Personal Restraint Petition Of Robert Lee Pry ( 2022 )


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  •        IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    In Re the Personal Restraint of                   No. 83437-1-I
    ROBERT LEE PRY,                                   DIVISION ONE
    Petitioner.           UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    COBURN, J. — Robert Lee Pry seeks relief from his convictions for murder
    in the first degree, kidnapping in the first degree, identity theft in the second
    degree, possession of stolen property in the second degree, and tampering with
    a witness in the second degree. He argues that he is entitled to a new trial for
    his murder and kidnapping convictions in light of an affidavit submitted by a
    coparticipant, who had not testified at trial. He also challenges the trial court’s
    denial of his request to change venue and contends his counsel was ineffective
    for not objecting to an exceptional sentence. Because Pry fails to demonstrate
    that he is entitled to relief, we deny his personal restraint petition (PRP).
    FACTS
    In December 2015, Robert Pry and Joshua Rodgers Jones 1 went to rob
    the Bremerton home of 89-year old veteran Robert Hood. Robert Davis, Pry’s
    friend and former boss, assisted with their plans. On the night of the murder, Pry
    and Rodgers Jones severely beat Hood, causing extensive injuries to his head,
    1 Rodgers Jones’ name appears in different variations throughout the
    record. We refer to him as “Rodgers Jones” without a hyphen as that is how he
    writes his name in the affidavit.
    Citations and pin cites are based on the Westlaw online version of the cited material.
    No. 83437-1-I/2
    neck, and spine. They “hogtied” Hood, tying together his wrists and ankles
    together with rope. Hood’s death was a consequence of the combination of his
    head trauma, being hogtied, and his inability to breathe. From Hood’s home, Pry
    and Rodgers Jones stole cash, checks, financial and personal documents, and
    various antiques.
    Immediately after the robbery, Pry, his girlfriend Ocean Wilson, his sister
    Shawna Dudley-Pry, Rodgers Jones, Davis and some other friends and
    acquaintances traveled to Fife to go gambling. While in Fife, Pry unsuccessfully
    tried to access Hood’s bank accounts by writing fake checks, attempting to
    transfer funds online, and by impersonating Hood over the telephone. Davis
    invited Alisha Small from Seattle to use her accounting expertise to help Pry
    access Hood’s accounts.
    Over the next week, Pry and Rodgers Jones tried to dispose of Hood’s
    body, involving more than a dozen family members, friends, and unwitting
    strangers. Pry drove Hood’s body in the trunk of a stolen Honda and tried to
    dump him in an undeveloped area near Teal Lake. Pry had spray painted the
    Honda black. The Honda became stuck in the mud, which required the
    assistance of several individuals to assist Pry and Rodgers Jones with its
    recovery. Once Pry had the Honda back, he enlisted the help of another friend,
    Arnold Cruz, to help him dispose of the body.
    Cruz and Pry unsuccessfully attempted to bury Hood’s body on Cruz’s
    property. At some point, Hood’s body was placed into a 55-gallon blue barrel
    2
    No. 83437-1-I/3
    Cruz kept on his property. The barrel then traveled in multiple vehicles of
    individuals acquainted with Cruz. Finally, Cruz took the barrel to the home of
    Zakary Bonds where police later recovered it and discovered Hood’s body. Pry
    was arrested. 2
    The State charged Pry with murder in the first degree, robbery in the first
    degree, kidnapping in the first degree, identity theft in the second degree,
    possession of stolen property in the second degree, and tampering with a
    witness. 3 A jury convicted Pry on all five counts. By special verdict the jury also
    found that Pry acted with deliberate cruelty, knew Hood was particularly
    vulnerable, and demonstrated an egregious lack of remorse on the murder,
    kidnapping, and robbery charges. At sentencing, the court concluded that Pry’s
    murder and robbery convictions merged and the robbery conviction was vacated.
    The court imposed an exceptional sentence of 958 months.
    Pry unsuccessfully appealed his conviction. 4 Pry’s judgement and
    sentence became final on January 28, 2020 and he timely filed this PRP within
    one year. RCW 10.73.090(3)(b).
    2With the help of a police informant, Pry was arrested on December 22,
    2015, eight days prior to the recovery of Hood’s body on December 30, 2015.
    3 Pry’s convictions for murder and robbery in the first degree were
    subsequently merged into a single felony murder conviction.
    4 State v. Pry, No. 77930-3-I (Wash. Ct. App. Nov. 13, 2018)
    (unpublished), https://www.courts.wa.gov /opinions/pdf/779303.PDF. The
    Supreme Court denied Pry’s petition for review. State v. Davis, 
    192 Wn.2d 1022
    ,
    
    435 P.3d 288
     (2019). In State v. Pry, 
    194 Wn.2d 745
    , 
    452 P.3d 536
     (2019), the
    Supreme Court reviewed only issues related to Pry’s co-defendant Arnold Cruz.
    3
    No. 83437-1-I/4
    DISCUSSION
    Standard of Review
    A petitioner may request relief though a PRP when they are under
    unlawful restraint. RAP 16.4. But Washington courts have limited collateral relief
    through a PRP, as such relief “‘undermines the principles of finality of litigation,
    degrades the prominence of trial, and sometimes deprives society of the right to
    punish admitted offenders.’” In re Pers. Restraint of Davis, 
    152 Wn.2d 647
    , 670,
    
    101 P.3d 1
     (2004) (quoting In re Pers. Restraint of St. Pierre, 
    118 Wn.2d 321
    ,
    329, 
    823 P.2d 492
     (1992)). A petitioner must therefore prove a constitutional
    error resulting in actual and substantial prejudice, or alternatively, a non-
    constitutional error with a fundamental defect that results in a complete
    miscarriage of justice. Davis, 
    152 Wn.2d at 672
    . A petitioner must show an error
    by a preponderance of the evidence. In re Pers. Restraint of Monschke, 
    160 Wn. App. 479
    , 488, 
    251 P.3d 884
     (2010).
    Newly Discovered Evidence
    Pry argues that newly discovered evidence exonerates him from the
    murder and kidnapping charges and entitles him to a new trial.
    Newly discovered evidence entitles a petitioner to relief if the evidence
    requires vacation of the conviction or sentence to satisfy the “‘interest of justice.’”
    In re Pers. Restraint of Lui, 
    188 Wn.2d 525
    , 569, 
    397 P.3d 90
     (2017) (quoting In
    re Pers. Restraint of Lord, 
    123 Wn.2d 296
    , 319, 
    868 P.2d 835
     (1994); RAP
    16.4(c)(3). For the exception to apply, a petitioner must show that the evidence:
    “‘(1) will probably change the result of the trial; (2) was discovered since the trial;
    4
    No. 83437-1-I/5
    (3) could not have been discovered before trial by the exercise of due diligence;
    (4) is material; and (5) is not merely cumulative or impeaching.’” Lui, 188 Wn.2d
    at 569 (quoting Lord, 
    123 Wn.2d at 319-20
    ). The absence of any one of the five
    factors is grounds to deny a new trial. In re the Pers. Restraint of Brown, 
    143 Wn.2d 431
    , 453, 
    21 P.3d 687
     (2001).
    Pry presents a January 2017 sworn affidavit from Joshua Rodgers Jones,
    a co-participant in the crimes whose case was severed from Pry’s case prior to
    trial. 5 In his affidavit, Rodgers Jones alleges that Pry was not involved in the
    kidnapping and murder of Hood and claims that his defense attorney refused to
    let him come forward with the exculpatory information.
    According to Rodgers Jones’ affidavit, he, Dudley-Pry, and Pry were
    driving home from a friend’s house and he asked Dudley-Pry to stop the car so
    he could go see a friend. Leaving Dudley-Pry and Pry in the car, he went to
    Hood’s home and when Hood answered, Rodgers Jones asked him if he could
    borrow some cash. While offering Rodgers Jones the requested cash, Hood
    tried to hug him. In response, Rodgers Jones, “triggered” by a “memory of my
    [sexual] abuse,” pushed and punched Hood and he “fell on his head” and
    became unconscious. After tying Hood up with some rope, Rodgers Jones
    dragged him into the bathroom. He then searched Hood’s home for items of
    In October 2016, a few weeks after Pry was sentenced, Rodgers Jones
    5
    pleaded guilty to murder in the first degree, identity theft in the first degree, and
    possession of stolen property in the second degree.
    5
    No. 83437-1-I/6
    value. Rodgers Jones left Hood’s home and discovering that Dudley-Pry and Pry
    had left, he walked home. Later, Rodgers Jones asked Pry if he
    would work on some paperwork I had[.] [H]e told me he would and
    he did but had no idea where any of it came from, I never told
    anyone where any of the paperwork came from. [Pry] tried to work
    on it but it didn’t work[.] [H]e couldn’t get any paperwork or checks
    to work[.]”
    Rodgers Jones then went back to Hood’s home alone to find him dead. He put
    Hood in the trunk and then tried to dispose of his body.
    Pry contends that Rodgers Jones’ new testimony, “[c]ombined with the
    lack of forensic evidence tying [him] to the scene of the crime” “could have led a
    reasonable jury to acquit [him].” The State responds that Pry fails to meet the
    first and fifth factors of the new evidence test because Rodgers Jones’ new
    testimony would not have changed the result of Pry’s trial and such evidence
    would be merely cumulative or impeaching. 6 A witness who admits to the crime
    and corroborates a defendant’s version of events can hardly be considered
    merely cumulative. However the new testimony would be merely impeaching as
    to testimony from other witnesses.
    More importantly, the new testimony would not have changed the outcome
    of Pry’s trial. Pry’s primary trial strategy was to create the exact same narrative
    as Rodgers Jones’ affidavit: that Rodgers Jones alone committed the murder,
    robbery, and kidnapping. The jury rejected this theory.
    6  The State does not challenge that Rodgers Jones’ affidavit meets the
    second, third, and fourth prong of the newly discovered evidence test. As Pry
    fails to meet the first prong of the test, we need not address whether the affidavit
    satisfies the other prongs.
    6
    No. 83437-1-I/7
    Pry, along with Davis and Cruz, asked the court to sever his criminal
    proceedings from Rodgers Jones’ case. The court granted the motion. Rodgers
    Jones’ severance from Pry’s trial allowed Pry to portray Rodgers Jones as the
    sole criminal actor. Pry’s opening statement immediately set up this theory:
    Ladies and gentlemen, the person who murdered Robert Hood is
    not in this courtroom today. You heard the State talk about Joshua
    Rodgers Jones. You're going to hear a lot about Joshua Rodgers
    Jones, the person who had been to Robert Hood's house prior to
    this event, had befriended Robert Hood, and who was [the] one that
    murdered Robert Hood.
    During trial, Pry elicited testimony from law enforcement that Pry had told
    them during interviews that he had never been to Hood’s property and Rodgers
    Jones confided in Pry that he had assaulted Hood. He elicited testimony from
    witnesses to portray Rodgers Jones as possessing a “violent nature” and a
    “crazy” disposition. In his own testimony, Pry denied any involvement in the
    robbery, Hood’s murder or the cover-up. According to Pry, Rodgers Jones alone
    went into Hood’s home and returned with items he had collected. Pry claimed he
    learned from Rodgers Jones there might be a body in the trunk of the Honda but
    Pry did not believe him and never saw Hood’s dead body. In closing, Pry
    continued with his consistent theme that “the person who committed this murder,
    the person who murdered Robert Hood, is not here in this courtroom.” Pry
    reiterated that Rodgers Jones was violent and he could have “handled [Hood] by
    himself.”
    The jury rejected Pry’s theory that Rodgers Jones acted alone and were
    instead persuaded by the narrative put forth by the State’s several dozen
    7
    No. 83437-1-I/8
    witnesses over two months of trial: that Pry participated in the murder, robbery,
    and kidnapping of Hood. The new testimony from Rodgers Jones does not
    eliminate the inculpatory evidence. The evidence against Pry was overwhelming.
    Pry’s former girlfriend Ocean Wilson testified that a few days prior to the
    date of the incident she heard Pry and Rodgers Jones talking about an easy “lick
    they wanted to hit.”7 The night of the murder, Rodgers Jones and Pry put on
    “dark clothing” and beanies. Wilson heard Davis tell them, “Don’t fuck this up,
    don’t get us caught.” Rodgers Jones and Pry responded, “We got this.”
    Hood’s neighbor, Edward Scholfield, placed Pry outside of Hood’s home
    the night of the murder. Scholfield testified that after Pry’s sister yelled for him to
    get in the car, Pry stated, "Everything is okay. I got it taken care of." Pry admits
    he saw Scholfield that night and Scholfield told him to leave.
    Wilson testified that when Pry returned from Hood’s home, Pry revealed
    items contained in a pillowcase. Several of Hood’s items were eventually
    recovered in Pry’s home 8 including Hood’s personal and financial documents
    including bank statements and deposit slips, social security card, driver’s
    licenses, checkbook, credit and medical services cards, among other things.
    Law enforcement officers also recovered Hood’s antique shotguns, shells, and a
    razor from Pry’s home. Pry’s fingerprints were on some of Hood’s items. From
    A “lick” refers to a robbery.
    7
    Pry lived in a shared home with Wilson, another woman and her children.
    8
    At some point Rodgers Jones also lived in the home.
    8
    No. 83437-1-I/9
    Pry’s home, law enforcement also recovered a handwritten note that said, “We
    have to go handle the old man like right now, then we can milk it.”
    Alone with Wilson after going to Hood’s home, Pry showed her a “wad of
    one hundreds” he had obtained. Pry confided in Wilson as to what had
    happened at Hood’s home:
    [Pry] told me that -- when they went up to the man’s house, that he
    knocked on the door and told the man that he was God. And that
    they had tied the old man up and hit him and asked him if he had
    raped kids in the past. And I guess the old man, Mr. Hood, had
    confirmed that that was a long time ago. Bubba[9] told me that they
    left the man in the house tied up, and he was snoring on the floor.
    Wilson testified that later she learned that a body was in the trunk of the
    Honda Pry was driving. Another witness, David Ojeda—Pry’s cousin—testified
    that on the day Pry took Hood’s body to Cruz’s home, Pry told Ojeda that “there
    was a pedophile in the trunk.” Another witness, Albert Jouravel, who used his
    truck to help Ojeda and Pry tow the Honda from Teal Lake, saw the “silhouette”
    of something wrapped in a sheet in the backseat. Once the Honda was freed,
    Pry drove away quickly. At one point Pry slowed down and Jouravel heard him
    scream, “Plan B.”
    Witness Christina Waggoner, who lived with Davis, testified that she saw
    Pry and Rodgers Jones together sometime in mid-December, looking in the trunk
    of a car and they “were acting weird.” Alisha Small testified that she overheard a
    conversation in which Davis, Pry, and Rodgers Jones discussed “[h]aving to
    dispose of a body.”
    9   “Bubba” is Pry’s nickname.
    9
    No. 83437-1-I/10
    Witness Miranda Bond overheard a conversation between Cruz, Pry, and
    Pry’s sister. Pry’s sister “didn’t understand why she was in this” and Pry told her
    “not to worry about it, to go upstairs and worry about the accounts.” Pry then told
    Cruz, “I need you to help me get rid of it. I need to get rid of it.” Bond also
    overheard a conversation between Pry and Rodgers Jones in which they
    discussed going to an “old man’s house, and Pry said that they assaulted him.
    And then [Rodgers Jones] said he went and got rope and tied the old man up
    and that Pry left him tied up in the bathroom.” They said that the old man got
    “pieced in.”
    Wilson was with Pry when he took Hood’s body and visited Cruz to ask for
    help. Wilson saw Pry emerge from Cruz’s shed with a shovel in his hand. Pry
    told Wilson, “he would never get the image of putting that man in a bucket out of
    his head.”
    Witness Zakery Bonds, at whose home Hood’s body would eventually be
    discovered by police, testified that Pry came to his house. Pry told Bonds that
    “stuff was messed up and that he needed to get rid of the car” and he would “be
    in a lot of trouble.”
    Law enforcement testified that upon learning of their arrival, Pry asked a
    friend to make a 911 call about a fake shooting to distract police from the house,
    threw a cell phone out the window, and then hid under a bed. A cell phone was
    discovered under the bed where Pry was found hiding which contained photos of
    Hood’s mailbox and financial statements.
    10
    No. 83437-1-I/11
    The State also presented Jacob Spears, Pry’s jail mate, who told the jury
    that Pry said he was at Hood’s murder and Hood died by being “clubbed in the
    head” and they had taken Hood’s body to a friend’s home. Pry then asked
    Spears to help him send a message to a family member outside the prison to
    “figure out a way to discredit Ocean Wilson.”
    Pry’s testimony did little to refute the overwhelming evidence from the
    State. He conceded that he participated in the attempt to access Hood’s
    accounts because he thought he “might be able to get some money out of the
    situation.” Pry admitted that he lied to law enforcement during their investigation
    of the murder. Considering the jury’s findings of guilt, it appears Pry’s
    concessions did not rehabilitate his credibility. When asked why he agreed to go
    help Rodgers Jones, who he believed to be crazy, to perform some unknown
    task, Pry answered that Rodgers Jones was his roommate and sister’s boyfriend.
    When asked why he was involved in spray painting the Honda, he testified that
    he did not want to drive around in a car “with a ridiculous paint job” and it was
    unrelated to having been seen by Hood’s neighbor Schofield. This contradicted
    Pry’s earlier trial testimony that the car was painted because it had been seen by
    Hood’s neighbor.
    Pry’s testimony also acknowledged that he had been at several locations
    that were connected to Hood’s decomposing body: an area near Teal Lake,
    Arnold Cruz’s property, and Zakery Bonds’ house. Pry offered many reasons for
    his presence in these places. When asked why he repeatedly went back to Teal
    11
    No. 83437-1-I/12
    Lake to try and recover the Honda from the mud—despite claiming he never saw
    Hood’s body—he said he “didn’t want my possessions linked to that vehicle. I
    didn’t want nothing of mine or my fingerprints or anything around any of that.”
    When asked why he went to Cruz’s home he said he was helping Cruz move
    some “washer and dryers” and denied digging a hole there. Pry testified he knew
    nothing about the four-foot, nine-inch long, two-feet deep hole found there by law
    enforcement. Finally, when asked why he was at Zakery Bonds’ home, where
    Hood’s body was eventually recovered, Pry testified simply that he wanted to
    borrow some money from him.
    Other parts of Pry’s testimony reflected credibility issues. When asked
    why he hid when the police showed up at his home, Pry said, “I can't even tell
    you what I was thinking, really. I mean, I knew that – all I did was hide under the
    bed, you know, try to scrounge up a cigarette and smoke some weed.” Pry
    conceded that he wrongfully used another inmate’s prison account to make a jail
    call to ask someone to destroy an incriminating letter and another call in which he
    told his brother to ensure Wilson was thinking about “her future.”
    The jury found Pry guilty of all charges after hearing all the State’s
    evidence and Pry’s own testimony. The jury rejected Pry’s explicit attempt to
    portray Rodgers Jones as the sole person responsible for Hood’s murder. Pry
    fails to establish that Rodgers Jones’ testimony would probably have changed
    the result of Pry’s trial. As Pry fails to meet the first factor of the newly
    discovered evidence test, we need not address the remaining factors.
    12
    No. 83437-1-I/13
    Change of Venue
    Pry next contends that his Sixth Amendment 10 right to a fair trial by an
    impartial jury was violated when the trial court denied his request to change
    venue because of pretrial publicity.
    The Sixth Amendment guarantees a criminal defendant the right to a fair
    and impartial jury. State v. Rupe, 
    108 Wn.2d 734
    , 748, 
    743 P.2d 210
     (1987). A
    trial court should grant a motion for a change of venue when necessary to
    effectuate a defendant’s right to a fair trial. State v. Hoffman, 
    116 Wn.2d 51
    , 71,
    
    804 P.2d 577
     (1991). Pretrial publicity alone is insufficient to warrant a change in
    venue. State v. Jackson, 
    111 Wn. App. 660
    , 669, 
    46 P.3d 257
     (2002). Where a
    defendant claims prejudice from pretrial publicity, they must demonstrate a
    “probability of unfairness or prejudice.” Hoffman, 
    116 Wn.2d at 71
    . “The fact that
    ‘the great majority of veniremen’ remember a case, without more, is ‘essentially
    irrelevant. The relevant question is not whether the community remembered the
    case, but whether the jurors at [the] trial had such fixed opinions that they could
    not judge impartially the guilt of the defendant.’” State v. Jackson, 
    150 Wn. 2d 251
    , 269, 
    76 P.3d 217
     (2003) (alteration in original) (quoting Patton v. Yount, 
    467 U.S. 1025
    , 1035, 
    104 S. Ct. 2885
    , 
    81 L. Ed. 2d 847
     (1984)).
    A trial court’s ruling on a motion for a change of venue is discretionary
    and will not be disturbed on appeal without a showing of abuse of discretion.
    Jackson, 111 Wn. App. at 669. A court abuses its discretion where the discretion
    10   U.S. CONST. amend. VI.
    13
    No. 83437-1-I/14
    is exercised in a manifestly unreasonable manner or on untenable grounds. Id.
    To determine if a court abused its discretion in denying a venue change, we must
    consider the Crudup factors:
    “(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 the prospective or trial jurors with the publicity and the resultant
    effect upon them; (6) the challenges exercised by the defendant
    selecting the jury, both peremptory and for cause; (7) the
    connection of government officials with the release of the publicity;
    (8) the severity of the charge; and (9) the size of the area in which
    the venire is drawn.”
    Jackson, 111 Wn. App. at 670 (quoting State v. Crudup, 
    11 Wn. App. 583
    , 587,
    
    524 P.2d 479
     (1974)).
    In May 2016, Pry filed a motion to change venue. Pry argued that he
    would be unable to receive a fair trial in Kitsap County due to local media
    coverage of the case, specifically referring to numerous news articles that had
    been published in the local newspaper. The trial court denied the motion,
    concluding that Pry failed to show a probability of prejudice. We review whether
    the trial court’s denial of Pry’s motion was an abuse of discretion.
    The media coverage of Hood’s murder was extensive. Several news
    articles were published in the local newspaper, the Kitsap Sun, and were
    circulated both in print and online. In Kitsap County, with a 2015 population of
    approximately 260,000 residents, the Kitsap Sun’s circulation was around 16,000
    people. These articles included statements of Rodgers Jones admitting that he
    and Pry assaulted Hood in his home and then tried to hide his body. The articles
    14
    No. 83437-1-I/15
    were published in the relatively short amount of time between Hood’s murder
    (December 2015) and Pry’s trial (May 2016). Given the pretrial publicity
    surrounding Pry’s trial and the severity of the charges, it is clear that some of the
    Crudup factors (1, 2, 3, 8, 9) pointed in favor of a change of venue.
    But the other Crudup factors (4, 5, 6, 7)—those in the court’s or State’s
    control—supported not granting Pry’s request to change venue.
    The court and the parties exercised great care in selecting a fair and
    impartial jury. Due to the pretrial publicity in the case, Pry’s jury venire was
    larger – 208 jurors – than a typical criminal case to “ensure an unbiased jury
    could be selected.” Prospective jurors were required to answer a questionnaire,
    inquiring as to whether they had heard about the case:
    This case involves the death of Robert Archie Hood, who was
    reported missing on December 19, 2015. There were news reports
    about the search for Mr. Hood and several suspects leading up to
    Christmas and continuing until the start of January 2016. Those
    news reports included details about certain suspects who were
    wanted in connection with the case, the search for a Honda with
    Oregon license plates and a blue barrel. Have you heard or read
    anything about this case and/or the defendants?
    The questionnaire also asked prospective jurors if they would follow the court’s
    instruction not to view or discuss any media coverage. In addition to the
    questionnaire, the court asked the prospective jurors if they had read a recent
    article about the case in the Kitsap Sun. As articles continued to be published
    during jury selection, the court specifically directed the jurors not to open or read
    15
    No. 83437-1-I/16
    the Kitsap Sun and to disable the Kitsap Sun on social media. 11
    The State and defense attorneys individually questioned 28 prospective
    jurors who indicated that they had seen media about the case, or had heard
    about the case from others. The court granted multiple requests from defense
    attorneys to excuse prospective jurors for cause related to the extent of their
    media exposure. But most of the prospective jurors questioned about their
    media exposure indicated that they could not remember specific details about the
    case, or if they did remember, the details were trivial, such as hearing about a
    missing older man or that there had been a murder.
    Pry highlights that 28 out of 208 jurors, more than 10 percent, were
    questioned about their exposure to pretrial publicity. But he does not cite to
    anything in the record to suggest that any seated juror created a probability of
    unfairness or prejudice.
    As the Washington Supreme Court stated in Jackson, that a juror might
    “remember a case, without more, is ‘essentially irrelevant.’” Instead, the relevant
    inquiry is whether a juror “‘had such fixed opinions that they could not judge
    impartially the guilt of the defendant.’” Jackson, 
    150 Wn.2d at 269
     (quoting
    Patton, 
    467 U.S. at 1035
    .
    Pry also contends, without citing to the record, that defense used eight
    peremptory challenges because of pretrial publicity exposure and if they had not
    11Throughout trial, the court continued to inquire as to whether the jurors
    were able to comply with its instructions not to read any media reports related to
    the issues presented at trial.
    16
    No. 83437-1-I/17
    had to use those challenges for that purpose, they could have used those
    peremptory challenges for other jurors. We first note that Pry does not argue that
    the trial court improperly denied a for-cause challenge leaving defendants with no
    choice but to use a peremptory challenge. Second, the defense only exercised
    eight of their 13 available peremptory challenges.
    Where a defendant claims prejudice from pretrial publicity, they must
    demonstrate a “probability of unfairness or prejudice.” Hoffman, 
    116 Wn.2d at 71
    . Pry failed to so demonstrate. Publicity alone is insufficient to warrant a
    change in venue. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying Pry’s
    motion to change venue.
    Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
    Finally, Pry asserts that he received ineffective assistance of counsel
    because his attorney did not object to the imposition of an exceptional sentence.
    We disagree.
    At Pry’s sentencing, the State recommended sentences within the
    standard range, but to run them consecutive along with added time for the
    aggravating factors, for an exceptional sentence that totaled 900 months. The
    pre-sentence investigation (PSI) report also recommended an exceptional
    sentence for a total of 917 months. Defense asked for a total sentence that fell
    within the standard range of the murder charge, 411-548 months. The court
    imposed an exceptional sentence of 958 months.
    17
    No. 83437-1-I/18
    We apply a strong presumption that counsel’s representation was
    reasonable. State v. Estes, 
    188 Wn.2d 450
    , 458, 
    395 P.3d 1045
     (2017). To
    show ineffective assistance of counsel, a petitioner must demonstrate both that
    “(1) counsel’s performance was deficient, i.e., that it fell below an objective
    standard of reasonableness and (2) the deficient performance prejudiced him,
    i.e., that there is a reasonable possibility that but for the deficient conduct, the
    outcome of the proceeding would have differed.” Monschke, 160 Wn. App. at
    490-92 (holding that the prejudice prong from Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 694, 
    104 S. Ct. 2052
    , 
    80 L. Ed. 2d 674
     (1984), applies in a PRP). We
    review an ineffective assistance of counsel claims de novo. Estes, 188 Wn.2d
    at 457.
    Several individuals spoke at Pry’s sentencing hearing, asking the court to
    impose a high-end sentence. The lead detective in the investigation, Detective
    Jason Bowman, Hood’s friend Candyce Gratton and her three children spoke in
    support of the court imposing the maximum sentence allowed. Only one person
    spoke on behalf of Pry, his aunt, who asked the court not to impose a maximum
    sentence because there were other people involved in the crimes.
    In addition to requesting a sentence between 411 to 548 months, Pry’s
    attorney successfully persuaded the court that the robbery conviction merged
    with the murder conviction. Defense counsel also asked the court to take into
    consideration Pry’s upbringing that was touched upon in the PSI:
    I was a little bit disappointed in the presentence investigation. I’m
    not sure that it went through Mr. Pry’s situation, his upbringing, as
    much as I would have liked.
    18
    No. 83437-1-I/19
    I think by any measure, Mr. Pry did not have a good
    upbringing or any role models or a regular childhood.
    By any measure, his upbringing was a mess. I’m not saying
    that as an excuse or to say that that somehow does not make him
    responsible for his actions. I’m just asking the court to take that
    into account in how Mr. Pry has got to where he’s got.
    And that’s a part of his life, was this upbringing that he had,
    that as I indicated, it was a mess.
    I know that the court likely has a number that they’re looking
    at, and I just ask that the court take that into account, that that
    number should take into account how Mr. Pry has gotten to where
    he’s gotten.
    And the State indicates, it says that Mr. Pry acts like – or
    indicates that he's somehow a victim of this.
    I don’t believe that that’s the case. But I do believe, and I do
    believe whole-heartedly, if Mr. Pry had not come into contact or
    become involved with Joshua Rodgers Jones, that he would never
    be sitting here. He would never be sitting here if he hadn’t become
    involved with Mr. Rodgers Jones.
    I think by even the State’s evidence in this case,
    Mr. Rodgers Jones was the impetus and the main actor and the
    main person involved in this situation. Mr. Pry would not be here if
    it was not for Rodgers Jones.
    So when the court is coming up with a number to sentence
    Mr. Pry, I would just ask that you take that into account in
    determining that number.
    The court did take into consideration Pry’s upbringing:
    It did not come as a particular surprise to this court that
    Mr. Pry’s childhood and family experience was less than what we
    would all hope for a child.
    It’s pretty clear that Mr. Pry is, in some parts, one of the
    clearest examples of a failure of our system on every level.
    Mr. Pry is 30-years-old. I don't remember when he turned 30,
    but I believe he’s currently 30-years-old. He has been to prison
    four times. This will be his fifth trip to prison in adulthood, that’s 12
    years in duration.
    He’s been on community custody for 11 years of his, again,
    12 years of adulthood.
    19
    No. 83437-1-I/20
    He was raised by parents who led a life of crime, and began
    using drugs himself when he was, according to the PSI, about ten-
    years-old. And I am confident to say, not necessarily agree with
    you, Mr. Drury, that had he not been involved with Joshua Rodgers
    Jones he wouldn’t have been here, not sure about that. But I am
    confident that if Mr. Pry had been raised by different people, he
    probably would be a different person. Mr. Pry has sat in this
    courtroom for months, and I’ve seen other sides to him.
    I’ve seen that he’s able to behave in a polite and respectful
    manner, that he loves his siblings intently, that he has shown some
    loyalty to those that mean something to him. I’ve seen that side of
    him.
    Despite those circumstances, the court could not ignore Pry’s “career of
    crime” and the “brutal” crime committed against Hood. The court noted it was
    “almost speechless” when considering Pry’s actions:
    [T]his was a brutal act of selfishness.
    ...
    [Hood] was also chosen, I believe, because he was
    vulnerable. He was chosen because he was probably unlikely to
    be able to defend himself. And I'm without a doubt that those
    part[s] of the factors that came into play in picking Mr. Hood to be
    the victim of this offense.
    After assaulting and tying Mr. Hood up, he was left bleeding
    on his bathroom floor and left to die.
    No one in this case tried to aid Mr. Hood. No one made an
    anonymous call to 9-1-1 to try to save him. He was left . . . like a
    piece of trash on the floor in the home that he lived in his entire life
    from his childhood.
    Then, after brutally assaulting Mr. Hood and leaving him to
    die, Mr. Pry and his friends blithely go off to the casino in Fife
    where their whole goal at this point is to enjoy the fruits of their
    labor and to try to see if they can get more out of Mr. Hood.
    This wasn’t the end of the story for Mr. Hood with Mr. Pry.
    Instead of leaving Mr. Hood for his family and friends to have a
    chance to be able to say goodbye to him and give him the funeral
    he deserved, Mr. Pry put Mr. Hood into the trunk of a car for the
    purpose of disposing of the body and hiding the evidence of his
    crime.
    20
    No. 83437-1-I/21
    In the end, really, if you put it down to the truth of it, the
    intent of this was to deprive the family of the dignity of giving
    Mr. Hood the funeral that he deserved, and really to deprive the
    family and friends of a chance to say goodbye to Mr. Hood.
    When dumping the body of Mr. Hood in a wooded area in
    Jefferson County didn’t work, Mr. Pry left his body with Mr. Cruz in
    a barrel.
    Mr. Pry then just washes his hands of the whole affair and
    goes on with his life.
    The court emphasized the jury’s finding of the aggravating factors of
    deliberate cruelty, lack of remorse, and a particularly vulnerable victim. The court
    found that the “vulnerability of the victim, and the cruelty [to] the victim, are really
    the factors that had the most weight with this court.” In addition to the
    aggravating factors, the court noted that the standard range of 411-548 months
    on the murder and the 51-68 months for kidnapping was “clearly insufficient
    under the facts of this case and the history of the defendant.” The court also
    rejected the State’s recommendation as well as the recommendation from the
    PSI report, and imposed an exceptional sentence of 958 months.
    Pry is correct that his defense attorney did not specifically object after the
    court imposed the exceptional sentence. However, counsel did not need to
    object to make his position clear; he had already made his recommendation and
    argued the basis for that recommendation. The court’s explanation as to why it
    was imposing an exceptional sentence was supported in the record. An
    objection at this point would have been nothing more than to repeat the
    defense’s position that it disagreed and recommended a different sentence.
    Counsel was not deficient for not objecting under these circumstances.
    21
    No. 83437-1-I/22
    The trial court electing to impose a sentence even greater than what was
    recommended by the State and in the PSI report evidenced the court’s strong
    inclination to impose an exceptional sentence. Even if Pry could show that his
    defense counsel should have objected to the exceptional sentence specifically,
    Pry fails to demonstrate that a reasonable possibility existed that any objection
    would have changed the outcome of his sentencing hearing. Pry’s counsel was
    not deficient. Pry’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim fails.
    For the reasons explained above, Pry fails to demonstrate that he is
    entitled to relief. We deny his petition.
    WE CONCUR:
    22