State Of Washington, Resp-cross Appv. Ecarnacion Salas Iv, App-cross Resp ( 2021 )


Menu:
  • IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,
    DIVISION ONE
    Respondent,
    No. 80522-3-I
    v.
    UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    ENCARNACION SALAS IV,
    Appellant.
    DWYER, J. — Encarnacion Salas appeals from his conviction of murder in
    the second degree with a deadly weapon. Salas contends that the trial court
    erred by (1) not instructing the jury sua sponte that he had no duty to retreat, (2)
    admitting certain evidence in violation of ER 404(b), and (3) admitting certain
    testimony that generally regarded dog tracking. Salas also asserts that the
    prosecutor violated his due process right to a fair trial by eliciting “misleading”
    testimony and making a false argument to the jury. Finally, Salas avers that the
    trial court mistakenly ordered him to pay supervision fees to the department of
    corrections. We remand the judgment for the trial court to strike the requirement
    that Salas pay supervision fees. In all other respects, we affirm.
    I
    Salas lived in a unit of an apartment complex with his two aunts, Ruby and
    Cristal Salas. Jesus Lopez lived with his mother, Antonia Lopez, in the same
    apartment complex. According to trial testimony, Salas and Lopez became
    No. 80522-3-I/2
    friends and spent time together. They enjoyed drinking alcohol, smoking
    marijuana, talking, and watching television shows. After some time, their
    relationship became, in Salas’s words, “kind of homosexual.” Salas described a
    time around August 2014 when Lopez made a sexual advance. Salas informed
    Lopez that he was “uncomfortable with that” and “not ready.”
    Salas owned several knives and hatchets. He frequently carried a knife
    with him. Sometime in August 2014, Salas purposefully cut his own face with a
    knife because he felt conflicted about his sexuality and relationship with Lopez.
    Around 9:00 p.m. on October 24, 2014, Lopez sent several text messages
    to Salas asking whether he wanted to drink alcohol. Salas went to Lopez’s
    apartment and the two began consuming alcohol. Salas brought a backpack,
    which contained alcohol and a knife. Lopez and Salas had, on occasion, played
    with the knife. They would “sometimes twirl it, spin it around.” Salas and Lopez
    listened to music for a couple of hours.
    Salas testified that, at one point during the evening, Lopez “made a pass”
    at him. Salas told Lopez that he was “uncomfortable” and “not ready for that step
    in the relationship.” Thereafter, Salas and Lopez “maintained a little distance,”
    and Salas continued to drink. Salas and Lopez subsequently went onto the
    balcony of the apartment where Lopez grabbed Salas’s genital area. Salas
    repeated his reservations, but this time did so “more aggressively.” According to
    Salas, Lopez then “hit” him with the knife. Salas stated that he reacted by hitting
    Lopez against the door. Salas then retrieved the knife from Lopez. Salas
    2
    No. 80522-3-I/3
    testified that he and Lopez started “wrestling” on the balcony. Salas then
    stabbed Lopez “a couple times” with the knife.
    Antonia Lopez was present that evening. She testified that she “heard
    something” and exited her bedroom. Antonia stated that she saw Lopez at the
    door of the balcony where he was “holding himself up on the border of the door.”
    Her son was “bleeding a lot.” Salas was standing on the balcony and “was trying
    to pull” Lopez out onto the balcony.
    Salas testified that, while Lopez was standing at the door of the balcony,
    Salas was “trying to go in, and pushing him, and he’s pushing back.” Salas had
    the knife in his hand. At this moment, Salas knew that Lopez did not want him to
    enter or remain at the apartment:
    [The State]: And at the point whereby [Lopez]’s got his hand up
    against the wall, was trying to prevent you from
    pulling him onto the balcony, and why are you doing
    that? He’s trying to get away from you.
    [Salas]:     I don’t believe he was doing that. I think he was -- I
    was trying to come in and he was there.
    [The State]: You were trying to come in and he was there?
    [Salas]:     The apartment.
    ....
    [The State]: So you say you have the knife. He’s keeping you
    from coming back into the house. Why don’t you just
    leave the balcony then?
    [Salas]:     It didn’t occur to me at the time.
    [The State]: So he doesn’t want you in his house at that point?
    [Salas]:     Correct.
    (Emphasis added.)
    According to Salas, “the next thing I know, we’re inside.” Once they were
    inside, Salas kicked Lopez, punched Lopez, and “push[ed] the knife in his
    direction.” Lopez did not get control of the knife. The struggle persisted into the
    3
    No. 80522-3-I/4
    dining room and kitchen. According to Salas, he knocked Lopez to the floor and
    noticed blood coming from Lopez’s neck. He stated that he “applied pressure” to
    stop the bleeding. Salas saw “blood everywhere.” Lopez was not moving.
    Antonia’s recollection differed from Salas’s testimony. She testified that,
    when Salas and Lopez were inside of the apartment, she pulled Lopez away
    from Salas. She then leaned Lopez against the kitchen bar. Salas went to the
    front door and put on his backpack and shoes. Antonia did not notice any
    injuries to Salas.
    According to Antonia, Lopez then fell to the floor. Lopez pleaded, “Mother,
    help me, I’m dying.” Salas then “grabbed something” from his backpack and
    “jumped on” Lopez. From Antonia’s perspective, Salas was “cutting him” and
    “doing something to his neck.” Antonia pulled on Salas’s ears and “squeezed his
    nose really hard.” Salas then “took off” and left the apartment via the balcony.
    Antonia locked the balcony door.
    Looking back at Lopez, Antonia knew that he was dead “because there
    was blood everywhere.” Antonia left the apartment and asked several neighbors
    for help. Shortly thereafter, police officers arrived.
    Lopez had extensive injuries. These included (1) four stab wounds on the
    side of his chest, (2) two stab wounds on his upper chest, (3) several incise
    wounds on the neck, one of which went “into the yellow, fatty tissue beneath the
    skin” and two of which “severed the external left jugular vein,” and (4) an incise
    wound on the chin that went “to the surface of the . . . jaw bone.”
    4
    No. 80522-3-I/5
    Salas spent the night in the woods, where he remained for approximately
    14 hours. A police-led dog track of Salas was unable to locate him. The next
    day, Salas returned to his apartment. Once there, he showered and treated a
    wound on his arm. He began to gather his belonging to “go to the mountains.”
    However, a neighbor telephoned the police to report that Salas was at the
    apartment. Police officers soon arrived at the apartment and arrested Salas.
    The State charged Salas with murder in the first degree with a deadly
    weapon, “to wit: knife.” The case proceeded to a jury trial. Ultimately, the jury
    did not reach a verdict on the charge of murder in the first degree, but did find
    Salas guilty of murder in the second degree with a deadly weapon. On appeal,
    we reversed on the bases of prosecutorial misconduct and ineffective assistance
    of counsel. State v. Salas, 1 Wn. App. 2d 931, 953, 
    408 P.3d 383
     (2018).
    On remand, the case proceeded to trial again. Again, the jury did not
    reach a verdict on the charge of murder in the first degree, but found Salas guilty
    instead of murder in the second degree with a deadly weapon. The trial court
    imposed a sentence of 244 months of incarceration.
    Salas appeals.
    II
    Salas presented a defense of self-defense. On appeal, he asserts that the
    trial court erred by not providing a no-duty-to-retreat instruction sua sponte.
    According to Salas, the absence of a no-duty-to-retreat instruction gives rise to a
    manifest error affecting a constitutional right. We disagree.
    5
    No. 80522-3-I/6
    Salas did not request a no-duty-to-retreat instruction at trial.
    Nevertheless, he claims that he was entitled to the following instruction:
    It is lawful for a person who is in a place where that person
    has a right to be and who has reasonable grounds for believing that
    [he] [she] is being attacked to stand [his] [her] ground and defend
    against such attack by the use of lawful force. The law does not
    impose a duty to retreat.
    11 W ASHINGTON PRACTICE: W ASHINGTON PATTERN JURY INSTRUCTIONS: CRIMINAL
    16.08 (4th ed. 2016).
    Salas’s claim of error fails for three reasons. First, we have already held
    that error cannot be assigned to a trial court for not giving an unrequested no-
    duty-to-retreat instruction:
    [Defendant] . . . argues that the court erred in failing to instruct the
    jury that he had no duty to retreat. But, he never requested that
    instruction and does not cite any case that would require the trial
    court to give it sua sponte. In fact, the Washington Supreme Court
    has held that when a party fails to request an instruction, it “cannot
    predicate error on its omission.”
    State v. Lucero, 
    152 Wn. App. 287
    , 292, 
    217 P.3d 369
     (2009) (quoting McGarvey
    v. City of Seattle, 
    62 Wn.2d 524
    , 533, 
    384 P.2d 127
     (1963)), rev’d on other
    grounds, 
    168 Wn.2d 785
    , 
    230 P.3d 165
     (2010).
    Second, Salas unconvincingly asserts that he was entitled to a no-duty-to-
    retreat instruction because, without it, the law of self-defense was not manifestly
    apparent to the average juror. In support of this argument, he cites to State v.
    Ackerman, 11 Wn. App. 2d 304, 309, 
    453 P.3d 749
     (2019), in which we
    explained that a “trial court erred by giving instructions that failed to make the
    self-defense standard manifestly apparent to the average juror.” However,
    in Ackerman, we stated that “[w]e analyze unpreserved claims of error regarding
    6
    No. 80522-3-I/7
    self-defense instructions on a case-by-case basis to determine whether they
    constitute a manifest constitutional error.” 11 Wn. App. 2d at 309. As such, here
    we must analyze the instructions that were actually given by the trial court in
    order to determine whether those instructions made the relevant legal standard
    manifestly apparent. Ackerman, 11 Wn. App. 2d at 312. Contrary to Salas’s
    contention, Ackerman does not stand for the proposition that a defendant is
    always entitled to assign error to a self-defense instruction that he or she did not
    request.
    Finally, based on the evidence in the record and the applicable legal
    standard, a no-duty-to-retreat instruction was not warranted in this case.
    Generally, we will not consider an issue raised for the first time on appeal. RAP
    2.5(a). However, a claim of error may be raised for the first time on appeal if it is
    a “manifest error affecting a constitutional right.” RAP 2.5(a)(3). “‘Manifest’ in
    RAP 2.5(a)(3) requires a showing of actual prejudice.” State v. Kirkman, 
    159 Wn.2d 918
    , 935, 
    155 P.3d 125
     (2007). When determining whether an error is
    manifest,
    [i]t is not the role of an appellate court on direct appeal to address
    claims where the trial court could not have foreseen the potential
    error or where the prosecutor or trial counsel could have been
    justified in their actions or failure to object. Thus, to determine
    whether an error is practical and identifiable, the appellate court
    must place itself in the shoes of the trial court to ascertain whether,
    given what the trial court knew at that time, the court could have
    corrected the error.
    State v. O’Hara, 
    167 Wn.2d 91
    , 100, 
    217 P.3d 756
     (2009).
    7
    No. 80522-3-I/8
    Here, the evidence in the record did not support a no-duty-to-retreat
    instruction. Indeed, Salas testified that he knew that he no longer had
    permission to remain at Lopez’s apartment prior to killing Lopez:
    Q.      And at the point whereby [Lopez]’s got his hand up against
    the wall, was trying to prevent you from pulling him onto the
    balcony, and why are you doing that? He’s trying to get
    away from you.
    A.      I don’t believe he was doing that. I think he was -- I was
    trying to come in and he was there.[1]
    Q.      You were trying to come in and he was there?
    A.      The apartment.
    ....
    Q.      So you say you have the knife. He’s keeping you from
    coming back into the house. Why don’t you just leave the
    balcony then?
    A.      It didn’t occur to me at the time.
    Q.      So he doesn’t want you in his house at that point?
    A.      Correct.
    (Emphasis added.)
    In other words, even viewed in the light most favorable to Salas, his own
    testimony demonstrates that his license to remain at Lopez’s apartment had
    been revoked and that he was aware of this. 2 Yet “[a] defendant is entitled to a
    no duty to retreat instruction when evidence supports a finding that the defendant
    was assaulted in a place where the defendant was lawfully entitled to
    remain.” State v. Williams, 
    81 Wn. App. 738
    , 742, 
    916 P.2d 445
     (1996)
    (emphasis added). Given the evidence in the record and the applicable legal
    standard, the trial court could not have reasonably given a no-duty-to-retreat
    1  On direct examination, Salas testified, “I’m trying to go in, and pushing him, and he’s
    pushing back, and the next thing I know, we’re inside.”
    2 See Conaway v. Time Oil Co., 
    34 Wn.2d 884
    , 893, 
    210 P.2d 1012
     (1949) (“A license
    authorizes the doing of some act or series of acts on the land of another . . . and justifies the
    doing of an act or acts which would otherwise be a trespass.”); Proctor v. Huntington, 
    146 Wn. App. 836
    , 852, 
    192 P.3d 958
     (2008) (“[A] license is revocable . . . and created by the licensor’s
    oral, written, or implied consent.”), aff’d, 
    169 Wn.2d 491
    , 
    238 P.3d 1117
     (2010).
    8
    No. 80522-3-I/9
    instruction. Salas fails to establish that he was prejudiced. Thus, there is no
    manifest error.
    Accordingly, Salas’s assignment of error fails.
    III
    Salas next contends that the trial court erred by admitting evidence that he
    cut his own face approximately two months before the incident in dispute. This is
    so, he asserts, because the evidence should have been excluded pursuant to ER
    404(b). We disagree.
    We review the trial court’s evidentiary decisions for abuse of
    discretion. State v. Bajardi, 3 Wn. App. 2d 726, 729, 
    418 P.3d 164
     (2018). A
    trial court abuses its discretion when its decision is manifestly unreasonable or is
    based on untenable grounds or reasons. State v. Taylor, 
    193 Wn.2d 691
    , 697,
    
    444 P.3d 1194
     (2019).
    As a general rule, “[a]ll relevant evidence is admissible.” ER 402. ER
    404(b) provides an exception to this general rule:
    Evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts is not admissible to prove
    the character of a person in order to show action in conformity
    therewith. It may, however, be admissible for other purposes, such
    as proof of motive, opportunity, intent, preparation, plan,
    knowledge, identity, or absence of mistake or accident.
    As a noted scholar has explicated, “Rule 404(b) expresses the traditional
    rule that prior misconduct is inadmissible to show that the defendant is a
    dangerous person or a ‘criminal type’ and is thus likely to have committed the
    crime for which he or she is presently charged.” 5D KARL B. TEGLAND,
    WASHINGTON PRACTICE: COURTROOM HANDBOOK ON W ASHINGTON EVIDENCE
    9
    No. 80522-3-I/10
    § 404:7 (2019 ed.). The policy behind this rule is that, “[b]ecause of the State’s
    burden of proof in a criminal case, the law is uncomfortable with the notion of
    once a criminal, always a criminal.” 5D TEGLAND, supra, § 404:8. Indeed, we
    have previously explained that “ER 404(b) prohibits evidence of prior acts to
    prove the defendant’s propensity to commit the charged crime.” State v. Cook,
    
    131 Wn. App. 845
    , 849, 
    129 P.3d 834
     (2006), abrogated on other grounds
    by State v. Magers, 
    164 Wn.2d 174
    , 
    189 P.3d 126
     (2008).
    Although the traditional rule is primarily concerned with evidence of the
    defendant’s prior misconduct, our Supreme Court has determined that the “acts”
    contemplated by ER 404(b) are not necessarily limited to misconduct. Instead,
    the “‘acts’ inadmissible under ER 404(b) include any acts used to show the
    character of a person to prove the person acted in conformity with it on a
    particular occasion.” State v. Everybodytalksabout, 
    145 Wn.2d 456
    , 466, 
    39 P.3d 294
     (2002).
    In that case, “the trial court permitted the State to introduce the testimony
    of [a police officer] that . . . [the officer] often saw [the defendant] and [the co-
    defendant] together . . . and that [the defendant] would usually carry
    conversations with the officer while [the co-defendant] stood back or walked
    away.” Everybodytalksabout, 
    145 Wn.2d at 462-63
    . The State then “relied upon
    that testimony to establish that [the defendant] was liable as an accomplice” to a
    murder. Everybodytalksabout, 
    145 Wn.2d at 465
    .
    Our Supreme Court explained that the evidence of the defendant’s prior
    acts was inadmissible propensity evidence under ER 404(b) because the
    10
    No. 80522-3-I/11
    evidence was admitted to establish a trait of the defendant’s character in order to
    prove that he acted in conformity with that trait of character in committing the
    crime charged:
    Although [the defendant’s] prior “acts” about which the detective
    testified were not misconduct, unpopular or disgraceful, they were
    offered to show his qualities of leadership; that he acted in
    conformity with those qualities at the time [the victim] was killed;
    and he therefore somehow participated with [the co-defendant] in
    killing [the victim]. The evidence is inadmissible under ER 404(b).
    Everybodytalksabout, 
    145 Wn.2d at 468
    .
    It is well-established that the purpose of ER 404(b) is to prevent the
    introduction of evidence to establish the character of the defendant in order to
    prove that the defendant had a propensity to commit the crime charged or is
    otherwise a bad person. Indeed, in referring to Federal Rule of Evidence
    404(b), 3 Judge Richard Posner explained:
    The aim of the rule is simply to keep from the jury evidence that the
    defendant is prone to commit crimes or is otherwise a bad person,
    implying that the jury needn’t worry overmuch about the strength of
    the government’s evidence. No other use of prior crimes or other
    bad acts is forbidden by the rule, and the draftsmen did not try to
    list every possible other use.
    3  “‘Where a state rule parallels a federal rule, analysis of the federal rule may be looked
    to for guidance’ in interpreting the state rule.” Washburn v. City of Federal Way, 
    178 Wn.2d 732
    ,
    750, 
    310 P.3d 1275
     (2013) (quoting Beal v. City of Seattle, 
    134 Wn.2d 769
    , 777, 
    954 P.2d 237
    (1998)). Fed. R. Evid. 404(b) is analogous to ER 404(b):
    Other Crimes, Wrongs, or Acts.
    (1) Prohibited Uses. Evidence of any other crime, wrong, or act is not admissible to
    prove a person’s character in order to show that on a particular occasion the person
    acted in accordance with the character.
    (2) Permitted Uses. This evidence may be admissible for another purpose, such as
    proving motive, opportunity, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, identity, absence of
    mistake, or lack of accident.
    Thus, Washington courts have analyzed federal case law concerning Fed. R. Evid.
    404(b) in order to interpret ER 404(b). See, e.g., State v. Arrendondo, 
    188 Wn.2d 244
    , 261, 
    394 P.3d 348
     (2017); State v. Norlin, 
    134 Wn.2d 570
    , 580-81, 
    951 P.2d 1131
     (1998); State v. Donald,
    
    178 Wn. App. 250
    , 258-64, 
    316 P.3d 1081
     (2013).
    11
    No. 80522-3-I/12
    United States v. Taylor, 
    522 F.3d 731
    , 735-36 (7th Cir. 2008) (citation omitted). 4
    Here, the State elicited testimony from Salas that he had purposefully cut
    his own face with a knife approximately two months before killing Lopez:
    Q.      Okay. And this?
    A.      What about it?
    Q.      On your face.
    A.      Yes.
    Q.      That happened in August?
    A.      Yes.
    Q.      Did you do that to yourself?
    A.      I did.
    Q.      Why?
    4 Other federal appellate courts are in agreement. Indeed, the Ninth Circuit Court of
    Appeals has opined:
    The Federal Rules of Evidence start from the proposition that “[a]ll relevant
    evidence is admissible.” Fed. R. Evid. 402. Rule 404(b) makes an exception for
    “[e]vidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts” where that evidence “prove[s] only
    criminal disposition.” United States v. Rocha, 
    553 F.2d 615
    , 616 (9th Cir. 1977).
    But we have held that Rule 404(b) is “one of inclusion,” and if evidence of prior
    crimes bears on other relevant issues, 404(b) will not exclude it. 
    Id.
    United States v. Cruz-Garcia, 
    344 F.3d 951
    , 954 (9th Cir. 2003); see also United States v.
    Donovan, 
    984 F.2d 507
    , 512 (1st Cir. 1993) (“Rule 404(b) is a rule ‘of inclusion which allows the
    introduction of evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts unless the evidence tends to only prove
    criminal disposition.’” (quoting United States v. Fields, 
    871 F.2d 188
    , 196 (1st Cir. 1989))); United
    States v. Dupree, 
    870 F.3d 62
    , 76 (2d Cir. 2017) (“Under our Circuit’s ‘inclusionary approach,’
    prior act evidence is admissible if offered ‘for any purpose other than to show a defendant’s
    criminal propensity.’” (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting United States v. Mejia, 
    545 F.3d 179
    , 206 (2d Cir. 2008))); United States v. Green, 
    617 F.3d 233
    , 249 (3d Cir. 2010) (“[T]he
    purpose of Rule 404(b) is ‘simply to keep from the jury evidence that the defendant is prone to
    commit crimes or is otherwise a bad person’” and “‘[n]o other use of prior crimes or other bad acts
    is forbidden by the rule’” (quoting Taylor, 
    522 F.3d at 735-36
    )); United States v. Siegel, 
    536 F.3d 306
    , 317 (4th Cir. 2008) (“‘Rule 404(b) is viewed as an inclusive rule, admitting all evidence of
    other crimes or acts except that which tends to prove only criminal disposition.’” (quoting United
    States v. Young, 
    248 F.3d 260
    , 271 (4th Cir. 2001))); United States v. Johnson, 
    439 F.3d 884
    ,
    887 (8th Cir. 2006) (“Rule 404(b) is . . . ‘a rule of inclusion rather than exclusion and admits
    evidence of other crimes or acts relevant to any issue in the trial, unless it tends to prove only
    criminal disposition.’” (quoting United States v. Simon, 
    767 F.2d 524
    , 526 (8th Cir. 1985))); United
    States v. Merritt, 
    961 F.3d 1105
    , 1111 (10th Cir. 2020) (“Rule 404(b) admits ‘all evidence of other
    crimes or acts except that which tends to prove only criminal disposition.’” (quoting United States
    v. Brooks, 
    736 F.3d 921
    , 939 (10th Cir. 2013))).
    The policy behind Fed. R. Evid. 404(b) is summarized within the advisory committee’s
    notes:
    “Character evidence is of slight probative value and may be very prejudicial. It
    tends to distract the trier of fact from the main question of what actually
    happened on the particular occasion. It subtly permits the trier of fact to reward
    the good man and to punish the bad man because of their respective characters
    despite what the evidence in the case shows actually happened.”
    Johnson, 
    439 F.3d at 887
     (quoting Fed. R. Evid. 404 advisory committee notes (1972)).
    12
    No. 80522-3-I/13
    A.     When we attempted that relationship kind of messed with
    me, and thinking to myself, you know, what are you doing?
    Or, dude, you should be, like, with a woman or something. I
    was drunk, all that’s just running through my mind, and I end
    up cutting myself.
    Q.     With your knife?
    A.     With one of my knives, yes.
    Q.     Okay. So you were really conflicted about this?
    A.     Yes.
    Q.     And [Lopez], was he at the source of that?
    A.     He was the source, but not the cause. I make decisions.
    Q.     Okay. And you were so conflicted about it, so upset about it
    that you did that to your face?
    A.     I did.
    During closing argument, the State referenced this testimony in order to
    persuade the jury to conclude that Salas was willing to cut his own arm after
    murdering Lopez in order to have evidence in support of his claim of self-
    defense:
    Maybe ask yourself, well, how did [the cut on Salas’s arm]
    occur and who caused [it]? The defendant. The defendant cut his
    own arm. Just like he cut his own face.
    In a pretrial ruling, the trial court determined that ER 404(b) did not
    preclude the evidence from being admitted:
    THE COURT: Actually, if you take a look at [Section] 404:7
    in Tegland’s, it . . . says [ER] 404(b) expresses the traditional rule
    that prior misconduct is inadmissible to show that the defendant is a
    dangerous person or a criminal type and is thus likely to have
    committed the crime for which he or she is presently charged.
    ....
    THE COURT: In other words, the defendant’s misconduct
    not charged in the present case is not admissible to demonstrate
    the defendant’s general propensity for misconduct.
    So this does not appear to be the type of misconduct that’s
    contemplated at all by the rule, and it’s certainly not for purposes of
    showing his propensity to engage in criminal activity because it’s
    not a criminal activity. And so that’s what, at least, Tegland’s
    references.
    13
    No. 80522-3-I/14
    At this point I’m going to deny the motion to exclude the
    evidence.
    The trial court incorrectly determined that ER 404(b) applies only to
    misconduct. See Everybodytalksabout, 
    145 Wn.2d at 466
    . However, the trial
    court correctly determined that the evidence that Salas had cut his own face was
    not excluded by ER 404(b) because it was not being introduced for the purpose
    of showing his propensity to engage in criminal activity. See, e.g., Donovan, 
    984 F.2d at 512
     (“Rule 404(b) is a rule ‘of inclusion which allows the introduction of
    evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts unless the evidence tends to only
    prove criminal disposition.’” (quoting Fields, 
    871 F.2d at 196
    )).
    Here, the evidence that Salas had previously cut his own face was not
    designed to prove Salas’s character or that he had a propensity to commit the
    crime charged. Indeed, the State did not use this evidence to argue that,
    because Salas had cut his own face, he possessed a certain character trait—
    such as violence or aggression—and acted in conformity with that character trait
    by murdering Lopez. Instead, the State proffered the evidence to show that
    Salas was willing and mentally capable of inflicting pain upon himself after he
    had already killed Lopez.
    This evidence was properly used to rebut the natural presumption that
    people ordinarily do not willingly inflict pain upon themselves. In support of his
    self-defense theory, Salas argued that Lopez had inflicted the cut on his arm. A
    juror might naturally believe that a serious knife wound on an arm would be
    caused by the other person involved, not by the person who suffered the wound.
    However, evidence of Salas’s willingness to inflict a knife wound on himself gave
    14
    No. 80522-3-I/15
    a more complete picture of the situation. Coupled with the 14-hour period during
    which he disappeared and after which he possessed the wound, the jury was
    faced with a reasonable factual alternative to Salas’s self-defense narrative.
    Accordingly, ER 404(b) did not preclude the admission of the evidence.
    IV
    Salas next asserts that the trial court erred by admitting testimony
    regarding dog tracking. According to Salas, this testimony was inadmissible
    because it was irrelevant, failed to satisfy certain foundational requirements, and
    violated a pretrial ruling regarding the disclosure of expert testimony. We
    disagree.
    Again, we review the admission of evidence by a trial court for abuse of
    discretion. State v. Redmond, 
    150 Wn.2d 489
    , 495, 
    78 P.3d 1001
     (2003).
    However, on appeal, a party may not advance a claim of evidentiary error that
    was not properly preserved at trial. State v. Powell, 
    166 Wn.2d 73
    , 82, 
    206 P.3d 321
     (2009). “We adopt a strict approach because trial counsel’s failure to object
    to the error robs the court of the opportunity to correct the error and avoid a
    retrial.” Powell, 
    166 Wn.2d at 82
    . “The appellant may assign error in the
    appellate court only on the specific ground of the evidentiary objection made at
    trial.” State v. Henson, 11 Wn. App. 2d 97, 102, 
    451 P.3d 1127
     (2019)
    (citing Powell, 
    166 Wn.2d at 83
    ). Indeed, “[e]rror may not be predicated upon a
    ruling which admits or excludes evidence unless . . . a timely objection or motion
    to strike is made, stating the specific ground of objection.” ER 103(a)(1).
    15
    No. 80522-3-I/16
    During the trial, Detective Ted Betts, a former “accredited K-9 deputy,”
    testified generally about dog tracking. He did not testify about the particular dog
    track that was performed during the investigation of this case. When Detective
    Betts was asked about the “environmental factors” that a K-9 detects during a
    dog track, Salas objected on the ground of relevancy:
    Q.     Sure. Are there environmental factors -- first off, what does
    a K-9 detect when you’re doing a K-9 track?
    [DEFENSE COUSNEL]: I guess I’m going to object to
    relevance at this point, Your Honor.
    THE COURT: Overruled on that basis.
    Detective Betts then described a K-9’s capability to detect scents as well
    as certain environmental factors that may have an impact on that ability. On
    appeal, although Salas did not interpose an objection at trial to the following
    testimony, he asserts that it was also irrelevant:
    Q.     And, Detective, one last question about K-9 tracking. If a
    person were actively bleeding as they left the scene of an
    incident, how might that affect a K-9’s ability to track that
    person?
    A.     Oh, I’ve experienced that, where a person who’s bleeding
    heavily, especially, it’s essentially a pretty easy track
    because that blood is -- you know, we’ve heard the term
    blood trail, it’s a real thing. When the blood is being dropped
    on the ground, especially if there’s a lot of blood being
    dropped on the ground, the dog is picking that up very
    quickly. And the dog works very quickly through a track of
    that nature because that scent is much more enhanced than
    even sweat or skin cells, for instance. So the blood is going
    to be picked up very quickly by a dog.
    The trial court did not err by overruling Salas’s relevancy objection.
    Evidence is relevant when it has “any tendency to make the existence of any fact
    that is of consequence to the determination of the action more probable or less
    probable than it would be without the evidence.” ER 401. “The threshold to
    16
    No. 80522-3-I/17
    admit relevant evidence is very low. Even minimally relevant evidence is
    admissible.” State v. Darden, 
    145 Wn.2d 612
    , 621, 
    41 P.3d 1189
     (2002).
    Detective Betts’s testimony was relevant because it provided an
    explanation as to why the attempted dog track of Salas may have been
    unsuccessful in locating him. Indeed, during closing argument, Salas’s defense
    counsel argued that the individuals who investigated the murder did “some bad
    police work.” Detective Betts’s testimony provided an explanation, aside from
    there being a sloppy police investigation, as to why a dog track may not result in
    the perpetrator being found. For example, Detective Betts testified that, when an
    individual is “bleeding heavily” “it’s essentially a pretty easy track.” According to
    Detective Betts, “[w]hen the blood is being dropped on the ground, especially if
    there’s a lot of blood being dropped on the ground, the dog is picking that up very
    quickly.” By contrast, Detective Betts testified, “[s]mall amounts [of blood] . . . are
    going to be picked up with less ease than larger amounts, but it still gets picked
    up.” This testimony was material to an explanation of why the investigation of
    Salas may have initially been unsuccessful in locating him. Thus, the trial court
    did not err by overruling Salas’s relevancy objection. 5
    Salas contends that Detective Betts’s testimony was not relevant under
    our Supreme Court’s decision in State v. Lord, 
    161 Wn.2d 276
    , 
    165 P.3d 1251
    (2007). According to Salas, the Lord decision requires that, for “dog-tracking
    evidence” to be relevant, (1) the individual who conducted the dog track in
    question must testify, and (2) that individual must also testify that the scent in
    5 Similarly, the testimony that came in without objection does not provide a basis for
    appellate relief.
    17
    No. 80522-3-I/18
    question originated from the date that the crime occurred. He is wrong. In Lord,
    the court held that a trial court did not abuse its discretion by excluding as
    irrelevant testimony by a dog handler when “[t]he dog handler could not narrow
    the date of the scent trail followed by his dogs beyond a two week window.” 
    161 Wn.2d at 294
    . The court explained that the victim “had been to the [area in
    question] many times during that period, and the dog handler could not
    definitively testify that the track his dog followed was made on the day that [the
    victim] disappeared.” Lord, 
    161 Wn.2d at 295
    . Because the dog handler could
    not “express an opinion to a reasonable degree of probability, . . . [the handler’s]
    opinion [did] not make [any] material issue more or less likely.” Lord, 
    161 Wn.2d at
    295 n.16.
    Lord did not announce a requirement that, for any testimony concerning
    dog-tracking to be admissible, the witness must have actually conducted a dog
    track in relation to the case. Rather, it provided that, when such an individual
    testifies about a scent detected by a tracking dog, the witness must express an
    opinion within a reasonable degree of probability as to when the scent followed
    was originated, particularly when other evidence indicates that the scent may
    have been left at the scene on another date. Lord, 
    161 Wn.2d at 295
    .
    Detective Betts’s testimony was materially distinguishable. Rather than
    explain how a tracking dog located Salas, his purpose in testifying was to set
    forth reasons why that had not occurred. Such testimony did not require the
    same predicate testimony.
    18
    No. 80522-3-I/19
    Salas next asserts that Detective Betts’s testimony was not relevant
    because the State did not satisfy the foundational requirements for dog-tracking
    evidence set forth in State v. Loucks, 
    98 Wn.2d 563
    , 
    656 P.2d 480
     (1983). Not
    so. In Loucks, our Supreme Court explained that, in order for evidence that is
    derived from a dog track to be admitted, the following foundational requirements
    must be satisfied:
    “(1) the handler was qualified by training and experience to use
    the dog, (2) the dog was adequately trained in tracking humans,
    (3) the dog has, in actual cases, been found by experience to be
    reliable in pursuing human track, (4) the dog was placed on
    track where circumstances indicated the guilty party to have
    been, and (5) the trail had not become so stale or contaminated
    as to be beyond the dog’s competency to follow.”
    
    98 Wn.2d at 566
     (quoting State v. Socolof, 
    28 Wn. App. 407
    , 411, 
    623 P.2d 733
    (1981)).
    The Loucks opinion is of no aid to Salas. Salas did not object to Detective
    Betts’s testimony on the specific ground of lack of foundation. Thus, his
    assignment of error is waived. See Henson, 11 Wn. App. 2d at 102; ER
    101(a)(1); RAP 2.5(a). Moreover, even if Salas had objected on the ground of
    foundation, his objection would have been correctly overruled. The foundational
    requirements described in Loucks apply when a dog handler testifies about
    evidence that results from an actual dog track. See 
    98 Wn.2d at 564
     (dog-
    tracking evidence in question was “evidence provided by police dog Tally of the
    Seattle Police Department’s canine unit”). These requirements do not apply
    when a witness testifies generally about dog tracking. 6
    6Salas also asserts that “dog-tracking evidence” requires the trial court to provide a
    cautionary instruction when requested by the defense. See State v. Wagner, 
    36 Wn. App. 286
    ,
    19
    No. 80522-3-I/20
    Finally, Salas contends that the trial court erred by admitting Detective
    Betts’s testimony because the testimony violated a pretrial ruling. Based on a
    pretrial agreement between the parties, the trial court entered a ruling, which—
    without naming particular witnesses—“[e]xclude[d] expert witness or expert
    testimony not previously disclosed to the defense.” Salas avers that, because
    Detective Betts was not identified as an expert witness, no objection was
    required on his part in order to preserve the claim of error. However, in order to
    preserve the claim of error on appeal, Salas must have raised an objection that
    would have provided the trial court “the opportunity to correct the error.” Powell,
    
    166 Wn.2d at 82
    . That did not happen here. Indeed, the trial court was not
    called on to determine whether Detective Betts’s proposed testimony fell within
    the pretrial ruling. Thus, the claim of error was waived. RAP 2.5(a).
    The trial court did not err by admitting Detective Betts’s testimony.
    V
    Salas next contends that the prosecutor engaged in misconduct by
    eliciting “misleading” testimony from Detective Betts and using this testimony to
    make a “false” argument to the jury. Salas claims that the prosecutor’s asserted
    misconduct deprived him of his due process right to a fair trial. We disagree.
    The United States and Washington Constitutions guarantee persons
    accused of a crime the right to a fair trial. U.S. CONST. amends. VI, XIV; W ASH.
    CONST. art. I, §§ 3, 22. “We review alleged due process violations de
    287-88, 
    673 P.2d 638
     (1983). Even if Salas had requested a cautionary instruction, he would not
    have been entitled to such an instruction. Indeed, Detective Betts did not testify about any
    evidence derived from the tracking dog that was used during the investigation. Rather, he
    testified generally about dog tracking.
    20
    No. 80522-3-I/21
    novo.” State v. Seward, 
    196 Wn. App. 579
    , 584, 
    384 P.3d 620
     (2016). “A
    defendant arguing that prosecutorial misconduct violated his or her right to a fair
    trial has the burden of showing the prosecutor’s conduct was both improper and
    prejudicial.” State v. Walker, 
    182 Wn.2d 463
    , 477, 
    341 P.3d 976
     (2015).
    It is well established that a prosecutor “may not knowingly use false
    evidence, including false testimony, to obtain a tainted conviction.” Napue v.
    Illinois, 
    360 U.S. 264
    , 269, 
    79 S. Ct. 1173
    , 
    3 L. Ed. 2d 1217
     (1959). “The same
    result obtains when the State, although not soliciting false evidence, allows it to
    go uncorrected when it appears.” Napue, 
    360 U.S. at 269
    . Furthermore, “when
    it should be obvious to the Government that [a] witness’ answer, although made
    in good faith, is untrue, the Government’s obligation to correct that statement is
    as compelling as it is in a situation where the Government knows that the witness
    is intentionally committing perjury.” United States v. Harris, 
    498 F.2d 1164
    , 1169
    (3d Cir. 1974). “‘Mere inconsistency’ between witnesses’ testimony is not
    necessarily perjury, and not every contradiction is material.” United States v.
    Martin, 
    59 F.3d 767
    , 770 (8th Cir. 1995) (quoting United States v. Nelson, 
    970 F.2d 439
    , 443 (8th Cir. 1992)). A new trial is required if the uncorrected false
    testimony “could . . . in any reasonable likelihood have affected the judgment of
    the jury.” Napue, 
    360 U.S. at 271
    .
    Salas asserts that the prosecutor violated his due process right to a fair
    trial by stating the following during closing argument:
    What’s also inconsistent is the K-9 track. The K-9
    unsuccessfully tracked the defendant, didn’t actually track him.
    What did Detective Betts tell about a dog track? Someone, an
    active bleeder, super easy to track. Literally following a trail of
    21
    No. 80522-3-I/22
    blood. It’s inconsistent. Those injuries didn’t occur there and they
    didn’t occur at the hands of [Lopez].
    Salas concedes that “this argument appears to be supported by the
    evidence.” Indeed, Detective Betts testified that “it’s essentially a pretty easy
    track” when the person being tracked is “bleeding heavily.” Moreover, Salas
    testified that, as he was leaving Lopez’s apartment, Salas was “bleeding a lot”
    and he did not wrap up his wound until he returned to his apartment 14 hours
    later. Throughout the night, Salas slept in “the woods,” where he remained for
    approximately 14 hours. However, the dog track did not result in Salas being
    located. In the State’s framing of the evidence, the tracking dog’s failure to
    locate Salas was inconsistent with Salas suffering the knife cut at the hand of
    Lopez.
    Nevertheless, Salas contends that, in light of expert testimony that was
    elicited during the first trial, but not admitted at the second trial, the prosecutor’s
    argument was “false and misleading.” According to Salas, the “prosecutor
    deliberately elicited misleading expert testimony in order to support an argument
    to the jury that the prosecutor knew to be false.” The case law and record do not
    support Salas’s contention.
    First, we note that “the State [was] free to present new evidence at
    retrial.” State v. McKee, 
    193 Wn.2d 271
    , 278, 
    438 P.3d 528
     (2019). Thus, the
    State was free to present, and argue reasonable inferences from, Detective
    Betts’s testimony. See State v. Thorgerson, 
    172 Wn.2d 438
    , 448, 258 P.3d
    (2011) (“In closing argument the prosecuting attorney has wide latitude to argue
    reasonable inferences from the evidence.”).
    22
    No. 80522-3-I/23
    Second, the prosecutor’s argument was neither false nor misleading in
    light of the expert testimony at the first trial. 7 During the first trial, Deputy
    Matthew Boice, a dog handler, testified about dog tracks that he had conducted
    near Lopez’s apartment. According to his testimony, Deputy Boice initiated a
    dog track at Lopez’s apartment building where he observed “a bloody handprint
    on the side of the building which kind of ran downward” and “blood droplets” that
    were located “underneath the building.” Deputy Boice also noticed that “there
    were foot impressions in the ground.” The police dog, Kilo, detected a scent.
    Kilo then led Deputy Boice to building 18 of the apartment complex. 8 Deputy
    Boice and Kilo circled the exterior of building 18 but “the track ended at Building
    18” and they “did not locate a specific person.” Deputy Boice then “ran [Kilo]
    around the entire exterior of [the] whole complex . . . trying to locate where [the]
    scent went.” Kilo “did not give any indications.” This led Deputy Boice to
    conclude that “whoever [they] were tracking either went into one of the
    apartments inside Building 18 or . . . got picked up at a vehicle from that general
    area.”
    Deputy Boice also testified that, after Kilo had tracked the scent to building
    18, he and Kilo were “pulled off [that] track” in order to “look at some other
    location” “on the west side of the complex.” Deputy Boice commanded Kilo to
    look for the same scent at that location and, over the course of an hour to an
    7The testimony elicited during the first trial is available to us but is not formally part of the
    record of this case. See, e.g., State v. Blight, 
    89 Wn.2d 38
    , 46, 
    569 P.2d 1129
     (1977) (“We may
    not speculate upon the existence of facts that do not appear in the record.”). However, because
    the State does not contest the propriety of our consideration of the first-trial testimony, we will
    consider it in resolving this claim.
    8 Salas’s apartment was located inside building 18. Lopez’s apartment was located
    inside building 13.
    23
    No. 80522-3-I/24
    hour and a half, Kilo did not detect the scent on the west side of the apartment
    complex.
    Deputy Boice and Kilo then returned to building 18. Upon their return,
    Deputy Boice noticed that the scene around building 18 had become
    contaminated. He determined that there were “scents of dozens of other people,
    weather, wind, other animals, [and] cars.” At that moment, according to Deputy
    Boice, “it would [not] be realistic for [Kilo] . . . [or] any other dog to re-engage that
    exact same track.”
    Salas asserts that Deputy Boice’s testimony established that “the failure of
    the track was not because Mr. Salas was not bleeding heavily, but because of an
    error by the police in removing the dog from the track and the conditions of the
    area.” However, Deputy Boice’s testimony did not conclusively establish that Kilo
    was unable to locate Salas for either of those reasons. Rather, Deputy Boice’s
    testimony was entirely consistent with the prosecutor’s argument that the dog
    track was unsuccessful because Salas was not actively bleeding. Indeed, Kilo
    was able to track the scent only from the exterior of Lopez’s apartment to building
    18. Kilo was not able to track the scent anywhere else within the apartment
    complex, even though Deputy Boice “ran him around the entire exterior of [the]
    whole complex.” Yet Salas testified that, after he departed from Lopez’s
    apartment, he was “bleeding a lot” and did not return to his apartment until 14
    hours later. Throughout the night, Salas slept in “the woods,” where he remained
    for approximately 14 hours. Salas stated that he did not wrap up his wound until
    he returned to his apartment.
    24
    No. 80522-3-I/25
    Despite the fact that Salas claims to have been “bleeding a lot” and that
    he fled to “the woods,” Kilo did not pick up on Salas’s scent anywhere
    surrounding the exterior of the apartment complex. Thus, the prosecutor’s
    argument in the second trial was neither false nor misleading in light of Deputy
    Boice’s testimony in the first trial.
    Additionally, case law does not support Salas’s contention that the
    presentation of Detective Betts’s testimony violated his right to due process.
    Indeed, Salas does not assert that Detective Betts’s testimony was
    false. See Miller v. Pate, 
    386 U.S. 1
    , 7, 
    87 S. Ct. 785
    , 
    17 L. Ed. 2d 690
     (1967)
    (“[T]he Fourteenth Amendment cannot tolerate a state criminal conviction
    obtained by the knowing use of false evidence.”). Rather, Salas contends that
    the testimony was “misleading” in light of Deputy Boice’s testimony in the first
    trial.
    In support of this contention, Salas cites to a Michigan appellate court’s
    decision in People v. Smith, 
    498 Mich. 466
    , 870 N.W.2d (2015). In that case, a
    witness “had been compensated for his assistance in a [law enforcement] inquiry
    into [the victim]’s murder and a suspected criminal enterprise involving the
    defendant.” Smith, 498 Mich. at 471. However, the witness testified that “he was
    not paid for his cooperation in relation to ‘this case,’ i.e., the prosecution of the
    defendant for [the victim]’s murder.” Smith, 498 Mich. at 472 (emphasis added).
    Knowing that the witness had been compensated for assisting in the criminal
    investigation that regarded the case, the prosecutor, in an argument to the jury,
    “cement[ed] the false notion that [the witness] had only been paid for his
    25
    No. 80522-3-I/26
    cooperation in other cases.” Smith, 498 Mich. at 474. The court explained that
    “[t]he overall impression conveyed [by the testimony] was false” and that
    “[i]nstead of rectifying this false impression . . . the prosecutor capitalized on and
    exploited it.” Smith, 498 Mich. at 478. Thus, the court held, the prosecutor
    violated the “duty to correct false testimony.” Smith, 498 Mich. at 480.
    No such thing happened in Salas’s second trial. As already explained,
    Deputy Boice’s testimony in the first trial was not contrary to the State’s argument
    in the second trial that the dog track did not successfully locate Salas because
    Salas was not bleeding heavily. Detective Betts’s testimony did not convey a
    false impression. The testimony was not misused by the prosecutor in closing
    argument.
    Salas’s claim of error fails. 9
    VI
    Salas finally asserts that the trial court mistakenly ordered, as a condition
    of community custody, that he pay supervision fees. We agree.
    RCW 9.94A.703(2) provides that “[u]nless waived by the court, as part of
    any term of community custody, the court shall order an offender to: . . . (d) Pay
    supervision fees as determined by the department.” Because “the supervision
    fees are waivable by the trial court they are discretionary [legal financial
    obligations].” State v. Dillon, 12 Wn. App. 2d 133, 152, 
    456 P.3d 1199
    , review
    denied, 
    195 Wn.2d 1022
     (2020).
    9 Salas also asserts that cumulative error deprived him of a fair trial. “The cumulative
    error doctrine applies when several trial errors occurred and none alone warrants reversal but the
    combined errors effectively denied the defendant a fair trial.” State v. Jackson, 
    150 Wn. App. 877
    , 889, 
    209 P.3d 553
     (2009). Because no trial errors occurred, there was no cumulative error.
    26
    No. 80522-3-I/27
    At sentencing, the court found Salas to be indigent, and stated:
    Since Mr. Salas is incarcerated, I’ll have him pay a minimum
    of $10 per month on the financial obligations.
    I’ll waive everything except for the $500 victim penalty
    assessment, the $100 biological sample fee, and if there’s
    restitution.
    The trial court did not mention supervision fees. However, the judgment
    and sentence signed by the judge required Salas to “pay supervision fees as
    determined by [the Department of Corrections].” Pursuant to Dillon, this
    requirement must be eliminated on remand.
    The conviction is affirmed. The judgment is reversed and remanded to the
    trial court to eliminate the requirement of payment of supervision fees.
    WE CONCUR:
    27