (2017).
    51
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    whether an impartial jury can be impaneled, unless media coverage is so pervasive that
    bias can be presumed. State v. Jackson, 
    150 Wn.2d 251
    , 271, 
    76 P.3d 217
     (2003). “‘[I]f
    a defendant does not exercise all peremptory challenges it is presumed that he or she was
    satisfied with the jury.’” Clark, 
    143 Wn.2d at 759
     (quoting State v. Rice, 
    120 Wn.2d 549
    , 558-59, 
    844 P.2d 416
     (1993)).
    As Strickland observed, “If it is easier to dispose of an ineffectiveness claim on
    the ground of lack of sufficient prejudice, which we expect will often be so, that course
    should be followed.” 
    466 U.S. at 697
    . The State’s description of the jury selection
    process and the jury selected for Ennis’s trial persuades us that it is easy to dispose of this
    claim on the ground of Ennis’s inability to show actual prejudice.
    The State provided the following description of Ennis’s jury and how it was
    selected (we have deleted the State’s supporting citations to the record):
    The parties were given nine peremptory challenges each—six for the
    first twelve jurors and three for the alternates. The defendant waived two
    peremptory challenges—one for the first twelve jurors and one for the
    alternate jurors; the State waived three peremptory challenges—two for the
    first twelve jurors and one for the alternates.
    Of the 15 jurors50 who were ultimately empaneled, only five jurors
    indicated any prior knowledge of the case. Each of these individuals told
    the court that despite previously hearing of the case, they could all be fair
    and impartial; one indicated a belief that the news was not always correct;
    one indicated that she did not form any opinions based upon what she had
    previously read; one indicated that he had heard something through co-
    workers about jury duty for the case, but nothing substantive about the case
    itself, and did not see any news coverage in the paper, television, or
    internet; one indicated that she had heard that jurors were being called for
    52
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    the case, and knew that it involved a police officer, but nothing substantive
    about the allegations; and, an alternate juror stated that although she had
    heard of the incident on both the TV and internet, she understood her duty
    was to judge the case based upon the evidence only; she recognized the
    news can be incorrect or biased.
    ____________________________
    50
    Including the alternate jurors.
    Br. of Resp’t at 74-75 (record citations omitted).
    In reply, Ennis argues only that venire juror 37, who had read extensively about
    the case, who he challenged for cause, and who nonetheless was seated as the first
    alternate juror, was biased. He did not exercise an available peremptory to remove her,
    however, and she ultimately was not needed and was excused.
    This information on the jury’s selection suggests not only that a motion to change
    venue would not have been granted, it makes it impossible for Ennis to affirmatively
    demonstrate that he was actually prejudiced by the seating of a biased jury.
    Dismissal of a valid defense
    Ennis next argues that Cossey provided ineffective assistance when he “discarded
    [the reasonable belief] defense during closing argument, telling the jury not to consider
    it.” Appellant’s Opening Br. at 110. He relies on the following closing argument (the
    emphasis is Ennis’s):
    I believe that there are certain jury instructions that are going to be
    important. And one of them goes—it’s No. 11, and Judge Moreno read it.
    And it’s the one that says, “If the defendant reasonably believed that [K.S.]
    was not mentally incapacitated or physically helpless,” if he had that
    53
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    reasonable belief, given everything we’ve shown you, everything you’ve
    seen, the video, the pictures, everything you’ve heard, that if more likely
    than not that you believe he reasonably believed she was capable of
    consent, then that is another prong that you have to consider in your
    deliberations. But I don’t believe you need to do that, because here’s why.
    They’re telling you his story doesn’t make sense. There was two people
    there. Only those two people know what happened. Go through the
    timeline. Go through the testimony. You will make the decision that
    [K.S.’s] version of what happened that night does not make sense. We
    know what her reasons are. She told you those. She told you her
    motivation.
    Id. at 111 (alterations in original) (citing RP at 1535). Before explaining the
    defendant’s burden of proof, the exact text of the court’s instruction 11 was, “It is
    a defense to a charge of rape in the second degree that at the time of the act the
    defendant reasonably believed that [K.S.] was not mentally incapacitated or
    physically helpless.” CP at 325.
    We reject the premise that the defense was “discarded” and Cossey told the jury
    “not to consider it.” Cossey directed the jurors’ attention to the instruction, telling them
    it was one of “certain jury instructions that are going to be important.” Appellant’s
    Opening Br. at 110; RP at 1535. He argued, “I don’t believe you have to [consider]” the
    affirmative defense, but this was based on his argument that once they considered the
    evidence, the jurors would conclude that by 2:40 a.m., K.S. “had her full faculties, knew
    what was going on, and was a willing participant.” RP at 1535-36.
    The only legal authority cited by Ennis in support of this challenge is case law
    holding it can be deficient representation not to request a reasonable belief instruction
    54
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    when the facts support it. Cossey requested the instruction. He reminded the jury of it
    during closing. He elected to argue that the jury would not need to reach the affirmative
    defense because they would be satisfied the State had not proved its case.
    “There are countless ways to provide effective assistance in any given case,” and
    “[e]ven the best criminal defense attorneys would not defend a particular client in the
    same way.” Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 689
    . Because of the difficulties of eliminating the
    distorting effects of hindsight, we indulge a strong presumption that counsel was
    effective and “the defendant must overcome the presumption that, under the
    circumstances, the challenged action might be considered sound trial strategy.” 
    Id.
    (internal quotation marks omitted). Ennis has not overcome the presumption here.
    Failure to present exculpatory evidence
    Ennis next takes issue with Cossey’s failure to elicit certain exculpatory evidence
    from Weese and Beaver. The State objected to the evidence, so in order to prove that
    failure to elicit the evidence was ineffective assistance, Ennis must show, among other
    things, that the evidence was likely to be admitted over the State’s objection. Cf. In re
    Pers. Restraint of Davis, 
    152 Wn.2d 647
    , 714, 
    101 P.3d 1
     (2004) (where failure to object
    is characterized as ineffective assistance, defendant must show that objection would have
    been sustained).
    Immediately before the State called Weese as a witness, counsel spoke with the
    trial court outside the presence of the jury about a motion in limine involving Weese on
    55
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    which the court had reserved ruling. They explained that when Weese was interviewed,
    she said she had been under the impression that Ennis and K.S. were “a couple,” but
    when pressed about why she thought that, “she really [could not] answer that.” RP at
    740. Cossey told the court that he and the prosecutor had agreed that Weese could talk
    about her observations but “she cannot use her intuition or her gut instincts as part of her
    testimony.” 
    Id.
    Immediately before the State called Beaver, the lawyers told the trial court that
    Beaver presented an issue similar to the issue presented by Weese. Specifically, when
    interviewed by detectives, Beaver volunteered that she thought K.S. “had some kind of
    puppy love going” for Ennis, but when asked for her reasons, she was not able to provide
    any. RP at 799. “She just state[d] that that was her feeling and that’s what she thought
    was going on.” 
    Id.
     Here again, Cossey agreed with the prosecutor that Beaver’s
    observations were admissible but her “feeling” that K.S. had “puppy love going” for
    Ennis was not.
    Ennis argues that Cossey’s acquiescence to the State’s objection to the testimony
    was unreasonable. He argues that the testimony would probably have changed the
    outcome of the trial. Since no offer of proof was made, the only exculpatory evidence
    supported by the record is Weese’s unexplained inference that K.S. and Ennis were a
    couple and Beaver’s unexplained inference that K.S. had “puppy love going” for Ennis.
    56
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    For a lay witness’s testimony in the form of an opinion or inference to be
    admissible, it must (among other things) be “helpful to a clear understanding of the
    witness’ testimony or the determination of a fact in issue.” ER 701(b). An opinion or
    inference may be unhelpful and objectionable on the grounds that the subject matter is
    sufficiently understandable to a lay jury to allow the jurors to hear the facts and reach
    their own conclusions without the interjection of the witness’s opinion. 5B KARL B.
    TEGLAND, WASHINGTON PRACTICE: EVIDENCE LAW AND PRACTICE § 701.5 at 12 (6th ed.
    2016) (citing Johnson v. Caughren, 
    55 Wash. 125
    , 
    104 P. 170
     (1909)).
    We found no postrule Washington case law on this ER 701(b) requirement, but
    federal authority on Federal Rules of Evidence (FRE) 701(b), which ER 701(b) parallels,
    provides guidance. See Beal v. City of Seattle, 
    134 Wn.2d 769
    , 777, 
    954 P.2d 237
     (1998)
    (“Where a state rule parallels a federal rule, analysis of the federal rule may be looked to
    for guidance.”).
    A leading federal treatise describes FRE 701(b) as placing a limitation on lay
    opinion where the costs of the opinion outweigh its benefits. 29 CHARLES ALAN WRIGHT
    & VICTOR GOLD, FEDERAL PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE: EVIDENCE § 6255 (2d ed. 2016).
    Three ways in which the cost of a lay opinion can outweigh its benefits are where it
    deprives the jury of details the jury needs to determine the facts, where it adds nothing,
    and where the witness lacks a sufficient basis for the opinion. Id. at 171-73. “[T]he costs
    57
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    of lay opinion increase and the benefits diminish the closer the opinion approaches the
    crucial issue[ ] in the case.” Id. at 174.
    The decision of the federal Second Circuit Court of Appeals in Hester v. BIC
    Corp., 
    225 F.3d 178
    , 185 (2d Cir. 2000), is illustrative. In that case, the court held that
    “in an employment discrimination action, Rule 701(b) bars lay opinion testimony that
    amounts to a naked speculation concerning the motivation for a defendant’s adverse
    employment decision.”
    Witnesses are free to testify fully as to their own observations of the
    defendant’s interactions with the plaintiff or with other employees, but the
    witness’s opinion as to the defendant’s ultimate motivations will often not
    be helpful within the meaning of Rule 701 because the jury will be in as
    good a position as the witness to draw the inference as to whether or not the
    defendant was motivated by an impermissible animus. The four witnesses
    here testified that they observed Beck treat Hester with (variously)
    condescension, coldness, hostility or disregard, as compared with the three
    or so other Group Leaders, who were white. A jury can draw its own
    conclusions from observed events or communications that can be
    adequately described to it, such as the observed differential treatment
    described by Hester’s witnesses. But their speculative lay opinion that this
    differential is attributable to race rather than anything else, is not helpful in
    this case because it merely tells the jury what result to reach.
    
    Id.
     (brackets, citations, and quotation marks omitted) (quoting United States v.Rea, 
    958 F.2d 1206
    , 1215-16 (2d Cir. 1992).
    Ennis cannot demonstrate that Weese’s and Beaver’s unexplained inferences were
    likely to be admitted over the State’s objection. “The trial court is vested with wide
    discretion under ER 701.” State v. Kinard, 
    39 Wn. App. 871
    , 874, 
    696 P.2d 603
     (1985).
    58
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    Evidence established that the night of the party was the first time Weese and Beaver met
    K.S. Presenting the evidence of what these two witnesses observed about K.S.’s
    demeanor and actions put the jury in as good a position as the witnesses to assess whether
    their observations bore on Ennis’s claim that the sex was consensual. The issue of
    whether K.S. was enamored of Ennis or only liked and respected him was a material one,
    so the cost of admitting unhelpful opinions was high.
    Also, with respect to Weese’s testimony, Ennis cannot demonstrate that it
    probably would have changed the outcome of trial. The testimony of both K.S. and Ennis
    established that they were not a couple. Excluding Weese’s mistaken inference that they
    were could not have had any impact whatsoever on the outcome of the trial.
    Failure to object to the State’s misconduct
    Without any authority, discussion of the facts, or analysis, Ennis asserts that
    Cossey’s failure to object to the alleged instances of prosecutorial misconduct was
    deficient and prejudicial. We decline to address the assertion. Passing treatment of an
    issue or lack of reasoned argument is insufficient to merit judicial consideration.
    Brownfield v. City of Yakima, 
    178 Wn. App. 850
    , 876, 
    316 P.3d 520
     (2014); RAP
    10.3(a)(6).
    IV.    CUMULATIVE ERROR
    Ennis finally asks that in the event we find no single alleged error to be reversible
    error, we find that the cumulative effect of trial court errors warrants reversal. Under the
    59
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    cumulative error doctrine, a defendant may be entitled to a new trial when the trial court’s
    multiple errors combine to deny the defendant a fair trial. State v. Lazcano, 
    188 Wn. App. 338
    , 370, 
    354 P.3d 233
     (2015) (citing In re Pers. Restraint of Lord, 
    123 Wn.2d 296
    ,
    332, 
    868 P.2d 835
     (1994)). The defendant bears the burden of proving an accumulation
    of error of sufficient magnitude to warrant a new trial. 
    Id.
     (citing Lord, 
    123 Wn.2d at 332
    ).
    The only error we have found—arguably two errors—is the prosecutor’s objected-
    to statement in cross-examining Beaver that argumentatively impugned Beaver’s
    credibility and arguably impugned defense counsel. Viewed as two errors, cumulatively,
    they come nowhere near casting doubt on the fairness of Ennis’s trial.
    STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL GROUNDS
    In a pro se statement of additional grounds (SAG), Ennis makes what he
    characterizes as further arguments in support of (1) Cossey’s alleged conflict of interest,
    (2) the giving of the corroboration instruction, and (3) the prosecutor’s alleged
    misconduct in commenting on Ennis’s silence. These issues were adequately addressed
    by counsel. They will not be considered further. See RAP 10.10(a) (a SAG is available
    for matters that have not been adequately addressed by counsel’s briefing).
    Ennis makes an additional argument of ineffective assistance of counsel. He
    complains of Cossey’s failure to object to the State’s motion in limine preventing Doug
    Strosahl from expressing an opinion as to the credibility of K.S.’s disclosure of the
    60
    No. 36359-7-III
    State v. Ennis
    alleged assault. Ennis argues that Strosahl’s opinion would not have been a mere lay
    opinion; it would have been the opinion of a law enforcement expert who has taught
    college level classes on interviewing and report writing. SAG at 10.
    An objection to one witness’s opinion of another witness’s credibility is actually
    most likely to be sustained when the opinion is expressed by a police officer. “Testimony
    from a law enforcement officer regarding the veracity of another witness may be
    especially prejudicial because an officer’s testimony often carries a special aura of
    reliability.” State v. Kirkman, 
    159 Wn.2d 918
    , 928, 
    155 P.3d 125
     (2007). Cossey’s
    decision not to object to the in limine motion was not deficient performance.
    Affirmed.
    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.
    Siddoway, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    _____________________________
    Pennell, C.J.                                     Lawrence-Berrey, J.
    61