FILED
FEBRUARY 2, 2016
In the Office of the Clerk of Court
WA State Court of Appeals, Division III
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
DIVISION THREE
STATE OF WASHINGTON, )
) No. 31501-1-111
Respondent, )
)
v. )
)
ARTURO LUNA HUERTA, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION
)
Appellant. )
FEARING, J. - Arturo Huerta assigns numerous errors to his trial on charges for
possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver and involving a minor in drug
dealing. The assignments of error challenge evidentiary rulings, sufficiency of evidence,
closed hearings, and prosecutorial misconduct. We agree with only one assignment error.
We rule that the trial court should have excluded as hearsay testimony of a law
enforcement detective comparing $100 bills given to a confidential informant with
currency recovered after the drug buy, when the State presented neither the banknotes nor
the photocopies. We nonetheless hold the error to be harmless. We affirm Huerta's
convictions on both charges.
FACTS
A sting operation gave rise to this prosecution of appellant Arturo Huerta. On
No.3l501-l-II1
State v. Huerta
May 30, 2012, Yakima Police Detective Erik Horbatko contacted a confidential
informant and requested that the informant order the purchase of one ounce of
methamphetamine and one pound of marijuana from Huerta. We do not know why
police targeted Huerta. Horbatko wished the undercover buy to occur at the parking lot
ofa ubiquitous Walmart store in west Yakima. The confidential informant followed
Horbatko's instructions.
On May 3 1, 2012, Yakima Detectives Erik Horbatko and Rafael Sanchez met with
the confidential informant. Horbatko photocopied twelve $100 bills, after which he
handed the bills to the informant for purchase of the drugs. Horbatko instructed the
informant to drive to the Walmart store, park in the store's parking lot, call Arturo
Huerta, and ask Huerta to come to the lot. Horbatko and Sanchez followed the informant
into the northwest comer of the Walmart parking lot in order to observe the purchase.
Drug task force members surrounded the perimeter ofthe parking lot.
After an hour, Detective Erik Horbatko spied a tan Honda Accord enter the
Walmart parking lot and park a few rows from the confidential informant's car. Arturo
Huerta and a woman companion exited the Accord, and Horbatko saw Huerta holding a
red cup in his hand. The activity of the companion is relevant to charges against Huerta
for involving a minor in a drug purchase. Horbatko spoke with the informant on the
phone and told him to drive closer to Huerta and his companion. The informant
complied, and Huerta approached the informant's car. Huerta's female companion
2
No.31501-1-III
State v. Huerta
walked about one hundred fifty feet from him and stood near a shopping cart kiosk,
planting strip, or a light post in the parking lot. According to Erik Horbatko, the female
companion continued to survey the lot.
Arturo Huerta entered the passenger seat of the confidential informant's car. After
one or two minutes, Huerta, without the red cup, exited the informant's vehicle.
Detective Erik Horbatko watched Huerta and his female companion return to the Honda
Accord, enter the Accord, and sit for thirty seconds. The informant drove from the
parking lot, and Horbatko followed the informant. Huerta drove the Accord from the lot
as undercover task force members trailed him.
Detective Erik Horbatko met the confidential informant at a parking strip near the
Walmart store. The informant handed Horbatko a red McDonald's french fries cup.
Horbatko removed three separate parcels of a white crystal substance and a $100 bill
from the cup. Washington State Patrol Forensic Scientist Andrea Ricci later ascertained
one of the parcels contained 13.8 grams of methamphetamine. Detective Horbatko
compared the retained bill with the photocopy previously taken of the twelve bills. The
$100 bill was one of the twelve bills that Horbatko handed the confidential informant
before the parking lot purchase.
At the request of undercover drug task force members, Yakima police officers
detained the Honda Accord and arrested Arturo Huerta and his companion. At the
Yakima Police Department, law enforcement identified the companion as sixteen-year
3
No. 31501-1-III
State v. Huerta
old Suzanna Rodriguez. Huerta and Rodriguez's families are close, and Rodriguez often
socialized with Huerta's girlfriend and daughters.
At the police department, officers searched Arturo Huerta's person and found
neither drugs nor money. A female police officer took Suzanna Rodriguez into a
secluded room to conduct a frisk, but before the officer began the search, Rodriguez
reached into her bra and removed a wad of money. The wad contained eleven $100 bills.
Detective Erik Horbatko compared the eleven bills to the photocopy he ran earlier, and
the detective confirmed the bills surrendered by Rodriguez matched bills given the
informant to purchase drugs from Huerta.
After obtaining a warrant, Detectives Erik Horbatko and Rafael Sanchez searched
the tan Honda Accord. On the floor of the passenger side front seat, the detectives found
a McDonald's food bag with a ball of aluminum foil at the bottom of the bag. Inside the
aluminum lay two small plastic bags of a crystal substance. A state chemist determined
one of the bags contained 3.3 grams of methamphetamine. In the back seat of the
Accord, the detectives retrieved another food bag containing a crystal shard and a smaller
bag with the crystal substance. A state scientist concluded that the loose crystal
substance consisted of 1.7 grams of methamphetamine.
PROCEDURE
The State of Washington charged Arturo Huerta with one count of possession of
methamphetamine with intent to deliver. The State later amended its information to
4
No. 31501-1-111
State v. Huerta
additionally charge Huerta with one count of involving a minor in drug dealing.
Before trial, Arturo Huerta moved for the disclosure of the identity of the State's
confidential informant. He argued that disclosure was essential to a fair determination of
his prosecution since the informant was a percipient witness to the transaction that gave
rise to the criminal charges. The State opposed the motion by arguing that the
confidential informant's testimony was not relevant to the charges. The State also
reported that Detective Erik Horbatko could not locate the confidential informant and
believed he left Washington State.
Arturo Huerta next filed a pretrial motion to dismiss. Huerta argued that the
State's refusal to produce the confidential informant warranted dismissal and that the
State's inability to locate the informant amounted to governmental misconduct under CrR
8.3(b). Huerta also moved in limine to exclude testimony regarding a possible romantic
relationship between Huerta and Suzanna Rodriguez. He further asked for exclusion of
evidence of an incident in which Rodriguez called out "I love you" to Huerta while the
duo rested in jail. Clerk's Papers (CP) at 26.
The trial court entertained Arturo Huerta's motion to compel disclosure, motion to
dismiss, and motions in limine at the beginning of trial. During the hearing on the motion
to compel disclosure of the confidential informant's identity, Huerta and the State agreed
to allow Huerta's counsel to interview the informant, without obtaining the informant's
identity, and record the interview. Presumably the confidential informant reappeared,
5
No. 31501-1-111
State v. Huerta
assuming he ever disappeared. Huerta's attorney interviewed the confidential informant
that afternoon.
During the morning following the previous afternoon's interview of the informant,
Arturo Huerta's counsel informed the trial court that the State disallowed questions about
the informant's relationship to Huerta or the vehicle driven by the informant the day of
the parking lot rendezvous. Huerta renewed his motion to dismiss, although he limited
the motion to dismissal of the charge of involving a minor in drug dealing. He contended
the informant could provide testimony concerning whether Suzanna Rodriguez acted as a
decoy or sentinel. He argued that the State's interference during the interview prevented
him from preparing an adequate defense. Huerta provided the State and the trial court
with copies of the recording of his attorney's attempted interview. The trial court and
counsel discussed whether the court should interview the confidential informant in
camera. The trial court never ruled that it would interview the informant, nor does the
record confirm any interview. The trial court stated that it would listen to the recording
of the defense's interview with the confidential informant. The court did not mention
when it would listen to the recording. Shortly thereafter the trial court took a noon
recess.
After the lunch recess, Arturo Huerta informed the trial court that he no longer
wished to know the confidential informant's identity. The trial court did not indicate
whether it listened in camera, during the noon recess, to the recording of defense
6
No. 31501-1-111
State v. Huerta
counsel's interview with the informant. The trial court next addressed Huerta's motions
in limine. The State agreed not to offer Suzanna Rodriguez's purported "1 love you"
statement to Huerta unless the defense opened the door to its relevance. The prosecutor
remarked:
As to, 1 love you, it's not relevant unless for whatever reason the
[d]efendant gets up and says something that, you know, 1 don't know this
person, or something that would make it relevant and then we can discuss it
at that time.
Report of Proceedings (RP) at 96. Thus, the trial court rendered no ruling on the motion
to preclude testimony of the comment.
Jury selection proceeded the following day and ended at 4:32 p.m. The time of
ending is important to a public trial challenge by Arturo Huerta.
During trial, Detective Erik Horbatko testified for the prosecution. During his
testimony, Horbatko uttered comments to which Arturo Huerta objected as irrelevant and
prejudicial:
Q [PROSECUTOR]: You mentioned undercover-have you done
I
undercover operations where you were involved?
A [HORBATKO]: Yes.
Q Okay. And is that dangerous?
A Very.
MR. CASE [DEFENSE]: Objection as to relevance.
THE COURT: It just goes to his background, so overruled.
I
RP at 198-99. I
A [HORBATKO]: Before we did that, we had a[n] operational
!
f
safety briefing. ~
I
7
I
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No.31501-I-III
State v. Huerta
Q [PROSECUTOR]: What's that entail?
A It's very detailed and it's safety driven, safety of all involved,
including possible suspects. I have personally been involved where there
have been shootings that have taken place. I have been to scenes where
shootings have taken place.
MR. CASE: Objection. Relevance.
THE COURT: Relevance?
MR. CAMP: [PROSECUTOR]: It's explaining setting up-it's
explaining the setup and the plan for the operation and the things that go
into the thought process of the lead detective.
MR. CASE: What has occurred in the past in other cases has no
relevance on the safety meeting as to this matter.
THE COURT: Overruled. Go ahead.
RP at 201-02.
Q [PROSECUTOR]: From the start, what happened?
A [HORBATKO]: I was in contact with the confidential informant
through phone and we were actually there for some time, I think a little
over an hour, waiting.
Q Is that something that is expected?
I
A It is. We call it doper time.
MR. CASE: Objection. Prejudicial.
THE COURT: Overruled.
RP at 207.
During Detective Erik Horbatko's testimony, Arturo Huerta objected to Horbatko
attesting to the use of marked bills in the drug transaction. Huerta cited both hearsay and
best evidence rules in support of his objection:
A [HORBATKO] ... I issued the confidential informant $1200 in
$100 bills that I had xeroxed off.
MR. CASE [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Objection. Not in evidence.
THE COURT: Overruled. Go ahead.
MR. CASE: Foundation.
8
No. 31501-1-111
State v. Huerta
THE COURT: Overruled. Go ahead.
A Twelve $100 bills that 1 had xeroxed and made a copy of prior to
meeting with the informant.
Q And why do you xerox the buy money?
A So that at the end of the operation-in this case it was a buy bust
operation, which is you buy the drugs, you arrest the suspect or suspects,
whoever's involved. But sometimes strategically we don't plan things that
way and we end up raiding a house or serving a search warrant, and part of
that evidence is pre-recorded buy money, which we find commonly in
people's homes. Even a week, two weeks after the transactions have taken
place, we'll find our money in their residence. .
Q Now, there was an objection. Do you usually keep the xerox
photocopy of the money?
A Yes.
Q Okay. And do we have that with us today?
A We do not.
Q Okay. And do we know why?
A No, we don't. I can't blame anybody but myself. I don't know
what happened to it. I know what I usually do with it.
Q What is that?
MR. CASE: Move to strike testimony regarding the xerox money
and where what.
THE COURT: Do you have other-why don't we do this? Let's
reserve on that issue and-
MR. CAMP: [Prosecution]: There's corroborating evidence, Your
Honor.
THE COURT: Well, proceed with other testimony and then when
we get close to lunch, we'll let the jury go to lunch and then we can talk
about it.
RP at 205-06. During this passage, Horbatko commented that the bills were "pre
recorded," but he did not mention the bills being "marked."
Outside the presence of the jury, able defense counsel and the learned trial court
engaged in a colloquy concerning Arturo Huerta's hearsay and best evidence rule
objections to testimony about the buy money. The trial court overruled both hearsay and
9
No. 31501-1-III
State v. Huerta
objections and allowed Detective Horbatko to testify about the contents of the $100 bills
and their photocopy counterparts, provided Horbatko was the person who copied the bills
or the photocopier testified.
Erik Horbatko then testified:
Q Detective Horbatko, just to get us back to where we were at prior
to the lunch break, we were talking about the money that you had given to
the confidential informant. How much money was that again?
A One thousand 200 dollars.
Q And we also talked about recording the bills. And again, why do
you record the bills?
A So I can verify that it's the same money later on down the road
after an arrest has been made or it becomes evidence.
Q And how do you record the money?
A Ninety-eight point seven three percent ofthe time I xerox the
copies. Every once in a while if it's just a few bills, I'll just write the bills
down in my notes. In this particular case it was xerox copied.
Q And do we have the xerox copy?
A No.
Q Okay. And why is that?
A I don't know. I don't know where it is. I have a system and for
some reason it's not with everything that I've had in this case.
RP at 236-37 (emphasis added).
Detective Erik Horbatko testified later about the McDonald's french fries cup
handed him by the confidential informant after the parking lot transaction:
Q What was inside of the McDonald's fry box?
A It was a bag with-no, I'll explain, but it had two eightballs and
one half ounce of methamphetamine approximately. So it was three
separate parcels. There was two about the size of a-an ounce is about the
size of an egg and an eightball is about the size of, like, a large marble
would be or like a large olive, and there were two of those with it, as well.
Q So
10
No. 31501-1-III
State v. Huerta
A Along with one $100 bill.
Q Showing you what has been marked as State's Identification
Number 5. Do you recognize this?
A Yes.
Q How do you recognize it?
A This is the McDonald's Golden Arch red box that the confidential
informant gave me that contained the-
MR. CASE: Objection. Foundation (inaudible).
THE COURT: Overruled. Go ahead.
Q Go ahead.
A Confidential informant gave me this and inside this was what
ultimately turned out to be methamphetamine and a $100 bill.
Q And was the $100 bill-was that some of the marked bills buy
money?
A Yes.
Q I'm showing you what-
MR. CASE: Objection. Move to strike.
THE COURT: Basis?
MR. CASE: Based on the Court's prior pretrial ruling regarding the
buy money.
. THE COURT: Why don't you just have him explain how he knew
the $100 bill was part of the buy money?
Q How did you know that the $100 bill was part of the buy money?
A Before the operation I had xeroxed 12 $100 bills. I made a copy
of those, I put those in my folder with my notes. I had those 12 $100 bills
with me until I gave them to the confidential informant to use during the
transaction and I got one back from him immediately after the transaction.
RP at 242-44. Horbatko spoke of the bills being marked, but did not identify the nature
of the markings. He did not disclose whether he or another law enforcement officer
placed a mark on the bills.
Erik Horbatko testified concerning money found on Suzanna Rodriguez:
Q And was the Defendant searched for drugs and money-Arturo?
A Yes, I assume. I did not do that.
Q Was the buy money found?
11
No.31501-1-III
State v. Huerta
A No.
Q Since there was no buy money, what did you think?
A I thought it has to be in-my first thought was, it has to be in the
vehicle. The only other place it could be is the female, the juvenile female.
Q And did you check the possibility that it might be on the juvenile
female?
A I did after-at that time I wasn't able to search the vehicle
because it was pending a search warrant, I couldn't search it without one.
So I had a female officer-Officer Taryn Miller-she actually happened to
walk in our patrol room as I was going to have her, Suzana, searched, and
she agreed. I don't know where she took her. I don't know if it was a rest
room or I don't think it was in the juvenile holding cell because it has
cameras. So maybe 20, 30 seconds later Officer Miller came to me with 11
$100 bills and said that the money was found in-
MR. CASE: Objection. Hearsay.
DETECTIVE HORBATKO: Okay, you're right.
THE COURT: Sustained.
Q So did Taryn Miller hand you over
A Eleven hundred dollars.
Q Okay. And did you check-did you reference-or how about
this-was it the buy money?
A Yes.
Q Okay.
MR. CASE: Objection.
Q Every single bill?
THE COURT: Wait, wait. Objection is foundation? Why don't
you ask him how he knew it was the-
Q Did you-how did you know that it was the buy money?
A I compared it with the xerox copy that I had done prior to the
operation and it matched.
Q And why do you keep the xerox copy-what happens to the buy
money after it's been utilized-does it go into evidence?
A No, it doesn't.
Q Why is that?
A Because we need it basically to buy drugs for another day, so we
put it back into our fund in the safe to use later on.
RP at 250-02. In this passage, Detective Horbatko spoke of comparing the bills taken
12
No. 31501-1-111
State v. Huerta
from Rodriguez as matching the photocopied bills. He did not identify the markings or
content within the bills that allowed the comparison. Horbatko, at no time during any of
his testimony, mentioned the presence of serial numbers on the $100 bills.
During cross-examination of Detective Erik Horbatko, the following exchange
occurred between defense counsel and Horbatko:
Q All right. You talked about the situation involving the 1991
Honda. Now, it is-it is in your prior experience that drug dealers might
have cars that are expensive and shiny and fancy; that's correct, isn't it?
A Yes, sometimes.
Q Okay. And often you guys go after the assets that aren't involved
in the exact transaction itself; right?
A Sometimes.
Q For instance, if you feel that the individual had more assets than
what occurred at the transaction, you could go to their house and try and
seize their car or their property inside their house; correct?
A Yes.
Q And there was no such actions here with regards to Mr. Huerta; is
that correct?
A I didn't know where he lived. This was a one-time shot, a one
time deal. I didn't know anything else about him.
Q Interesting. And so, following up on that investigation, you
weren't able to find any assets as to his home for additional cars or other
assets or monies or savings that he has; is that correct?
A No. I didn't find anything. I didn't know anything else about
him and he wouldn't talk to the police.
RP at 350-51 (emphasis added). On appeal, Arturo Huerta complains that Horbatko's
last answer violated his right to remain silent.
Court proceedings concluded at 4:42 p.m. on the first day of Erik Horbatko's
testimony. The day following court proceedings ended at 4:21 p.m.
13
No.31501-I-II1
State v. Huerta
After the State rested its case, Arturo Huerta again moved to dismiss the charges
against him, citing insufficient evidence. The trial court reserved its ruling on the
motion. Suzanna Rodriguez testified for the defense and stated that she needed a ride
from Huerta to Walmart to purchase pads. Rodriguez' father asked Huerta to provide the
ride since the Rodriguez family car was inoperable. She also declared that, upon arriving
at Walmart, she entered the store, bought pads, returned outside, and sat in the car while
waiting for Huerta. Huerta gave her no directions. Rodriguez, nevertheless, admitted
that the Walmart store where she purportedly shopped that day lay eighty-four blocks
from her house and other stores, including a Ubiquitous Walmart, were closer to her
residence.
During cross-examination by the prosecution, Suzanna Rodriguez testified that she
did not want Arturo Huerta to be in trouble. Thereafter, the following colloquy occurred
between the State's counsel and Rodriguez:
Q Okay. And-and you care about him, don't you?
A Well, not like that, no.
Q Not like that. Well, isn't it true that when you found out what
was going-isn't it true at the Yakima Police Department that when you
found out that you might possibly be in some trouble and Arturo was in
trouble-
A Yeah.
Q -that you started crying; isn't that correct?
A Yeah.
Q And didn't you yell out to him I love you?
A Yeah.
Q Okay. And didn't he return and say I love you?
A Yeah. To like-like family.
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No. 31501-1-111
State v. Huerta
MR. CASE: Objection.
Q Like family?
MR. CASE: Hearsay.
THE COURT: Overruled.
MR. CAMP: Party opponent, Your Honor.
Q So you found out he might get in trouble and you yelled out that
you loved him. Wouldn't you be kind of angry to a certain extent that you
were getting in all this trouble for something he possibly did?
A 1 guess.
RP at 451-52.
Also during cross-examination, Suzanna Rodriguez admitted that she had $1100
tucked in her bra. On redirect, Rodriguez testified she did not know why she received the
money. Arturo Huerta and she had no romantic relationship.
Arturo Huerta did not testify at trial. After the defense rested its case, the trial
court denied Huerta's motion to dismiss.
On appeal, Arturo Huerta contends the State of Washington expanded the charges
against him by new theories during its summation. During closing argument, the State of
Washington maintained:
Ladies and gentlemen, there was the methamphetamine in the car
and there was also this methamphetamine in the fry box, in the red fry box.
Ladies and gentlemen, he didn't constructively possess this
methamphetamine, he actually possessed this methamphetamine. When he
walked from his car to the confidential informant's car, he had the intent to
deliver it. And when he got out, he didn't have it anymore.
And what else? Right. He just got done selling meth that was
packaged the same way, bagged in the same manner, and disguised in the
same manner. All right. Ladies and gentlemen, he just sold the fries-I
submit to you it's reasonable to infer that he was about ready to sell the
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No. 31501-1-II1
State v. Huerta
burger. Thinking, what do they say, uh, two patties, special sauce, lettuce,
cheese, pickles, onions on a sesame seed bun, and meth. That there shows
the intent.
So the State would submit to you that the evidence before you,
circumstantial evidence and direct evidence, points that the [d]efendant
intended to sell the methamphetamine in the car, and he intended to sell or
deliver the methamphetamine in his hand as he was walking towards the
vehicle.
RP at 496-98. During closing, the prosecution never mentioned Detective Erik
Horbatko's matching the retrieved $100 bills with the photocopied bills.
During summations, the State also commented concerning the charge of involving
a minor in a drug transaction:
Now, it also says allowing a person under the age of 18 to remain at
a drug transaction is insufficient to establish that a person under the age of
18 is involved in a drug transaction. Now, note that there's nothing about
criminal intent for the minor. What the minor knows or doesn't know
doesn't matter. It's all directed at the actions ofthe adult.
Well, let's see what we have here. Well, he took her there. He
drove her to the drug deaL Two, they both exited the vehicle and they both
were looking around.
Now, either they were looking for the confidential informant's
vehicle or they were doing a heat check or looking for the police, or both.
What she did was she walked a short distance away from the vehicle
and started looking around. And then when the transaction was done and
he got out, she walked right back with him, got into the vehicle and they
left.
She acted as a lookout. She was countersurveillance, which the
detective-Detective Horbatko stated happens all the time. All right. She
was the lookout. She was Uncle Tury's (phonetic) little helper is what she
was. All right. Doesn't matter why. Doesn't matter had her criminal
intent or if she knew anything, but she was helping him with
countersurveillance.
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No.31501-I-III
State v. Huerta
He took her there to be a lookout, to hold the money, to be a decoy.
Where were the drugs found? On her side between her legs. Cute little 16
year-old driving with Uncle Tury. Anything goes down, they're not going
to search her. They're going to think, oh, he's just being a-maybe he's
her father, not a drug dealer. Decoy-avoid, apprehension, detention-that
was her job. She had failed at it. They were done. She was distraught
about that because she cared about him. That's where the tracks lead.
Well, ladies and gentlemen, he's not charged with delivery. He's
charged, as it says in there, involving her in a transaction to--to unlawfully
deliver meth. Right? It doesn't say in a transaction that results in an actual
delivery.
RP at 500, 503-05, 538-39.
The jury declared Arturo Huerta guilty of possession of a controlled substance
with intent to deliver and involving a minor in drug dealing. After the jury delivered its
I
verdict, the trial court judge spoke with the jury off the record. During a later sentencing
hearing, the trial court disclosed the contents of its conversation with the jury regarding
I
the charge of involving a minor in drug dealing:
I
THE COURT: Okay. So, again, the mere fact that he has been
convicted ofthis crime-again, I can't imagine any fact situation where-I I
I
mean if the facts had been any less, it probably wouldn't have gotten to the
jury on Count II. In fact, I talked to the jury afterwards. Did you talk to the
jury?
MR. CAMP: I did, Your Honor.
THE COURT: They told me they didn't think she was a lookout and
that they don't think he gave her the money until the cops pulled them over
I,
f
in the Nob Hill parking lot at the bowling alley. Well, that's-you know,
that's pretty far removed from the transaction. Now, whether this is going (i
to hold up on appeal or not, I don't know. But again it's hard to imagine
how you could have a set of circumstances where there was still enough to
convict somebody but that would be less than what there is in this case. I
mean this is a really close case.
II
;
t
I
17 I
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No. 31501-1-111
State v. Huerta
RP at 563.
Thereafter Arturo Huerta renewed his motion to dismiss the charge of involving a
minor in drug dealing on the basis of insufficient evidence. The trial court denied the
motion. The trial court convicted Huerta on both counts, sentenced him to sixteen
months' confinement on the charge of possession with intent to deliver, and sentenced
him to fifty-one months' confinement on the charge of involving a minor in drug dealing,
with the sentences to be served concurrently.
After Arturo Huerta appealed, this court requested a reference hearing be
conducted in another case, State v. Andy, No. 31018-3-111, for findings regarding public
access to the Yakima County courthouse and its courtrooms during Joey Andy's trial.
Andy expressed concern that the public lacked access to his trial because of a courthouse
sign stating the courthouse closed at 4 p.m., when his trial often continued beyond that
closing time.
Yakima County Commissioner Rand Elliott, Court Administrator Harold Delia,
and courthouse Security Officer Joel Clifford testified at the Andy reference hearing.
After the hearing, Yakima County Superior Court Judge Blaine Gibson entered factual
findings, the most pertinent of which are: (1) a sign on the exterior of the county
courthouse informed the public that the courthouse closed at 4 p.m. and the court at 5
p.m., (2) despite this sign, no member of the public was deterred from attempting to enter
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No.31501-I-III
State v. Huerta
the courthouse, (3) during Andy's trial, Yakima County maintained a policy that the
doors would remain unlocked as long as any courtroom remained in session, and (4)
court security personnel would verifY that all court sessions had ended before locking the
courthouse doors.
At this reviewing court's request, Yakima County Judge Blaine Gibson held
another reference hearing in State v. Arredondo, No. 30411-6-III, on the same issue. The
trial judge found: (1) courthouse doors remained unlocked during Fabian Arredondo's
trial, and (2) courthouse signage did not deter or deprive the public of accessing the
proceedings. Our court commissioner later granted an agreed motion to supplement the
record with the transcripts and exhibits from the reference hearings held in State v. Andy
and State v. Arrendondo. Commissioner's Ruling, State v. Huerta, No. 31501-1-II1
(Wash. Ct. App. Mar. 26, 2014).
LAW AND ANALYSIS
Arturo Huerta raises many contentions on appeal: (1) the trial court deprived him
of his right to an open and public trial by listening to a recorded informant interview in
camera without conducting a Bone-Club analysis, (2) the trial court deprived him of his
right to an open and public trial by holding proceedings after 4 p.m., (3) the trial court
admitted evidence that violated hearsay and best evidence rules, (4) his conviction for
possession with intent to deliver is not supported by sufficient evidence, (5) his
conviction for involving a minor in drug dealing is not supported by sufficient evidence,
19
No.31501-I-II1
State v. Huerta
(6) the State committed prosecutorial misconduct by eliciting testimony from Detective
Horbatko designed to inflame the jury, (7) the prosecutor misstated the charges against
Huerta during closing argument, and (8) cumulative error requires reversal. We address
these assignments of error and more in such order. The many assignments of error
prolong this opinion.
Issue 1: Whether the trial court denied Arturo Huerta ofhis right to an open and
public trial when listening to a recorded interview ofthe confidential informant?
Answer 1: No.
We first address Arturo Huerta's contention that two trial incidents violated his
public trial rights. Ifhe succeeds on either argument, we would reverse the convictions
and remand for a new trial. Such a reversal would moot other assignments of error.
Arturo Huerta maintains that the trial court deprived him of his right to an open
and public trial in two instances: (1) by listening to a recorded defense interview with the
confidential informant in camera, during a recess, and without conducting an analysis
under State v. Bone-Club, 128 Wn.2d 254,906 P.2d 325 (1995), and (2) by holding court
proceedings after 4 p.m., when courthouse exterior signage informed visitors that the
courthouse was closed to the public at that hour. We address the contentions in such
order.
Arturo Huerta contends the trial court violated his right to a public trial when it
stated on the record that it would listen in camera to Huerta's counsel's recorded
20
No.31501-I-III
State v. Huerta
interview with the State's confidential informant, without first conducting a Bone-Club
analysis. In other words, a part of the proceedings would occur with the judge alone in
his chambers and not be open to the public. We refuse to address this argument because
the record does not confirm that the trial court listened to the recording. Shortly after the
court commented that it would listen to the recording, the court recessed for lunch. On
appeal, Arturo Huerta claims that the trial court remarked that it would listen to the
recording during lunch, but the record is void of any such comment. When court
proceedings resumed after lunch, Arturo Huerta withdrew his request to call the
confidential informant as a witness. Therefore, the trial court no longer possessed a
reason to listen to the recording. The trial court never stated on the record that it listened
to the recording during the noon recess.
As former practitioners, we recognize the diligence of superior court judges who
frequently use the noon hour to review pleadings and depositions related to a pending
trial. We do not know if this practice occurs so frequently that we could take judicial
notice of Arturo Huerta's trial court judge listening to the interview recording during the
lunch hour. Assuming the trial court judge devoted his lunch hour to work, he could have
read other critical pleadings or case law for Huerta's trial.
Article I, section 10 of the Washington Constitution reads, "Justice in all cases
shall be administered openly, and without unnecessary delay." This provision entitles the
public and the press, as representatives of the public, to openly administered justice.
21
No. 3150 I-I-III
State v. Huerta
Allied Daily Newspapers of Wash. v. Eikenberry, 121 Wn.2d 205, 209-10, 848 P .2d 125
(1993); Cohen v. Everett City Council, 85 Wn.2d 385, 388,535 P.2d 801 (1975). Article
I, section 22 of the Washington Constitution provides, in pertinent part, "In criminal
prosecutions the accused shall have the right ... to have a speedy public triaL" In State
v. Bone-Club, 128 Wn.2d 254 (1995), our state high court enumerated five criteria that a
trial court must consider on the record in order to close trial proceedings to the public.
Huerta need not have objected at trial to a constitutional violation in order to raise this
issue for the first time on appeaL State v. Shearer, 181 Wn.2d 564, 569, 334 P.3d 1078
(2014).
A defendant does not establish a violation of the public trial right unless he shows
a closure of the courtroom. State v. Gomez, 183 Wn.2d 29,33,347 P.3d 876 (2015). The
defendant bears the burden of providing a record that shows a courtroom closure
occurred. State v. Andy, 182 Wn.2d 294,301,340 P.3d 840 (2014); State v. Koss, 181
Wn.2d 493, 503,334 P.3d 1042 (2014). Assuming a trial judge's listening in chambers
to a recorded deposition constitutes a closure, Arturo Huerta has not shown the court
closure occurred.
State v. Gomez, 183 Wn.2d 29 (2015) is illustrative. The trial court commented at
the beginning of trial that the public would not be permitted to enter the courtroom once
the proceedings began for security reasons and to prevent distractions. The Supreme
Court held that the trial court's comments did not sustain Benito Gomez's assertion that
22
No. 31501-1-II1
State v. Huerta
his public trial rights were violated. The record contained no indication as to whether the
court took any action to enforce the policy or whether any observers were actually
excluded as a result of the remark.
Issue 2: Whether the State violated Arturo Huerta's right to an open and public
trial because ofan exterior courthouse sign that read the courthouse closed at 4 p.m. and
trial proceedings continued beyond that time?
Answer 2: No. A reference hearing established the courthouse remained open.
Arturo Huerta next complains about trial proceedings extending beyond 4 p.m.
Huerta maintains that at the time of his trial, Yakima County courthouse's exterior signs,
website, and telephone system informed the public that the courthouse closed at 4 p.m.
and these announcements deterred the public from viewing his trial. Huerta identifies no
evidence in the record of these facts, but rather argues that the public knows Yakima
County to administer its courthouse in this manner. The State relies on the trial court's
findings in the reference hearings for State v. Andy and State v. Arredondo to argue that
no closure took place during Huerta's trial. We agree with the State.
The Washington Supreme Court addressed Arturo Huerta's contention in its own
review of Joey Andy's case. State v. Andy, 182 Wn.2d 294 (2014). The court noted that
a defendant bears the burden of providing a record that shows a courtroom closure
occurred. The Supreme Court held no closure occurred in Andy's case because of the
findings made by the trial court judge during the reference hearing.
23
No. 31501-1-111
State v. Huerta
We have ordered no reference hearing in this appeal, and thus we lack any finding
by the trial court as to whether the courtroom signage discouraged a member of the
public from attending Arturo Huerta's trial or if officials locked the courthouse doors
during the proceedings. At the same time, Huerta forwards no evidence in the record of
the purported offending closure sign or of locked courthouse doors. The parties
stipulated to this court considering the reports of proceedings in State v. Andy and State v.
Arredondo. In those hearings, the trial court found that the public could access the
courthouse when any court was in session. Based on the trial court's findings in Andy
and Huerta's lack of any affirmative evidence, we hold that Huerta has not met his
burden to show that a courtroom closure occurred. Thus, we rule Arturo Huerta suffered
no violation of his public trial rights.
Issue 3: Was testimony o/Erik Horbatko that the bills recovered after the
methamphetamine purchase matched the previously photocopied bills inadmissible
hearsay?
Answer 3: Yes.
Sometimes an undercover law enforcement pens a peculiar marking on currency
used in a sting's purchase of narcotics or stolen property. In the case on appeal, the State
of Washington refers to the banknotes paid by the confidential informant to Arturo
Huerta for the purchase of the methamphetamine alternatively as "marked" and
"prerecorded." Nevertheless, Detective Erik Horbatko did not disclose ifhe or another
24
No. 3150l-I-III
State v. Huerta
officer marked the $100 bills. Rather than marking the currency, law enforcement
officers usually photocopy drug buy money for the ease of creating a record of the serial
numbers of the bill. The serial number of each banknote is unique and thus each note is
easily traceable. In addition to identifying the particular bill, serial numbers can divulge
other information such as the banknote's year of issue, place of printing, whether it is part
of a collector series, and whether it replaced a defective note. For purposes of our
hearsay analysis, we assume that, since he photocopied the currency, Detective Horbatko
matched serial numbers rather than other markings on the bills when comparing the buy
money with the $100 bills later recovered. Our analysis would not change if Horbatko
otherwise marked the currency.
Arturo Huerta shrewdly objected to Detective Erik Horbatko's testimony
concerning the prerecorded $100 bills on both hearsay and best evidence grounds, but the
trial court overruled both objections. Huerta renews the objections on appeal. We
address the hearsay objection first.
Detective Erik Horbatko testified that he matched the copy of purchase money
handed to the confidential informant with the money later pulled from Suzanna
Rodriguez's undergarment and the red french fries cup. This testimony necessarily relied
on the contents of the $100 bills. Money talks. The serial numbers on the bills spoke to
Horbatko of their true identity and Horbatko, when later testifying, relied on the
banknotes' out of court statement of their identity. Thus, Horbatko's testimony was
25
No. 31501-1-111
State v. Huerta
either hearsay or based on hearsay.
This court reviews whether or not a statement was hearsay de novo. State v. Neal,
144 Wn.2d 600,607,30 P.3d 1255 (2001). "'Hearsay' is a statement, other than one
made by the declarant while testifying at the trial or hearing, offered in evidence to prove
the truth of the matter asserted." ER801(c). "A 'statement' is (1) an oral or written
assertion or (2) nonverbal conduct of a person, if it is intended by the person as an
assertion." ER 801(a). Whether a statement is hearsay depends on the purpose for which
the statement is offered. State v. Garcia, 179 Wn.2d 828, 845,318 P.3d 266 (2014);
State v. King, 113 Wn. App. 243, 267, n.4, 54 P.3d 1218 (2002). Statements not offered
to prove the truth of the matter asserted, but rather as a basis for inferring something else,
are not hearsay. State v. Garcia, 179 Wn.2d at 845. As confirmed by the text ofER
801(a), the content of or information from writings may constitute hearsay. Palin v. Gen.
Canst. Co., 47 Wn.2d 246,254,287 P.2d 325 (1955).
A controlling decision is State v. Fricks, 91 Wn.2d 391,397,588 P.2d 1328
(1979). John Fricks successfully appealed the trial court's admission of a gas station
owner's testimony regarding the contents of a currency tally sheet not produced at trial.
The State gave no reason for the document's absence and instead presented the owner's
testimony as the sole evidence of the amount of money Fricks allegedly stole from the
gas station. The State relied on this testimony and evidence of a similar amount of
currency found in Fricks' apartment to create an inference that the money found there
26
No. 31501-1-III
State v. Huerta
was in fact stolen. In holding that the tally sheet was hearsay and did not qualify for the
business records exception to hearsay, the Supreme Court ruled that the owner's
testimony was likewise inadmissible hearsay.
Many foreign cases support a conclusion that testimony reciting a serial number or
matching serial numbers is hearsay, although in some cases the testimony was admitted
under a hearsay rule exception. The State, in this appeal, has asserted no hearsay rule
exception.
In United States v. Davis, 542 F.2d 743 (8th Cir. 1976), the government
prosecuted Larry Davis for armed bank robbery. Through the bank auditor's testimony,
the court admitted into evidence a list of serial numbers on stolen bait money. The court
of appeals noted the evidence was hearsay but sustained its admission on the basis ofthe
business record exception to the hearsay rule.
People v. Rivas, 302 Ill. App. 3d 421, 707 N.E.2d 159,236 III Dec. 314 (1998)
does not directly address whether a police sheet containing information concerning
prerecorded funds used to buy cocaine is hearsay. The court affirmed the sheet's
admission as an exhibit because of its trustworthiness as a business record. Of course,
the State of Washington lacked any sheet in the prosecution of Arturo Huerta.
In another Illinois decision, People v. Strother, 53 I1L2d 95,290 N.E.2d 201
(1972), the reviewing court also addressed the admissibility of a list of serial numbers of
currency used in the purchase of narcotics. The court noted that the list may be hearsay
27
No.31501-1-III
State v. Huerta
because the People introduced it to prove the serial numbers recorded were in fact those
of the currency used in the controlled purchase. The court approved its admission,
however, on the basis of the past recollection recorded exception to the hearsay rule.
In Kuczaj v. State, 848 S.W .2d 284 (Tex. Ct. App. 1993), the reviewing court
ruled that a list of serial numbers from stolen appliances was hearsay. The court
concluded the trial court committed no error because the owner of the appliances when
testifying could refer to the written list as recorded recollection.
In State v. Griffin, 438 A.2d 1283 (Me. 1982), the Maine high court reversed Peter
Griffin's conviction for receiving a stolen outboard motor. The evidence convicting
Griffin included testimony from a detective and a purchaser of the motor about matching
serial numbers on the motor. According to the court, the testimony was either hearsay or
based on hearsay. In Estes v. Commonwealth, 8 Va. App. 520, 382 S.E.2d 491 (1989),
the reviewing court also reversed a criminal conviction because of hearsay testimony
regarding the serial number on a stolen firearm.
Our trial court posited a thoughtful analogy about a pair ofjeans with a particular
mark worn by a suspect. A witness could identify the pants as that worn by the suspect
based on the pants' marking. The analogy falls short, however. The jeans' mark was
likely not intended to communicate any statement. The serial number of a bill or a
police's marking on the bill communicates a message of identity.
The trial court also mentioned a photocopy not being a witness and the inability
28
No.31501-I-III
State v. Huerta
and lack of a right to cross-examine a piece of paper. We agree, but this observation fails
to recognize the missing nature of the photocopies and banknotes paid to Arturo Huerta.
Consistent with the trial court's comment, the State had the right to present the bills and
photocopy as exhibits to show the jury the identical markings or numbers. Horbatko
could have referred to the bills or photocopy to refresh his memory. Nevertheless, the
State lost the writings and desired Erik Horbatko to rely on language from the writings
when that language lay outside of the courtroom.
The State contends that no error occurred since it did not offer Detective Erik
Horbatko's testimony to prove the serial numbers themselves. According to the State,
Horbatko's testimony was permissible to show that the numbers on the banknotes
matched a list of the numbers on the currency issued to the confidential informant.
Horbatko did not repeat the serial numbers in court. He only testified to the match.
The State fails to recognize that Erik Horbatko's declaration that the numbers
matched can be truthful and helpful only because of the serial numbers themselves. The
State offered Horbatko's testimony to show the truthfulness of the information provided
in the $100 bills. Horbatko could have limited his testimony to the amount of money
handed the confidential informant and the amount retrieved from the juvenile and fries
cup. Horbatko went further and claimed that information on the banknotes confirmed
their use in the parking lot transaction.
The State seeks to distinguish this appeal from reported decisions on the ground
29
No. 31501-1-III
State v. Huerta
that Detective Erik Horbatko did not tell the jury the serial numbers of the $100 bills. He
merely testified that the numbers on the retrieved bills matched the numbers on the
currency handed to the confidential informant. This is a distinction without a difference.
Horbatko's testimony of matching serial numbers relied on the identifYing numbers.
Horbatko lacked a foundation for his testimony but for the hearsay.
State v. Johnson, 61 Wn. App. 539, 811 P.2d 687 (1991) refutes the State's
position. In Johnson, a police lieutenant did not testifY to the contents of an informant's
statement, but the trial court allowed testimony, based on the statement, that he had
I
reason to suspect the appellant was involved in drug trafficking. This court held that a
law enforcement officer's testimony concerning an informant's or eyewitness's statement
is inadmissible hearsay even when the officer does not repeat the contents of the
statement. The Johnson court held that when the inescapable inference from the
testimony is that a nontestifYing witness has furnished the police with evidence of the
defendant's guilt, the testimony is hearsay, notwithstanding that the actual statements
made by the nontestifYing witness are not repeated. The inescapable conclusion from
Erik Horbatko's testimony and the inference the State wanted the jury to draw was based
on the hearsay in the banknotes. The currency constituted a nontestifYing witness.
The hearsay rule serves to prevent the jury from hearing a declarant's statement
without giving the opposing party a chance to challenge the truthfulness of the
declarant's assertions. Brundridge v. Fluor Fed. Servs., Inc., 164 Wn.2d 432,451-52,
30
No. 3150 I-I-III
State v. Huerta
191 P.3d 879 (2008). That purpose is served when the court bars a witness from relating
the contents of a lost writing. The opponent has no opportunity to review the record or
cross-examine the witness to determine the accuracy of the testimony.
Issue 4: Whether the testimony ofDetective Erik Horbatko violated the best
evidence rule?
Answer 4: We need not and do not address this issue.
We have already ruled that the testimony of Detective Erik Horbatko violated the
hearsay rule and should not have been admitted at trial. Arturo Huerta also challenges
the admissibility of the testimony about matching serial numbers as violative of the best
evidence rule. Nevertheless, any ruling by us that the best evidence rule also barred the
testimony would not assist Huerta. Twice barred evidence is no more or less
inadmissible or harmful than once barred evidence.
We decline to resolve Arturo Huerta's challenge under the best evidence rule
because its resolution does not impact our decision on the merits. Principles ofjudicial
restraint dictate that if resolution of another issue effectively disposes of a case, we
should resolve the case on that basis without reaching the first issue. Wash. State Farm
Bureau FedJn v. Gregoire, 162 Wn.2d 284,307, 174 P.3d 1142 (2007); Hayden v. Mut.
ofEnumclaw Ins. Co., 141 Wn.2d 55, 68, 1 P.3d 1167 (2000).
Issue 5: Whether the hearsay testimony ofErik Horbatko violated Arturo
Huerta s constitutional right to confront witnesses?
J
31
No. 31501-1-111
State v. Huerta
Answer 5: We need not and do not address this issue.
Arturo Huerta argues that, in addition to violating the hearsay rule, the testimony
of Detective Erik Horbatko violated the constitutional confrontation clause. Under the
Sixth Amendment's confrontation clause, in all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall
enjoy the right to be confronted with the witnesses against him. U.S. CONST. amend. VI.
Even hearsay with an applicable exception becomes inadmissible in violation of the
clause ifit is testimonial hearsay. Davis v. Washington, 547 U.S. 813, 821, 126 S. Ct.
2266, 165 L. Ed. 2d 224 (2006).
Arturo Huerta raises a constitutional violation in order to obtain a stricter harmless
error review. On the one hand, erroneous evidentiary rulings that do not impact a
constitutional right are not reversible error unless, within reasonable probabilities, the
outcome of the trial would have been materially affected if the error had not occurred.
State v. Brown, 113 Wn.2d 520, 554, 782 P.2d 1013, 787 P.2d 906 (1989). On the other
hand, a constitutional error is harmless only if the appellate court is assured beyond a
reasonable doubt that the jury verdict is unattributable to the error. State v. Anderson,
171 Wn.2d764, 770, 254 P.3d 815 (2011).
Our review of the evidence shows that, under either harmless error analysis, the
State prevails. Therefore, we will assume, without deciding, that the inadmissible
evidence violated the confrontation clause.
Issue 6: Whether the inadmissible testimony ofDetective Erik Horbatko
32
No.3l50l-l-III
State v. Huerta
constitutes harmless error?
Answer 6: Yes.
The State contends that, assuming any evidentiary error infringed Arturo Huerta's
constitutional rights, the error was harmless. We agree.
A constitutional error is harmless if the appellate court is assured beyond a
reasonable doubt that the jury verdict is unattributable to the error. State v. Anderson,
171 Wn.2d at 770 (2011). This court employs the "overwhelming untainted evidence"
I
test and looks to the untainted evidence to determine if it is so overwhelming that it
necessarily leads to a finding of guilt. Anderson, 171 Wn.2d at 770 (internal quotation
marks omitted). We assume constitutional error to be prejudicial, and the State bears the
burden of proving that the error was harmless. State v. Watt, 160 Wn.2d 626,635, 160
PJd 640 (2007).
In analyzing harmless error, we exclude the inadmissible testimony of Detective
Erik Horbatko that the serial numbers on the currency given to the confidential informant
matched the numbers on the $100 bills recovered from Suzanna Rodriguez and the french
fries cup. The jury still heard that $1200 was given to the informant in $100 bill
denominations. Police searched the confidential informant before and after the parking
lot rendezvous and the informant possessed no other currency during the time. The
officers observed the transaction from beginning to end and testified that no party was out
of sight from the handing of the banknotes to the informant until the arrest of Arturo
33
No. 31501-1-111
State v. Huerta
Huerta. Law enforcement observed Huerta bring a red cup to the parking lot. After the
informant and Huerta were alone in the car, the informant delivered to police the red cup
that contained methamphetamine. Law enforcement recovered twelve $100 bills after the
sale. Arturo Huerta's witness, Suzanna Rodriguez, agreed she was given eleven $100
bills, which she stashed in her undergarment. Methamphetamine was found elsewhere in
Huerta's Honda Accord. The State did not emphasize the matching serial numbers
during closing.
Under RCW 69.50.401 and a companion federal statute, 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(l), the
State need not prove a sale of a drug, only an intent to transfer drugs from one person to
another. United States v. Ramirez, 608 F.2d 1261, 1264 (9th Cir. 1979); United States v.
Meyers, 601 F. Supp. 1072, 1074 (D. Or. 1984). Thus, whether or not the confidential
informant purchased the methamphetamine holds little consequence. The untainted
evidence overwhelming supports a finding that Arturo Huerta intended to transfer a
controlled substance. The matching of the bills bore little relevance to the charge of
involving a minor in a drug transaction. The untainted evidence also overwhelmingly
supports this second conviction.
Issue 7: Whether SUfficient evidence supports the conviction for possession ofa
controlled substance with intent to deliver?
Answer 7: Yes.
Arturo Huerta contends that neither of his convictions is supported by sufficient
34
No. 31501-1-III
State v. Huerta
evidence. Huerta argues that the methamphetamine found in the car he drove and
evidence that he delivered a controlled substance to another person before his arrest is
insufficient to sustain a conviction for possession with intent to deliver. Our previous
harmless error analysis shows otherwise, but we independently review this assignment of
error.
Due process requires the State to prove, beyond a reasonable doubt, every element
of the crime charged. In re Winship, 397 U.S. 358, 364, 90 S. Ct. 1068,25 L. Ed. 2d 368
(1970). Evidence is sufficient if, after viewing it in the light most favorable to the State,
a rational trier of fact could find each element of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.
State v. Green, 94 Wn.2d 216,221-22,616 P.2d 628 (1980); State v. Witherspoon, 180
Wn.2d 875,883,329 P.3d 888 (2014). A defendant challenging the sufficiency of the
evidence at trial admits the truth ofthe State's evidence and all reasonable inferences
therefrom. Witherspoon, 180 Wn.2d at 883. Both direct and indirect evidence may
support the jury's verdict. State v. Brooks, 45 Wn. App. 824, 826, 727 P.2d 988 (1986).
This court may not consider, however, inadmissible hearsay when determining whether
the trial testimony is sufficient for a conviction. State v. Nation, 110 Wn. App. 651, 666,
41 P.3d 1204 (2002).
Only the trier of fact weighs the evidence and judges the credibility of witnesses.
State v. Carver, 113 Wn.2d 591, 781 P/2d 1308, 789 P.2d 306 (1989). A jury may draw
inferences from evidence so long as those inferences are rationally related to the proven
35
No.3l501-1-III
State v. Huerta
facts. State v. Jackson, 112 Wn.2d 867,875,774 P.2d 1211 (1989). A rational
connection must exist between the initial fact proven and the further fact presumed.
Jackson, 112 Wn.2d at 875. The jury may infer from one fact the existence of another
essential to guilt, if reason and experience support the inference. Tot v. United States,
319 U.S. 463,467,63 S. Ct. 1241,87 L. Ed. 1519 (1943).
RCW 69.50.401(1) provides:
Except as authorized by this chapter, it is unlawful for any person to
manufacture, deliver, or possess with intent to manufacture or deliver, a
controlled substance.
In order to obtain a conviction for possession of a controlled substance with intent to
deliver, the State must prove the following elements beyond a reasonable doubt: (1)
unlawful possession of (2) a controlled substance with (3) intent to deliver. State v.
Goodman, 150 Wn.2d 774, 782, 83 P.3d 410 (2004). Naked possession of a controlled
substance is generally insufficient to establish an inference of an intent to deliver. State
v. Darden, 145 Wn.2d 612, 624, 41 PJd 1189 (2002). This is true even if the amount of
the controlled substance is greater than what is consistent with personal use, or if the
substance is separated into individual baggies. State v. Zunker, 112 Wn. App. 130, 135,
48 PJd 344 (2002); State v. Kovac, 50 Wn. App. 117, 121,747 P.2d 484 (1987). Some
additional factor must be present. Zunker, 112 Wn. App. at 136. Additional factors can
include large amounts of cash, scales, cell phones, address books, baggies, and materials
used in narcotics manufacture. Zunker, 112 Wn. App. at 136; Goodman, 150 Wn.2d at
36
No.31501-1-III
State v. Huerta
783. A rule controlling in this appeal is that a jury may infer possession with intent to
deliver a controlled substance from evidence that a defendant delivered a controlled
substance to another person shortly before his arrest. State v. Hernandez, 85 Wn. App.
672,676,935 P.2d 623 (1997); State v. Brown, 68 Wn. App. 480,484,843 P.2d 1098
(1993).
In State v. Hernandez, 85 Wn. App. at 675, a consolidated appeal, two individuals
challenged the sufficiency of the evidence for their convictions for delivery of a
controlled substance. In each case, police officers used high power binoculars to observe
the individuals allegedly delivering drugs, arrested the individuals after the customers had
left with the merchandise, and found illicit drugs on the arrestees' persons that appeared
similar to the item delivered. In upholding the convictions for delivery of a controlled
substance, this court analogized approvingly to federal decisions holding that a factfinder
could reasonably infer possession with intent to deliver based on evidence that the person
delivered a controlled substance prior to their arrest.
Sufficient evidence supports Arturo Huerta's conviction for possession of
methamphetamine with intent to deliver. Law enforcement personnel instructed their
confidential infonnant to call Huerta and arrange to purchase marijuana and
methamphetamine. The officers observed Huerta enter the Walmart parking lot, carry a
red cup, enter the informant's vehicle, and shortly after exit the vehicle without the cup.
Detective Horbatko searched the informant immediately after the sale and discovered that
37
No. 31501-1-III
State v. Huerta
the red fries cup held three small bags containing methamphetamine. After Huerta's
arrest, police officers discovered more bags of methamphetamine in his car. Thus, the
State's evidence showed not only possession, but the additional factor of evidence of a
contemporaneous delivery prior to Huerta's arrest and a large amount of money.
Issue 8: Whether sufficient evidence supports the conviction/or involving a minor
in a drug dealing?
Answer 8: Yes.
Arturo Huerta also contends that insufficient evidence supports his second
conviction for involving a minor. He contends that Suzanna Rodriguez accompanying
him to the drug buy, standing one hundred fifty feet away, looking around, and
possessing buy money after the transaction is insufficient for a jury to find him guilty of
involving a minor in a drug transaction beyond a reasonable doubt. Huerta maintains that
a child's proximity to the transaction is not encompassed within the crime as
contemplated by the statute. We agree that proximity to the transaction alone does not
establish the crime. We disagree with Huerta's argument of insufficient evidence,
however. The jury heard evidence beyond Suzanna Rodriguez's propinquity to the
delivery.
RCW 69.50.4015(1) declares:
It is unlawful to compensate, threaten, solicit, or in any other manner
involve a person under the age of eighteen years in a transaction unlawfully
to manufacture, sell, or deliver a controlled substance.
38
No.31501-1-III
State v. Huerta
Simply allowing a minor to be present during a drug transaction is not enough to support
a conviction. The statute requires evidence that the defendant committed some act,
directed at the minor, to bring or attempt to bring the minor into the transaction. State v.
Gonzales Flores, 164 Wn.2d 1,24, 186 P.3d 1038 (2008). Thus, the focus is on the
defendant's affirmative acts. State v. Hollis, 93 Wn. App. 804, 812,970 P.2d 813 (1999).
In State v. Hollis, 93 Wn. App. 804, a consolidated case, Mark Hollis and
Lawrence Reddick challenged a former version of the minor involvement statute, RCW
69.50.401(f), as unconstitutionally vague. In Hollis' case, an undercover police officer
approached Hollis and asked for "a forty." Hollis contacted Tanisha Brown, a minor, and
asked her to sell to the officer. Brown approached another minor, took pieces of rock
cocaine out of the minor's jacket, and handed the pieces to the officer in exchange for
payment. Reddick sold an undercover police officer rock cocaine while he stood arm-in
arm with Katie Davis, a minor. Juries respectively convicted Hollis and Reddick of
involving a minor in a drug transaction. In holding that the statute was not
unconstitutionally vague as to the particular facts of their cases, this court explained:
An ordinary person should understand that Hollis' actions of asking
and convincing Brown-who was a minor-to unlawfully sell cocaine to
Officer Fox are proscribed by this statute. Likewise, an ordinary person
should understand that Reddick's acts of approaching the drug transaction
arm-in-arm with a minor, Davis, and allowing that minor to remain present
during the drug transaction, thereby obliging her to become associated with
the drug transaction, are also proscribed under this statute.
39
No. 31501-1-III
State v. Huerta
Hollis,93 Wn. App. at 812.
In State v. Gonzales Flores, 164 Wn.2d 1 (2008), Octavio Flores successfully
challenged the sufficiency of the evidence used to convict him of twice involving a minor
in a drug transaction. Flores and his wife sold cocaine to a confidential informant. The
Flores' minor daughter, Jessica, was present during two of the transactions. During the
first transaction, Jessica sat passively on a bench while her parents sold the informant
cocaine. During the second transaction, Jessica sat on a couch in the cabin's living room
while her parents sold the informant more cocaine. Flores appealed his convictions,
arguing that allowing a minor to remain present during a drug transaction is not alone a
violation of the statute. Our Supreme Court agreed, holding that the appropriate inquiry
is whether or not a defendant committed an overt act intended to bring the minor into the
transaction. It found the evidence against Flores insufficient, where his actions toward
Jessica were "purely passive." Gonzales Flores, 164 Wn.2d at 17.
In Gonzales Flores, our high court distinguished the facts from a federal court of
appeals decision, United States v. Castro-Hernandez, 258 F.3d 1057 (9th Cir. 2001), in
which a defendant attempted to cross into the United States from Mexico with forty-six
kilograms of marijuana in his vehicle and his young son at his side. The Ninth Circuit
Court of Appeals affirmed the federal district court's determination that the defendant's
admission that he made a special stop at home to pick up his son, after the drugs were
loaded into his truck, raised a reasonable inference that the defendant sought to use his
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No.31501-1-III
State v. Huerta
young son as a decoy. Castro-Hernandez, 258 F.3d at 1060.
In the case on appeal, the State of Washington presented sufficient evidence for
the jury to reasonably infer that Arturo Huerta attempted to use Suzanna Rodriguez as a
decoy or lookout, during the transaction. The jury heard testimony that Huerta brought
Rodriguez to the Walmart and this particular Walmart lay significantly farther from
Rodriguez's house than other stores, including another Walmart. Horbatko also testified
that Huerta and Rodriguez arrived at the Walmart together, exited the tan Honda Accord
and looked around, and, when the confidential informant approached, Rodriguez walked
from the transaction and stood in another spot peering around. The State also argued that
Rodriguez's distress on her arrest created a reasonable inference that Rodriguez was
upset that she had failed in her decoy duties. This was sufficient evidence for a jury to
reasonably infer that Huerta involved Rodriguez in the drug transaction, as either a decoy
or a lookout.
Arturo Huerta asks us to consider the trial court's conversation with the jurors,
after the rendering of the verdict. During the conversation, one or more jurors informed
the court that the jury did not believe that Suzanna Rodriguez performed as a lookout.
Huerta asks that we combine the jurors' disclosure with the trial court's finding, during
sentencing, of a lack of evidence that Rodriguez was aware of the transaction.
We do not base our resolution of sufficiency of evidence assignments of error
based upon jury comments. Courts generally do not inquire into the internal process by
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State v. Huerta
which the jury reaches its verdict. Gardner v. Malone, 60 Wn.2d 836, 840, 376 P.2d 651,
379 P.2d 918 (1962). A juror's postverdict statements regarding the way in which the
jury reached its verdict cannot be used to support a motion for a new trial. Breckenridge
v. Valley Gen. Hosp., 150 Wn.2d 197,205, 75 P.3d 944 (2003). Sufficient evidence
existed for a reasonable jury to conclude that Suzanna Rodriguez acted as a lookout.
Arturo Huerta also argues that Rodriguez's handling of the purchase money at the
time of the arrest lacked spatial and temporal proximity to the delivery by Huerta to the
confidential informant such that Huerta did not "involve" Rodriguez in a drug
"transaction" within the meaning ofRCW 69.50.4015(1). Since sufficient evidence
supports a conclusion that Rodriguez performed as a lookout, we need not entertain this
additional argument.
Issue 9: Did the prosecution engage in misconduct by testimony elicited from Erik
Horbatko?
Answer 9: No.
Arturo Huerta next contends that the State committed prosecutorial misconduct in
two ways: (1) by eliciting testimony from Detective Horbatko designed to inflame the
jury, and (2) by expanding the charges against Huerta in closing argument. We address
these contentions in such order. Huerta argues, in part, that the prosecutor elicited
testimony from Detective Horbatko regarding the dangerousness of conducting drug sting
operations and referring to the time that they waited for Huerta to arrive as "doper time."
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State v. Huerta
A defendant claiming prosecutorial misconduct must show that the prosecutor's
conduct was both improper and prejudicial in the context of the entire record and
circumstances at trial. State v. Emery, 174 Wn.2d 741, 756,278 P.3d 653 (2012).
Reviewing courts should focus less on whether the prosecutor's misconduct was flagrant
or ill intentioned, and more on whether the resulting prejudice could have been cured.
State v. Emery, 174 Wn.2d at 762. Under this heightened standard, the defendant must
show that (1) no curative instruction would have obviated any prejudicial effect on the
jury, and (2) the misconduct resulted in prejudice that had a substantial likelihood of
affecting the jury verdict. Emery, 174 Wn.2d at 760-61. A prosecutor's conduct may be
improper when he or she appeals to jurors' fear and repudiation of criminal groups. State
v. Ramos, 164 Wn. App. 327, 338 n.3, 263 P.3d 1268 (2011); State v. Perez-Mejia, 134
Wn. App. 907, 916, 143 P.3d 838 (2006).
We do not comment on the admissibility of the testimony about which Arturo
Huerta complains. We share in Huerta's criticism that Detective Erik Horbatko inserted
the "doper" comment without a question eliciting the response and for the purpose of
unfairly ridiculing Huerta. Nevertheless, Huerta does not assign error to the trial court's
rulings regarding the testimony. Even considering the testimony irrelevant and
prejudicial, the evidence did not likely affect the jury's verdict. The jury heard
overwhelming testimony supporting the intent to deliver charge and sufficient evidence
supporting the involving a minor charge. In his brief, Huerta summarily argues that
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No. 31501-1-111
State v. Huerta
Horbatko's testimony prejudiced him but he fails to expand on the argument and explain
the prejudice.
Arturo Huerta also complains that Detective Erik Horbatko allegedly commented
on Huerta's silence and testified that the confidential informant never informed him that
someone would accompany Huerta to the Walmart store. The prosecution did not elicit
Horbatko's comment on Huerta's silence. Instead, Horbatko remarked that Huerta would
not speak to the police, during aggressive questioning by defense counsel as to why
Horbatko had not found assets of Huerta to seize and forfeit. Horbatko's answer was a
legitimate response to the questioning. Huerta did not object to the response during the
trial, and he cites no authority on appeal that the answer was impermissible. Huerta also
did not object at trial to Horbatko's testimony based on the detective's conversation with
the informant. On appeal, Huerta does not argue that the testimony was inadmissible and
identifies no prejudice from the testimony.
Arturo Huerta also complains about the prosecution asking about a romantic
relationship between Huerta and Suzanna Rodriguez. Huerta contends that the State
agreed not to ask about Rodriguez saying "I love you" to Huerta unless Huerta opened
the door. We agree the State so agreed and stated it would discuss asking the question
before posing the question before the jury. The State reneged on this agreement when
asking Rodriguez about her statement without first approaching the court and defense
counsel. Whereas we do not condone the State's conduct, we do not find the behavior
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No. 31501-1-111
State v. Huerta
flagrant and prejudicial. Arturo Huerta placed Suzanna Rodriguez's credibility at issue
when he called her to testifY.
Cross-examination to elicit facts tending to show that a witness' testimony was
motivated by bias may not be unduly restricted. State v. Francis, 228 Conn. 118, 123,
635 A.2d 762 (1993). Bias may consist of a friendly feeling. State v. Christian, 267
Conn. 710,748,841 A.2d 1158 (2004). The interest ofa witness, either friendly or
unfriendly, in the prosecution or in a party is not collateral and may always be proved to
enable the jury to estimate credibility. Miller ex ret. Monticello Banking Co. v.
Marymount Med. Ctr., 125 S.W.3d 274, 282 (Ky. 2004).
Issue 10: Did the prosecution engage in misconduct during summation?
Answer 10: No.
Finally, Arturo Huerta argues that the State committed prosecutorial misconduct
by misstating the law and the facts of Huerta's case during its closing argument. He
claims that the State expanded the charges through closing argument. We disagree.
This court reviews a prosecutor's comments during closing argument in the
context of the total argument, the issues in the case, the evidence addressed in the
argument, and the jury instructions. State v. Boehning, 127 Wn. App. 511, 519, III P.3d
899 (2005). Allegedly improper remarks by the prosecution must be viewed in the
context of the entire argument, and a prosecutor enjoys wide latitude in drawing and
expressing reasonable inferences from the evidence. State v. Gentry, 125 Wn.2d 570,
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No.31501-I-III
State v. Huerta
596,888 P.2d 1105 (1995), aff'd sub nom. Gentry v. Sinclair, 705 F.3d 884 (9th Cir.
2013). Nevertheless, a prosecutor's statements are improper if they misstate the
applicable law, shift the burden to the defense, mischaracterize the role of the jury, or
invite the jury to determine guilt on improper grounds. Emery, 174 Wn.2d at 759-60;
Boehning, 127 Wn. App. at 522. If a defendant did not object to a prosecutor's alleged
misconduct at trial, he or she is deemed to have waived any error, unless the misconduct
was so flagrant and ill-intentioned that a jury instruction could not have cured the
resulting prejudice. Gentry, 125 Wn.2d at 596.
The conduct of which Arturo Huerta complains was neither flagrant, nor ill
intentioned. The State argued its theories of the case to support the charges in the
information. It did not assert new charges. The State contended that Huerta had recently
delivered drugs to the States' confidential informant and thus the jury could infer
possession with intent to deliver. The State also argued that the jury could infer from
Suzanna Rodriguez's behavior and the discovery of money in her bra later that she had
acted as either a decoy or lookout for Huerta. The contentions did not amount to an
impermissible amending of the charges, as the substantive crimes with which the State
charged Huerta remained the same. Huerta never objected to the argument during trial.
Issue 11: Does cumulative error require reversal?
Answer 11: No.
Under the cumulative error doctrine, a defendant may be entitled to a new trial if
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No. 31501-1-111
State v. Huerta
the trial court's multiple errors combined to deny the defendant a fair triaL In re Pers.
Restraint a/Lord, 123 Wn.2d 296,332,868 P.2d 835 (1994). The defendant bears the
burden of proving an accumulation of error of sufficient magnitude to warrant a new trial.
Lord, 123 Wn.2d at 332; see, e.g., State v. Perrett, 86 Wn. App. 312, 323, 936 P.2d 426
(1997).
Our trial court committed only one error by allowing testimony about matching
currency in violation of the prohibition against hearsay. This error was harmless in light
of the remaining untainted evidence supporting Arturo Huerta's two convictions.
CONCLUSION
We affirm Arturo Huerta's convictions for possession of a controlled substance
with intent to deliver and involving a minor in a narcotics transaction.
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.
WE CONCUR:
:2z rLio Wj)
Siddoway, CJ.
I ~c§= Lawrence-Berrey, J.
47