Christopher Jack Reid v. Pullman Police Department ( 2014 )


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  •                                                                  FILED
    JAN. 28, 2014
    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
    DMSION THREE
    CHRISTOPHER JACK REID,                           )
    )      No. 31039-6-111
    Appellant,                )
    )
    v.                                        )
    )
    PULLMAN POLICE DEPARTMENT,                       )      UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    )
    Respondent.               )
    FEARING, J. -    Christopher Jack Reid seeks to compel, under the Public Records
    Act (PRA), chapter 42.56 RCW, the Pullman Police Department (PPD) to produce,
    among other records, records the police department might have maintained in its
    investigatory file but claims it did not possess at the time of Reid's records request. The
    trial court denied Reid relief, and we affIrm.
    FACTS
    A jury convicted Christopher Reid of second degree rape and burglary. After
    losing an appeal, Reid requested all records related to his criminal case that the PPD, the
    investigating agency, possessed. The PPD responded, providing Reid with what it claims
    to be the entire copy of his criminal case fIle. The PPD produced over 1,000 pages and
    No. 31039-6-III
    Reid v. Pullman Police Dep 'f
    the response included two four-inch, loose-leaf notebooks and one three-inch notebook.
    After reviewing the voluminous records given to him by PPD, Christopher Reid
    concluded that records were missing. For example, he demands that PPD produce a copy
    ofthe audio recording of the rape victim's 911 call. An independent agency, Whitcom,
    however, took and recorded the calL Whitcom is a consolidated 911 dispatch center for
    Pullman, Asotin County, Washington State University, and Moscow, Idaho. The PPD
    informed Reid that the city did not have the 911 recording and suggested to Reid that he
    contact Whitcom.
    In a narrative report by Pullman Police Officer William Orsborn, Orsborn wrote
    that he gave photo lineup sheets to other officers who conducted interviews ofthose who
    saw Reid and Reid's accomplice. The records produced by PPD included statements of
    the witnesses who underwent the photo lineups. Christopher Reid supposes the PPD
    failed to produce documents because the records he received do not identify the names of
    the officers who performed the photo lineups.
    Christopher Reid believes that the PPD failed to provide him with an audio
    recording of an interview of the rape victim, K.N.E., conducted on September 13,2007
    by Pullman Police Officer Scott Kirk. A narrative report of Officer Kirk contains, near
    the end, the words "End of tape" and the initials "JSK/es." Clerk's Papers (CP) at 46.
    Officer Kirk signed an affidavit declaring: "I never took an audio recorded statement of
    the victim in this case. This record does not exist." CP at 127. He also stated that he
    2
    No. 31039-6-III
    Reid v. Pullman Police Dep't
    dictated his narrative, and the narrative report was typed by a transcriptionist. The
    transcriptionist, Elysia Spencer, averred that she transcribed the report Kirk dictated and
    that she did not transcribe an audio recording of a statement from the victim. In other
    words, reference to the "End oftape" in the report refers to the dictated tape from Kirk,
    not a tape of a recording of the victim. CP at 46.
    Separately from the request to Pullman, Christopher Reid requested records from
    the Washington State Patrol Identification and Criminal History Section (WSP). Reid
    compared the WSP records with the case file PPD produced. The WSP records showed
    that, during Pullman's rape investigation, PPD Officers William Orsborn and Michael
    Crow requested and received criminal histories of four other individuals. The results
    from those requests were not in the file PPD produced. Christopher Reid believes these
    missing records will substantiate his claim of innocence. He does not explain, but it is
    not relevant to the appeal, why these purported eXCUlpatory records have not or cannot be
    received from the WSP.
    According to PPD's Property and Evidence Specialist, police officers in the field
    obtain information from WSP databases by radioing requests to Whitcom, a regional
    dispatch center, and then receiving results over the radio. In such circumstances, an
    officer generally does not request printouts ofthe results for insertion in the case file.
    Even if an officer requests printouts and those printouts enter the case file, the officer
    may later remove them "in light of new information that tended to show the WSP record
    3
    No. 31039-6-III
    Reid v. Pullman Police Dep Jt
    was irrelevant." CP at 134.
    One investigating officer, Michael Crow, submitted an affidavit stating he did not
    print the histories he obtained from the WSP when investigating the rape. Pullman,
    however, did not submit an affidavit from Officer William Orsborn, who also requested
    the histories from the WSP. Orsborn is retired.
    Reid filed a motion with the trial court to "order [PPD] to show cause on why it
    has refused to allow copying" of the criminal histories, among the other records. CP at 9.
    The City of Pullman responded that it did not possess or control the records. In support
    of its position, Pullman submitted seven sworn statements from Pullman employees
    I    explaining why the records Christopher Reid requested did not exist. PPD's Records
    Specialist averred that, upon receipt of Reid's records request, she provided him a copy
    of the department's entire investigation file concerning the rape.
    After Pullman responded to the show cause order, Christopher Reid filed a motion
    for leave to insert an additional claim seeking declaratory relief for alleged violations of
    the Preservation and Destruction of Public Records Act (PDPRA) chapter 40.14 RCW.
    After reviewing the affidavits submitted by the parties, the trial court denied Reid any
    1
    I	   relief. The trial court found that Pullman's explanation for the absence of the criminal
    histories was "credible and logical" and that Pullman produced every record in its
    possession and control at the time the records request was made. CP at 126.
    4
    No. 31039-6-III
    I    Reid v. Pullman Police Dep't
    ANALYSIS
    PUBLIC RECORDS ACT
    On appeal, Christopher Reid continues to argue that Pullman violated the PRA
    because it has not produced records it possesses or possessed. The superior court reviews
    an agency's response to a public records request de novo. RCW 42.56.550(3); Zink v.
    City ofMesa, 
    140 Wash. App. 328
    , 335-37, 
    166 P.3d 738
    (2007). In turn, we also
    undertake de novo review, when the trial court rendered, as it did here, a decision based
    upon pleadings rather than oral testimony. Gronquist v. Dep't ofCorrections, 159 Wn.
    App. 576, 590, 
    247 P.3d 436
    (2011). Under such circumstances, the appellate court
    stands in the same position as the trial court and is not bound by the trial court's findings
    on disputed factual issues. 
    Id. I We
    have reviewed the entire record and conclude, as did the trial court, that
    Pullman's explanations with respect to the absence of records are credible. An officer
    1
    1	   may contact WSP for information that the officer reviews on a computer and never prints.
    The names of the officers performing lineups may often be important, but could have
    been of little consequence in the rape investigation because of a lack of certainty in the
    lineups, such that the names were never documented. Contrary to Reid's contention, the
    police department provided pages of raw data prepared as part of the lineups. Pullman
    amply explains why it has produced no recording of an interview of the victim or the 911
    call of the victim.
    5
    No. 31039-6-II1
    Reid v. Pullman Police Dep 't
    Reid believes the police are seeking to shield exculpatory infonnation, but the
    background and history of the case does not confinn this contention. The volume of
    records provided by Pullman suggests that the city lacked desire to exclude any
    documents in its production. In short, Reid has provided no finn evidence that Pullman
    withheld records. '"Purely speculative claims about the existence and discoverability of
    other documents will not overcome an agency affidavit which is accorded a presumption
    of good faith.'" Forbes v. City o/Gold Bar, 
    171 Wash. App. 857
    , 867,288 P.3d 384, 389
    (2012) (quoting Trentadue v. F.B.I., 
    572 F.3d 794
    , 808 (lOth Cir. 2009)), review denied,
    
    177 Wash. 2d 1002
    (2013).
    Christopher Reid correctly notes that an agency is forbidden from destroying
    responsive documents while a PRA request is pending. See RCW 42.56.100.
    Nevertheless, the argument does not control since the evidence does not support a fmding
    of spoliation of records. Assuming officers discarded the WSP criminal histories, the
    disposal occurred years before the records request. Christopher Reid also impliedly
    argues the PPD violated the PRA when it did not create records to identify officers who
    assisted in photo lineups. Yet, '" an agency has no duty to create or produce a record that
    is nonexistent.' " Bldg. Indus. Ass'n o/Wash. v. McCarthy (BIAW), 
    152 Wash. App. 720
    ,
    734,218 P.3d 196 (2009) (quoting Sperr v. City o/Spokane, 
    123 Wash. App. 132
    , 136-37,
    
    969 P.3d 1012
    (2004)).
    6
    No. 31039-6-III
    Reid v. Pullman Police Dep't
    Christopher Reid argues that the trial court erred when it found the PPD complied
    with the PRA without an affidavit from Officer William Orsborn. In violation of RAP
    10.3(a)(6), Reid fails to cite legal authority for this contention. Regardless, Orsborn's
    testimony is not required. In PRA cases, the agency's burden is to establish "beyond
    material doubt" the reasonableness of its search for documents, and "[t]o do so, the
    agency may rely on reasonably detailed, nonconc1usory affidavits submitted in good
    faith." Neighborhood Alliance ofSpokane County v. Spokane County, 
    172 Wash. 2d 702
    ,
    720-21,
    261 P.3d 119
    (2011). Pullman submitted seven detailed, sworn statements
    explaining the reasonableness of its search and attached over 1,000 pages of records
    demonstrating that it produced Christopher Reid's entire criminal case file.
    PRESERVATION AND DESTRUCTION OF PUBLIC RECORDS ACT
    Christopher Reid faults the trial court for refusing to require the PPD to offer proof
    that it complied with the State Records Management Guidelines and Retention Schedules.
    The PDPRA permits the State Archivist to create guidelines to assist government
    agencies to comply with the Act. RCW 40.14.070(2)(a)(iii). The State Archivist created
    and distributed the Records Management Guidelines for Local Government Agencies of
    Washington State (Guidelines).
    Reid asserts Washington courts have relied on the Guidelines when analyzing
    whether agencies violated the Public Records Act citing 0 'Neill v. City ofShoreline, 
    170 Wash. 2d 138
    , 148-49,240 P.3d 1149 (2010); Bldg. Indus. Ass'n of Washington (BIAW),
    7
    No. 31039-6-111
    Reid v. Pullman Police Dep't
    
    152 Wash. App. 720
    ; Daines v. Spokane County, 
    111 Wash. App. 342
    , 350,44 P.3d 909
    (2002), overruled in part on other grounds by Neighborhood Alliance o/Spokane County
    v. County o/Spokane, 
    172 Wash. 2d 702
    , 
    261 P.3d 119
    (2011). To the contrary, however,
    courts have held that an agency need not show it complied with the PDPRA to prove it
    complied with the PRA. West v. Dep't o/Natural Resources, 
    163 Wash. App. 235
    , 245,
    
    258 P.2d 78
    (2011), review denied 
    173 Wash. 2d 1020
    (2012); BIAW, 152 Wn. App at 741.
    Anyway, Reid identifies no guideline violated by Pullman and courts have questioned
    whether a private party has standing to sue under the PDPRA. BIA 
    W, 152 Wash. App. at 742
    ; 
    Daines, 111 Wash. App. at 350
    .
    MOTION FOR ADDITIONAL BRIEFING
    In its brief, Pullman wrote that the trial court reasonably concluded it did not
    violate the PRA based on affidavits along with "the context of certain records."
    Christopher Reid claims he has no knowledge of the "context" or "certain records" to
    which Pullman refers. In his reply brief, Reid asks this court, pursuant to RAP 10.4(d), to
    order Pullman to elaborate on the meaning of the phrase. This court denies Reid's
    motion because RAP 10.4(d) does not permit a party to file a non-dispositive motion in
    his brief. Ash v. Dep't o/Labor & Indus., 
    173 Wash. App. 559
    , 561,294 P.3d 834 (2013).
    CONCLUSION
    After conducting our de novo review of the record, we hold that Pullman did not
    violate either the PRA or the PDPRA. We affirm the trial court.
    8
    No. 31039·6·II1
    Reid v. Pullman Police Dep't
    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.
    Fearmg, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    Co:
    orsmo, C.~.                                           Kulik, J.
    9
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 31039-6

Filed Date: 1/28/2014

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021