FILED
APRIL 28, 2020
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. 36062-8-III
Respondent, )
)
v. ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION
)
ARNULFO ROMERO BRAVO, )
)
Appellant. )
SIDDOWAY, J. — Arnulfo Bravo appeals his conviction for first degree
manslaughter. We affirm the conviction but remand with directions to grant him
Ramirez 1 relief.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
On October 1, 1991, Barbara Kipp was found dead in her Moses Lake home by
her longtime roommate, Charles Flowers. The cause of death was not apparent. Arnulfo
Bravo, who Ms. Kipp was dating and who was then living with Ms. Kipp and Mr.
Flowers, was absent. Mr. Flowers called police and a Moses Lake police officer and the
Grant County Coroner responded. Mr. Flowers later realized his car was missing, as was
some of Ms. Kipp’s jewelry.
1
State v. Ramirez, 191 Wn.2d 732, 747, 426 P.3d 714 (2018).
No. 36062-8-III
State v. Bravo
Arnulfo Bravo was a suspect in Ms. Kipp’s death from the beginning. When first
interviewed by Detective Ron Varner on October 8, 1991, Mr. Bravo admitted he had
found Ms. Kipp dead on the night of Sunday, September 29, but denied killing her. He
said that after Ms. Kipp returned from work Sunday morning at about 7:45 a.m. (she
worked nights, 11:00 p.m. to 7:00 a.m., as a private nurse) the two of them had spent the
day together. That morning and into the afternoon they went to several bars and drank
heavily. After running an errand in the afternoon, they went home, ate pizza, drank some
more, and went to sleep.
Mr. Bravo told the detective that he and Ms. Kipp woke up around 9:45 or 10:00
p.m. Ms. Kipp fixed a lunch to take to work, and Mr. Bravo went to the store to buy
cigarettes around 10:05 p.m. He claimed that when he returned about 10 minutes later,
he found Ms. Kipp on her back on the floor, near the front door. He felt for a pulse and
put his ear to her chest, but could not hear or feel anything. He did not call an ambulance
or get help because he was sure she was dead and he was afraid he would be put in jail.
He took her lunch, some beer, and some other items, including her jewelry box and the
watch she was wearing, and left in Mr. Flowers’s car. Realizing he needed money for
gas, he returned to the house and took a couple hundred dollars from Ms. Kipp’s purse.
He then drove to California and stayed for several days with a sister and friends before
returning to Moses Lake, where he agreed to be interviewed by Detective Varner.
2
No. 36062-8-III
State v. Bravo
Asked by the detective whether he ever physically fought with Ms. Kipp, Mr.
Bravo stated that had only happened twice, when he had grabbed her arms. The first
time, he grabbed her hard enough to leave bruises. The second time was on the day Ms.
Kipp died, when he heard her on the phone with her ex-boyfriend. He told the detective
that he grabbed her by the arms, shook her, and told her she needed to make up her mind
about who she wanted to date. When Detective Varner told Mr. Bravo that others said
Ms. Kipp planned to leave Mr. Bravo and move to Montana, Mr. Bravo denied knowing
of any such plan.
Asked by the detective about any drug use by Ms. Kipp, Mr. Bravo said she had
bought and used speed, but not very often. Mr. Bravo did not know if she used any the
day she died.
On October 25, 1991, Detective Varner interviewed Mr. Bravo a second time.
When told by the detective that he was hearing from people that Mr. Bravo was a jealous
person and possessive of Ms. Kipp, Mr. Bravo said it was Ms. Kipp who was jealous, and
did not like him to go to the bar alone. He said they agreed they would only go together.
When the detective asked if he had ever threatened Ms. Kipp by tossing a bullet down
and telling her he would use it to kill her if she ever left, Mr. Bravo admitted that he once
put a bullet in front of her and said something to her in Spanish. He told the detective
Ms. Kipp later accused him of saying the bullet was for her, but he told her “that’s
bullshit,” and that he did not have a gun. Ex. 21 at 10.
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No. 36062-8-III
State v. Bravo
Mr. Bravo pleaded guilty to theft for taking Ms. Kipp’s belongings. He was
sentenced in November 1991 to a period of total confinement of 43 days, which he had
already served, and to 12 months’ community supervision.
The cause of Ms. Kipp’s death was still undetermined at the time of Mr. Bravo’s
release. Grant County Coroner Penny Sibley was not a medical doctor and had arranged
for Ms. Kipp’s autopsy to be performed by Dr. Gerald Rappe, the Chelan County
coroner. Dr. Rappe performed the autopsy on the day after the body was found, with
Coroner Sibley and Detective Varner in attendance.
Dr. Rappe would testify at trial that at the time he performed the autopsy, he
concluded that Ms. Kipp had been strangled, but he was not yet sure she was strangled to
death. Bruising was not initially visible on Ms. Kipp’s neck because it was obscured by
lividity, which is a red/purple coloring of the skin caused by the postdeath pooling of
blood.2 He microscopically examined neck skin, however, and found bruising in those
samples. He also found bruising in the deep muscles of Ms. Kipp’s neck around the
hyoid bone and in the strap muscles of the neck, all about the size of the end of a finger.
But there was no damage to the hyoid bone, as might occur with aggressive strangulation,
and no scratches on the neck from fingernails. Ms. Kipp had small petechiae in the eyes,
indicative of increased venous pressure in the neck and head that can be caused by
2
Dr. Rappe explained that gravity is the principal force controlling where blood
pools in the body after death. In Ms. Kipp’s case, however, she had considerable fat in
her abdomen and chest that compressed the blood, pushing some into her neck and head.
4
No. 36062-8-III
State v. Bravo
strangulation. But she also had foam coming out of her nose and mouth, which he was
inclined to associate with foamy pulmonary edema from a drug overdose. Given the
possibility of an overdose, he ordered comprehensive toxicology screening.
A little over six months after the autopsy, Coroner Sibley contacted Dr. Rappe and
asked about the status of his report, and he turned back to reviewing the case. Based on
the toxicology results, which did not reveal evidence of any drug that could cause an
overdose, and after consulting with the King County medical examiner, Dr. Rappe issued
a final report concluding that Ms. Kipp died from strangulation alone. He was satisfied
after consulting with others that foamy pulmonary edema with strangulation is not
uncommon, even though he had not seen it. Strangulation cuts off blood and oxygen to
the brain, which causes brain cells to die within about four minutes. Brain damage, in
turn, causes foamy pulmonary edema. He was also satisfied that strangulation often will
not crack or break a flexible hyoid bone, and Ms. Kipp’s was flexible.
In June 1992, the State charged Mr. Bravo with second degree murder and issued a
warrant for his arrest, but he had by then moved away. It was not until almost 25 years
later, in November 2016, that officers arrested Mr. Bravo in Texas and he was extradited
to Washington to stand trial on the second degree murder charge.
Trial
The charge proceeded to a four day jury trial. The trial court found that three in-
custody police interviews of Mr. Bravo (the two conducted in 1991 and a third conducted
5
No. 36062-8-III
State v. Bravo
in 2016) were knowing and voluntary. Transcripts of the two 1991 interviews were
offered by the State and were admitted without objection. In evidentiary rulings made
outside the presence of the jury, the trial court denied a defense motion in limine to
exclude “bad acts” evidence of what the defense characterized as Mr. Bravo and Ms.
Kipp’s “stormy relationship.” Report of Proceedings (RP) at 41. It agreed with the State
that the problems in the couple’s relationship were admissible to prove motive and intent.
The State called as its first witness Kristi Rambo, Ms. Kipp’s daughter, who
testified that she last saw her mother in September 1991, when Ms. Kipp traveled to
Montana, where Ms. Rambo lived and had recently given birth to a baby boy. Mr. Bravo
came along for the visit. Ms. Rambo testified there were arguments between Ms. Kipp
and Mr. Bravo during the four or five day visit, because Mr. Bravo would not give Ms.
Kipp and her daughter time to be alone together. She testified that before and after that
visit, when speaking to her mother on the telephone, she often heard Mr. Bravo telling
Ms. Kipp to get off the phone. She said this happened during the last conversation the
two had, which took place a couple of days before Ms. Rambo found out Ms. Kipp was
dead.
Dr. Rappe testified to his conclusion that the cause of death was strangulation and
explained why. Dr. Rappe had also reviewed a report from the forensic pathologist who
would testify for the defense and who concluded that a more likely cause of death was
suicide by overdose. Dr. Rappe explained why he had ruled that out.
6
No. 36062-8-III
State v. Bravo
Dr. Rappe testified that he had comprehensive toxicology screening that revealed
no sign of an overdose. It revealed only a blood alcohol content of 0.1 grams per
deciliter (slightly over the legal limit) and did not test positive for anything else except
caffeine and carboxyhemoglobin, which indicated she was a smoker.
Dr. Rappe also testified that microscopic examination of tissue from her kidneys
revealed fresh acute tubular necrosis, which was significant in indicating that she had
probably lived only about four hours after being strangled—not enough time for any
drugs in her system to have metabolized. He explained that when a person has very low
blood pressure (is hypotensive) after “four hours or so, maybe a little less,” cells in the
lining of the proximal convoluted tubule of the kidney lose their adhesion to the
underlying collagen tissues and fall into, and block, the lumina of the tubule. RP at 273.
The cells then begin to decay. In Ms. Kipp’s case, the cells had come off the lining and
clogged the lumen, but the cells themselves had not yet shown degenerative change.
From this, he viewed it as “beyond a reasonable doubt” that she did not live more than
four hours after being strangled. RP at 283. He expressed the further view that even if
she had lived longer, drugs would still have been detected because she was hypotensive
and “metabolism would have definitely been slowed.” RP at 283-84.
Mr. Flowers testified for the State that at the time of Ms. Kipp’s death, her dating
relationship with Mr. Bravo was not going well. He testified that Ms. Kipp was planning
to move to Montana “fairly soon,” without Mr. Bravo. RP at 340. He testified that he
7
No. 36062-8-III
State v. Bravo
had been out of town on a hunting trip in late September 1991 and discovered Ms. Kipp’s
body on his return. He said that on entering the home and even before discovering Ms.
Kipp’s body, he noticed the kitchen was not clean and beer had not been put away in the
refrigerator—two things that were out of character for Ms. Kipp.
Asked about any drug use by Ms. Kipp, he testified that the only drugs he ever
observed in the house were nonprescription stimulants, called “hearts,” that Ms. Kipp
used to keep awake at work. RP at 344.
Detective Varner testified that he was called out to the scene on the afternoon Ms.
Kipp’s body was found. He testified that in investigating such a crime, he would have
looked for any signs of drug use and noted any evidence in his report. He found no
evidence of drug use at the home.
He also testified that following the autopsy, he was called out to the funeral home
when the embalming process caused bruising to become visible. Pictures taken of the
bruising were admitted into evidence, as were his earlier pictures taken on the day Ms.
Kipp’s death was discovered.
Other than having Detective Varner identify the transcripts of his two interviews
of Mr. Bravo in October 1991, the prosecutor asked only a couple of questions about the
interviews, stating, “I’m not going to go through these interviews in detail because we
can read them.” RP at 331. He did elicit testimony that when interviewed, Mr. Bravo
claimed to have found Ms. Kipp dead within 10 to 15 minutes of leaving to buy
8
No. 36062-8-III
State v. Bravo
cigarettes, and admitted there had been “some conversations between the two of them
about them breaking up and her possibly going back to Montana.” RP at 332.
Before resting, the prosecutor offered as an exhibit the judgment and sentence
from Mr. Bravo’s conviction for the theft of Ms. Kipp’s jewelry and cash. The exhibit
was admitted without objection.
The only witness called by the defense was its expert, Dr. Carl Wigren. He
expressed his opinion that there was not enough evidence to support the conclusion that
Ms. Kipp died from strangulation.
Dr. Wigren attached much significance to a transcript he had read of a 1991
interview of Ms. Kipp’s daughter, Ms. Rambo, by Detective Varner. During the
interview, Ms. Rambo disclosed that her mother attempted suicide by pills after receiving
a leukemia diagnosis in 1989. She also told the detective that while her mother had been
in remission, she felt in 1991 that her symptoms were coming back. Dr. Wigren
described Ms. Kipp’s leukemia diagnosis as, in 1989, “essentially a death sentence.”
RP at 391. He testified that he was knowledgeable about suicide and suicide ideations
from volunteering with a crisis hotline and his psychiatric rotation during medical school.
He characterized the interview with Ms. Rambo and the re-emergence of symptoms of
the leukemia as “key to this case.” RP at 422.
Dr. Wigren described Ms. Rambo as telling Detective Varner that before her death
Ms. Kipp had acted “different,” “real mellow, real calm” and she had never seen her act
9
No. 36062-8-III
State v. Bravo
that way before. RP at 430-31. He attached significance to Ms. Rambo’s report to the
detective that Ms. Kipp talked to her about what she wanted to happen when she died,
such as where she wanted to be buried and that she wanted to be buried in a shirt, jeans,
boots, and specific earrings. He said Ms. Rambo told the detective that at the end of her
last visit, Ms. Kipp left her ring and watch with her daughter and did not mention
upcoming trips when she said goodbye, which was unusual for her. Dr. Wigren said this
could mean Ms. Kipp was planning her own death.
Dr. Wigren disagreed with Dr. Rappe’s conclusion that Ms. Kipp must have died
within 4 hours; he testified that the window for acute tubular necrosis to occur is 4 to 15
hours. He also testified that it was possible to find no sign of drugs in the system of
someone who dies of an overdose because drugs are primarily metabolized by the liver
and “[a]s long as the heart is beating and circulating blood through the body, the liver
cells are doing their job.” RP at 452.
When cross-examined, Dr. Wigren said he had not been provided with Mr.
Bravo’s statements to police. He was unaware that Ms. Kipp had a plan to move back to
Montana and would need to know more about that to say whether it affected his opinion.
In rebuttal, the State recalled Ms. Rambo and questioned her about the 1991
interview by Detective Varner to which Dr. Wigren attached significance. Ms. Rambo
said that when she told the detective about her mother’s behavioral changes, it was in
explaining her belief that her mother was afraid of Mr. Bravo, thought he would hurt her
10
No. 36062-8-III
State v. Bravo
if she left, and did not know what to do. She testified that when interviewed by Detective
Varner, she was specifically asked if she thought her mother would have committed
suicide, and said no. Asked by the prosecutor to read the explanation she gave Detective
Varner during the 1991 interview, she read:
Because she was happy, she was fine with life, she had so many things
going for her. She was coming back to Montana, she was going to help me
with my three children. My little twin brothers were there. She was just
very happy and wanted to come home. She was ready to come home.
RP at 491-92. Ms. Rambo testified that her mother’s plane ticket for Montana arrived at
Ms. Kipp’s Moses Lake home a couple of days after her body was found.
Jury instructions proposed by the State included not only an instruction on second
degree murder but instructions on the lesser included offenses of first and second degree
manslaughter as well. The State’s theory remained that this was a second degree murder,
however, and the defense remained a general denial of any charge.
In closing argument the prosecutor “walk[ed jurors] through” the transcripts of
Detective Varner’s two interviews of Mr. Bravo, which he told jurors, “[Y]ou haven’t
really seen yet.” RP at 515. He stated, “I’ll read the points that I think are important to
you, [defense counsel] will bring out some stuff that he thinks are important, and then
you look at it when you go back to the jury room.” RP at 515-16.
The jury was sent to deliberate in the early afternoon of March 19, 2018, with the
64 admitted exhibits. The exhibits consisted of 61 photographs, the 102-page and 50-
11
No. 36062-8-III
State v. Bravo
page transcripts of Detective Varner’s 1991 interviews of Mr. Bravo, and the 7-page
judgment and sentence for Mr. Bravo’s 1991 theft conviction. The next morning, the
jurors submitted two questions, asking about the date pictures were taken and the time
and date that Mr. Flowers discovered the body and called police. The court instructed
them to rely on their memory and/or notes. The jury reached a verdict late that morning.
All told, the jury deliberated for slightly less than five hours.3
The jury found Mr. Bravo not guilty of second degree murder and guilty of first
degree manslaughter. The court sentenced Mr. Bravo to 41 months of confinement and
imposed legal financial obligations (LFOs), including a $200 filing fee and $50 sheriff’s
service fee. Mr. Bravo appeals.
ANALYSIS
Mr. Bravo makes four assignments of error. One—a request for Ramirez relief
from the discretionary legal financial obligations imposed at sentencing—is not opposed
by the State and will be ordered.
Of the remaining three, we turn first to Mr. Bravo’s claims of improper opinion
testimony and error in applying ER 404(b) before turning to the closer question of
ineffective assistance of counsel.
3
The jury was sent to deliberate at 1:54 p.m. on March 19. The court informed
the lawyers that it would release the jurors at 4:30 that afternoon unless they were close
to reaching a verdict, in which case they would go until 5:00.
During the trial, jurors were asked to arrive in the morning by 8:45 a.m., to begin
proceedings at 9:00. They reached a verdict at 11:21 a.m. on March 20.
12
No. 36062-8-III
State v. Bravo
I. DR. RAPPE NEVER OFFERED AN OPINION ON GUILT
Mr. Bravo contends that Dr. Rappe invaded the province of the jury by improperly
offering an opinion on guilt, using the phrase “beyond a reasonable doubt.” Specifically,
he points to twice during in Dr. Rappe’s testimony when the doctor stated his belief,
“beyond a reasonable doubt,” that Ms. Kipp did not live for more than four hours after
being strangled. See RP at 283. No objection was made. But Mr. Bravo now argues that
“[a]n opinion on guilt, even by mere inference, invades the province of the jury.”
Opening Br. of Appellant at 17 (citing State v. Montgomery, 163 Wn.2d 577, 594, 183
P.3d 267 (2008)).
RAP 2.5(a) states the general rule that we will not review a claim of error that was
not raised in the trial court. Mr. Bravo seeks to rely on the exception for manifest
constitutional error, see RAP 2.5(a)(3), but improper opinion testimony is not a manifest
constitutional error unless it is an explicit or nearly explicit opinion on an ultimate fact.
State v. Kirkman, 159 Wn.2d 918, 938, 155 P.3d 125 (2007); Montgomery, 163 Wn.2d at
594.4 Generally, an improper opinion on guilt will be an assertion pertaining directly to
the defendant. City of Seattle v. Heatley, 70 Wn. App. 573, 577, 854 P.2d 658 (1993).
4
Even when an opinion is explicit, there is no prejudice and thus no manifest error
if the jury was properly instructed that they “‘are the sole judges of the credibility of
witnesses,’” and “‘are not bound’” by expert witness opinions. Montgomery, 163 Wn.2d
at 595 (quoting Kirkman, 159 Wn.2d at 937). The jury was properly instructed here. See
Clerk’s Papers at 21, 27.
13
No. 36062-8-III
State v. Bravo
Opinion testimony is not improper if it is not a direct comment on the defendant’s guilt,
is otherwise helpful to the jury, and is based on inferences from the evidence. Id. at 578.
The opinion held by Dr. Rappe that Mr. Bravo challenges for the first time on
appeal cannot qualify as manifest constitutional error. The time passing from when Ms.
Kipp was strangled to when she died is not an ultimate fact. It is a fact relevant to the
doctor’s belief about the cause of death, was based on inferences from the evidence, and
would be helpful to the jury. It was not a direct comment on Mr. Bravo’s guilt.
Since it was not a comment on guilt, the fact that Dr. Rappe characterized the
strength of his belief as “beyond a reasonable doubt” is not problematic. The time-
honored use of that measure in criminal trials shows it is a helpful way of expressing the
strength of a belief that falls short of absolute certainty but is more than a mere
likelihood. It is language that is not off limits in contexts where it will not be confusing.
If defense counsel had believed it might be confusing, he could have asked a clarifying
question in cross-examination.
II. THE TRIAL COURT PROPERLY DENIED MR. BRAVO’S MOTION TO EXCLUDE
EVIDENCE OF HIS “STORMY RELATIONSHIP” WITH MS. KIPP
The court heard argument of Mr. Bravo’s motion to exclude “bad acts” evidence
of friction in his relationship with Ms. Kipp, explained on the record its findings on the
required ER 404(b) analysis, and denied the motion. Mr. Bravo argues that the trial court
14
No. 36062-8-III
State v. Bravo
abused its discretion by admitting the evidence for a criminal propensity purpose and
failing to engage in ER 403 balancing.
“Properly understood . . . ER 404(b) is a categorical bar to admission of evidence
for the purpose of proving a person’s character and showing that the person acted in
conformity with that character.” State v. Gresham, 173 Wn.2d 405, 420, 269 P.3d 207
(2012). “[T]here is one improper purpose and an undefined number of proper purposes.”
Id. at 421. The rule identifies some proper purposes for which evidence of other crimes,
wrongs, or acts is admissible; among them are motive and intent. ER 404(b).
Whatever the asserted purpose, the trial court begins by assuming that evidence of
bad acts is inadmissible. State v. DeVincentis, 150 Wn.2d 11, 17, 74 P.3d 119 (2003). It
should then conduct an inquiry on the record and “‘(1) find by a preponderance of the
evidence that the misconduct occurred, (2) identify the purpose for which the evidence is
sought to be introduced, (3) determine whether the evidence is relevant to prove an
element of the crime charged, and (4) weigh the probative value against the prejudicial
effect.’” State v. Foxhoven, 161 Wn.2d 168, 175, 163 P.3d 786 (2007) (quoting State v.
Thang, 145 Wn.2d 630, 642, 41 P.3d 1159 (2002)). We review a trial court’s decision to
admit evidence subject to ER 404(b) for an abuse of discretion. State v. Fisher, 165
Wn.2d 727, 745, 202 P.3d 937 (2009).
In State v. Powell, 126 Wn.2d 244, 260, 893 P.2d 615 (1995), our Supreme Court
noted that historically, courts had admitted evidence of prior misconduct in spousal
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No. 36062-8-III
State v. Bravo
murder trials but the grounds for admission were not always clear. It undertook to clarify
the grounds for admission of evidence of misconduct in such cases, beginning with a
distinction between motive and intent:
“Motive” is said to be the moving course, the impulse, the desire that
induces criminal action on part of the accused; it is distinguished from
“intent” which is the purpose or design with which the act is done, the
purpose to make the means adopted effective.
Id. at 260 (quoting BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 1014 (6th ed. 1990)).
Like this case, Powell involved a charge of second degree murder, for Mr.
Powell’s alleged fatal strangulation of his wife. The court observed that evidence of
quarrels or threats is generally admissible to prove motive, but “such evidence must also
be of consequence to the action to justify its admission.” Id. It held that prior
misconduct evidence that demonstrates motive is of consequence in a murder prosecution
that relies on circumstantial evidence. Id. Since there were no witnesses to Mr. Powell’s
wife’s death (other than her murderer), the court found that much of the misconduct
evidence was properly admitted, including evidence of the couple’s hostile relationship,
other assaults and altercations, the victim’s efforts to leave and her statement that she was
seeking a divorce. Id. The same is true here.
The Powell court also observed that evidence of quarrels and threats between a
victim and defendant are probative on the question of intent. Id. at 262. On the facts of
Mr. Powell’s case, however, it found that intent was not a disputed issue, was inherent in
16
No. 36062-8-III
State v. Bravo
the charged crime, and was therefore unnecessary. Id. at 261-62. In Mr. Bravo’s case, by
contrast, the jury was instructed on lesser included manslaughter crimes, making intent
the materially distinguishing element. Motive and intent were proper purposes for
admitting the evidence.
Turning to Mr. Bravo’s contention that the court performed an insufficient ER 403
analysis, the court explained,
While I think this evidence is clearly prejudicial in the sense that it’s used
to try to sway the jury one way or the other, I don’t see it as evidence that
would lead to an emotional response. I think it’s a piece of evidence that
a juror can use and can still make a rational decision without, you know,
having the emotions raised unduly. So I’ll find that at this point the
probative value is not outweighed by the prejudicial effect.
RP at 47. Little analysis was needed. It was clear that in a circumstantial case, evidence
of Mr. Bravo’s “stormy relationship” with Ms. Kipp had a high probative value. The
analysis was sufficient.5
III. WHILE DEFICIENT REPRESENTATION IS SHOWN, PREJUDICE IS NOT
For the first time on appeal, Mr. Bravo points out that the judgment and sentence
for his theft charge admitted as exhibit 80 included a criminal history disclosing that he
5
Mr. Bravo also argues for the first time on appeal that the evidence lacked
substantial probative value because it consisted of 25-year-old recollections. Opening Br.
of Appellant at 28. One can imagine that Ms. Kipp’s death might have seared the
problems in Ms. Kipp’s and Mr. Bravo’s relationship into the memories of her daughter
and roommate. We need not consider the argument, however, because it was never made
to the trial court.
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No. 36062-8-III
State v. Bravo
was convicted of criminal negligence in 1977. The criminal history appears at page 2 of
the 7-page document.
Also for the first time on appeal, he points out the following questioning at page
96 of exhibit 23, his October 8, 1991 interview by Detective Varner:
Bravo: I had about three years with Yakima County and . . . (unable
to understand) Walla Walla . . .
Varner: But about 18 months in Walla Walla?
Bravo: Inside, yeah.
Varner: Okay uh one thing about Walla Walla uh, and this is a
problem that people, why they don’t like penitentiaries is that
people learn how to do things there which aren’t good. They
. . . they learn illegal things. They learn how to do better
burglaries. They learn how to be better thieves. They learn
how to hurt people better. And one of the things that they can
learn while they’re in prison is how to . . . how to kill people.
Uh, did you ever have nay [sic] problems while you were
down there in Walla Walla?
Bravo: (sighs)
Mr. Bravo argues he received ineffective assistance of counsel when his attorney
failed to object to admission of the judgment and sentence and failed to move to redact
the problematic questioning from the October 8 interview.6 He argues there was no
legitimate tactical reason for defense counsel to have agreed to the admission of this
6
Mr. Bravo’s opening brief states that defense counsel was ineffective when he
“failed to move to exclude, or for redactions of” the October 1991 interview. Opening Br.
of Appellant at 14 (emphasis added). He does not assign error to the results of the CrR
3.5 hearing, however, and devotes argument only to the failure to redact the questioning
at page 96 that is reproduced above. We will only consider the failure to request
redaction of the questioning that is addressed by argument. See RAP 10.3(a)(6).
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No. 36062-8-III
State v. Bravo
problematic evidence. He points out that the prior conviction was nearly the same crime
for which he was convicted in this case. He argues that while Detective Varner’s
aggressive questioning about learning to kill in prison might have been legitimate
investigation of a possible murder, it would have been excluded as trial evidence under
ER 403 had an objection been made.
To prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, Mr. Bravo must
establish that (1) defense counsel’s representation was deficient, i.e., it fell below an
objective standard of reasonableness based on consideration of all the circumstances; and
(2) defense counsel’s deficient representation prejudiced the defendant, i.e., there is a
reasonable probability that, except for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the
proceeding would have been different. State v. McFarland, 127 Wn.2d 322, 334-35, 899
P.2d 1251 (1995). If a defendant fails to establish either prong, the court need not
consider the other. State v. Hendrickson, 129 Wn.2d 61, 78, 917 P.2d 563 (1996).
We briefly address deficient performance. “The threshold for the deficient
performance prong is high” and there is “‘a strong presumption that counsel’s
performance was reasonable.’” State v. Grier, 171 Wn.2d 17, 33, 246 P.3d 1260 (2011)
(quoting State v. Kyllo, 166 Wn.2d 856, 862, 215 P.3d 177 (2009). We presume that a
failure to object to evidence was the “product of legitimate trial strategy or tactics, and
the onus is on the defendant to rebut this presumption.” State v. Johnston, 143 Wn. App.
1, 20, 177 P.3d 1127 (2007).
19
No. 36062-8-III
State v. Bravo
The State suggests that in withholding objection and not seeking redaction,
defense counsel could reasonably, strategically, have wanted to convey that Mr. Bravo
was not hiding anything, as a way of enhancing his credibility.
We note that defense counsel took pains to present evidence that prior to 1991,
Mr. Bravo had a bad brush with law enforcement. When the State called as a witness
Ritchie Norman, Mr. Bravo’s former employer and friend, defense counsel asked in
cross-examination about Mr. Bravo’s explanation for why he fled upon finding Ms.
Kipp’s body.7 Mr. Norman testified that within days of the discovery of Ms. Kipp’s
body, he told Detective Varner that in a call from California, Mr. Bravo told him, “one
time before . . . he had been in some trouble and the cops didn’t believe him and there’s
no reason for them to believe him now.” RP at 233. Perhaps defense counsel thought
providing an explanation for why Mr. Bravo was afraid police would not believe him,
and fled rather than call 911, was more important than excluding evidence of the 25-year-
old crime. He did not remind jurors of Mr. Norman’s testimony in closing argument,
however.
Mr. Bravo rightly notes that the criminal negligence conviction was not admissible
under ER 609 and that prior convictions, particularly for crimes similar to those with
which a defendant is currently charged, are generally inadmissible because of their
7
The State’s objection that the question called for hearsay was overruled, with the
trial court explaining that the State’s own questioning had opened the door.
20
No. 36062-8-III
State v. Bravo
potential for prejudice. See Hendrickson, 129 Wn.2d at 78 (although n.b., the court did
not find that Mr. Hendrickson’s right to a fair trial was prejudiced; see id. at 80).
In Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 670, 104 S. Ct. 2052, 80 L. Ed. 2d 674
(1984), the Supreme Court advised that “[i]f it is easier to dispose of an ineffectiveness
claim on the ground of lack of sufficient prejudice, that course should be followed.” We
find it easier to dispose of Mr. Bravo’s claim by pointing out his failure to demonstrate
prejudice.
A defendant claiming he received ineffective assistance of counsel must
“affirmatively prove prejudice.” Id. at 693. Courts find prejudice where but for an
attorney’s deficient performance, there was a reasonable probability of a different
outcome that is “‘sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.’” Grier, 171
Wn.2d at 34 (quoting Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694). “It is not enough for the defendant to
show that the errors had some conceivable effect on the outcome of the proceeding.
Virtually every act or omission of counsel would meet that test, and not every error that
conceivably could have influenced the outcome undermines the reliability of the result of
the proceeding.” Strickland, 466 U.S. at 693 (citation omitted).
The State never questioned any witness about Mr. Bravo’s 1977 criminal
negligence conviction or his time spent in the state penitentiary. It never alluded to those
matters in its questions, its opening statement, or in its closing argument.
21
No. 36062-8-III
State v. Bravo
In dealing with the October 8 police interview, the State did not play a video or
audio recording for the jury nor did it arrange for each question and answer to be read to
jurors during the State’s case. The prosecutor only asked Detective Varner about a
couple of Mr. Bravo’s statements made during the interview. Instead, he relied on
closing argument to identify the parts of the October 8 interview that he thought were
important, briefly describing the substance and telling the jurors the page numbers on
which those parts could be found. That portion of the prosecutor’s closing argument
consumes six pages of the report of proceedings. See RP at 516-21. As described by the
prosecutor, the important parts of the interview end at page 91, with Mr. Bravo admitting
that he grabbed and shook Ms. Kipp on the day of her death.
As for exhibit 80, the judgment and sentence, the prosecutor offered it at the very
end of the State’s case, immediately before resting. With no witness on the stand, he had
no one to question about it. It was not published to the jury. Since it revealed conviction
for a crime committed negligently, it did not have the same potential for prejudice as the
two prior convictions of drug crimes admitted in the drug prosecution at issue in
Hendrickson.
Neither side advocated that the jury should find Mr. Bravo guilty of second degree
manslaughter, the alternative charge that was similar to his 1977 conviction. Indeed,
neither side advocated that the jury should find him guilty of first degree manslaughter,
the crime the jury decided was committed. Instruction on the lesser included crimes was
22
No. 36062-8-III
State v. Bravo
proposed by the prosecutor, who stated at oral argument of the appeal that he probably
did it out of habit. In retrospect, he observed, it was probably not appropriate to have
instructed the jury on second degree manslaughter, since strangulation is not something
that can be done negligently. Wash. Court of Appeals oral argument, State v. Bravo, No.
36062-8-III (Dec. 5, 2019) at 13 min., 6 sec. through 14 min., 5 sec.8 He defended the
jury as having “got it exactly right” in finding first degree manslaughter, given Dr.
Rappe’s testimony (undisputed by Dr. Wigren) that Ms. Kipp lived for at least four hours.
Wash. Court of Appeals oral argument, supra, at 11 min., 33 sec. through 12 min., 27
sec.
The State presented sufficient evidence of death by strangulation and evidence of
motive. It was undisputed that Mr. Bravo was the last person to see Ms. Kipp alive.
While the defense presented competing forensic evidence as to the cause of death, the
significance that Dr. Wigren attached to Ms. Rambo’s 1991 statement was directly
contradicted by her. Most importantly, Dr. Wigren’s overdose theory was irreconcilable
with Mr. Bravo’s consistent statements to police and his employer that he was only gone
for 10 minutes and returned to find Ms. Kipp dead.
Roughly three hours into deliberations, the jury submitted two questions to the
court that reveal the jurors were interested, properly, in the experts’ competing evidence
8
Available at http://www.courts.wa.gov/appellate_trial_courts/appellateDockets
/index.cfm?fa=appellateDockets.showOralArgAudioList&courtId=a03&docketDate=201
91205.
23
No. 36062-8-III
State v. Bravo
of the cause of death. The jurors had been properly instructed. They deliberated for a
reasonable time. There is nothing in the record that their deliberations went astray
because of something they found in exhibits 23 or 80.
For all of these reasons, Mr. Bravo’s appellate counsel was questioned closely
during oral argument about how Mr. Bravo was prejudiced. She could argue only that,
conceivably, information about Mr. Bravo’s 1977 conviction and incarceration had an
effect on the outcome of the proceedings. She identified nothing tangible that would
undermine confidence in the outcome. She ultimately urged us to focus on deficient
performance, which she characterized as the “nut of the issue.”9 Deficient performance is
only one nut of a two-nut issue, however.
9
In response to a concluding question about how admission of the evidence would
have affected the jury’s deliberation or verdict, counsel argued that while factual issues
are important, they are “not as important as counsel’s error,” continuing,
There was no legitimate reason for letting the J&S in, or the interview
notes. And I think we need to remain focused there, rather than how
exactly did the jury come to this, was it a compromise verdict, was it this
. . . I mean I think we need to remain focused on that, because that’s the
question here, rather than how exactly the jury got to this manslaughter or
should they have considered the manslaughter two rather than manslaughter
one. I mean, I think really we need to get to the nut of the issue, which was
counsel’s choices.
Wash. Court of Appeals oral argument, supra, at 23 min., 3 sec. through 23 min., 43 sec.
24
No. 36062-8-III
State v. Bravo
We find no prejudice. Finding no other error or abuse to discretion, the conviction
is affirmed. We remand with directions to strike the $200 filing fee and $50 sheriff’s
service fee from Mr. Bravo’s judgment and sentence.10
A majority of the panel has determined this opinion will not be printed in the
Washington Appellate Reports, but it will be filed for public record pursuant to RCW
2.06.040.
_____________________________
Siddoway, J.
WE CONCUR:
_____________________________
Korsmo, J.
_____________________________
Pennell, C.J.
10
Mr. Bravo is entitled to the relief in light of Engrossed Second Substitute House
Bill 1783, which became effective June 7, 2018, and prohibits trial courts from imposing
discretionary LFOs on defendants who are indigent at the time of sentencing. LAWS OF
2018, ch. 269, § 6(3). Ramirez holds that the changes apply to cases pending on direct
review, which is the case here.
25