FILED
DECEMBER 9, 2021
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. 37521-8-III
Respondent, )
)
v. )
)
RENE CASTILLO, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION
)
Appellant. )
SIDDOWAY, A.C.J. — At the conclusion of a one-day trial, the jury found Rene
Castillo guilty of felony violation of a no-contact order entered to protect Mr. Castillo’s
teenage son, E.C. At Mr. Castillo’s request, the parties had stipulated to the element that
Mr. Castillo had at least two prior convictions for violating domestic violence protection
orders.
In the defense case, Mr. Castillo sought to establish that he did not knowingly
violate the no-contact order because he misunderstood it. To counter this defense, the
prosecutor questioned defense witnesses about Mr. Castillo’s prior no-contact order
No. 37521-8-III
State v. Castillo
violations. Mr. Castillo contends that this questioning violated the stipulation and,
together with portions of the State’s closing argument, constituted prosecutorial
misconduct. He also contends that the trial court erred in overruling a defense objection,
and that he received ineffective assistance of counsel.
The parties’ stipulation foreclosed the State from offering additional evidence to
support the element of convicted status, but the State did not agree to forego evidence
about the convictions that was relevant to other elements. The prosecutor made a flagrant
error when he stated once in closing argument that he believed Mr. Castillo was guilty,
but Mr. Castillo does not demonstrate that this fleeting, unobjected-to statement rose to
the level of prejudice required for a new trial. For that reason, and because Mr. Castillo
demonstrates no other error or abuse of discretion, we affirm.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
On an October evening in 2019, a state highway patrolman clocked Rene Castillo
speeding on U.S. Route 97 and pulled him over. The patrolman approached the car and
made contact from the passenger’s side, observing that Mr. Castillo was driving, a male
teen was in the front passenger seat, and two young girls were in the back seat. Thinking
the girls in the back might be so young that booster seats were required, he asked the
children’s ages. E.C. told the patrolman that the girls were 8 and 9 and he was 15.
After obtaining Mr. Castillo’s license, registration and insurance information, the
patrolman returned to his car and ran a driver’s check. Among information returned was
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State v. Castillo
that Mr. Castillo was subject to a protection order and the protected person was a 15-
year-old. After confirming that E.C. was the protected person, the patrolman placed Mr.
Castillo under arrest. Arrangements were made for the children to be picked up by
family.
Mr. Castillo had two prior convictions for violating a no-contact order, so the
October 2019 violation was charged as a felony. He proceeded to a one-day jury trial.
On the morning of trial, the prosecutor informed the trial court that the defense
had accepted the offer of an Old Chief1 stipulation that Mr. Castillo had twice been
previously convicted for violating domestic violence court orders. The parties agreed to a
jury instruction, later provided, that said:
The parties have agreed that certain facts are true. You must accept
as true that the person before the court, who has been identified as
Defendant, Rene Castillo, has at least two prior convictions for violating
the provisions of a Domestic Violence Court Order.
The stipulation is to be considered evidence only of the prior
conviction element. You are not to speculate as to the nature of the prior
conviction. You must not consider the stipulation for any other purpose.
Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 59 (Instruction 8).
The State called as witnesses only E.C. and the patrolman who discovered the no-
contact order violation during the traffic stop.
1
Old Chief v. United States, 519 U.S. 172, 180, 117 S. Ct. 644, 136 L. Ed. 2d 574
(1997).
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E.C. testified that at the time his father was stopped for speeding, he, his father,
and his two half-sisters were returning home following a several day trip to Yakima to
visit E.C.’s sister. He testified he did not know until the arrest that his father was court-
ordered not to have contact with him. In cross-examination, defense counsel questioned
E.C. about only one thing: whether he was ever alone with his father. E.C. answered that
his mother or sisters or grandmother were always around.
The highway patrolman testified about the circumstances leading to Mr. Castillo’s
arrest. With entry of the stipulation, the State rested.
In defense counsel’s opening statement, she told jurors she expected to show
“there was a different interpretation on the meaning of that protection order.” Report of
Proceedings (RP) at 153. The different interpretation offered was based on a handwritten
“third party supervision” exception to the otherwise broad language forbidding contact
with E.C.:
Ex. 1, at 1.
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Mr. Castillo’s first witness was Isabelle Baez, E.C.’s mother. Ms. Baez testified
that she knew there was a no-contact order but she never saw it, and her understanding
was that it only prohibited Mr. Castillo from being alone with E.C. She testified that she
never allowed E.C. to be alone with his father and she knew when E.C. traveled with Mr.
Castillo to Yakima that his two half-sisters would be with him.
The prosecutor conducted a contentious cross-examination of Ms. Baez,
questioning her failure to review the no-contact order and her claimed understanding that
it was not violated if E.C.’s eight- and nine-year-old half-sisters—one, a child with
special needs—were present. His questions and Ms. Baez’s answers revealed several
details about Mr. Castillo’s prior convictions. Mr. Castillo attaches importance on appeal
to the underlined information in the following exchanges:
Q: And your 15-year-old son was the subject of a court order that you
decided you didn’t want to see the order. Is that fair?
A: I wasn’t worried about it. He had never—he had never spanked my
son before.
Q: Well, how—
A: And I knew he never—would after that.
Q: So, the fact that your son is being protected from his father by a
court order causes you no concern or no—curiosity as to—as to the
circumstances of what that order is?
A: Well I knew he had to take some classes and he took them. I know
that.
Br. of Appellant at 5-6 (citing RP at 163), and later,
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Q: Is the—is the presence of a no-contact order something that causes
you concern?
A: I’m not—concerned for my son’s safety, if that’s what you’re asking
me—
Q: Okay.—
A: Far from it.
Q: Okay. But you’d agree with me that the court that signed this order
was, weren’t they?
A: To a certain extent I’m sure.
Q: Okay. And—you’re aware that—that there were two other no-
contact order[s] he’s violated, right? He was convicted of?
You’re aware of that, aren’t you? You said you’ve been with him
for what, 20 years?
A: Just because I’m with him for 20 years doesn’t mean I know all his
history.
Q: Well, but he was convicted of—no-contact order violation, wasn’t
he?
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Objection, your Honor
COURT: Basis?
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: There—He’s asking her to speculate
about things that she said she had no knowledge of.
COURT: She can answer if she knows, that question.
A: No.
Q: Okay. So you don’t know anything about the one in 2013.
A: Not to my knowledge. It’s—I’ve never done a no-contact order on
him.
Q: Well, I’m not asking about that; I’m asking if anybody else—if he’s
been—if you’re aware that he was convicted of violating a no-
contact order in 2013. Yes or no.
A: I know he—I know that he got in trouble. I don’t know for what.
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Q: Okay. How about do you know that he was convicted of violating a
no-contact order—in 2018.
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Objection, your Honor.
COURT: Overruled. Can answer if she knows.
A: I don’t know. I don’t know.
Q: Would it surprise you that he was convicted of violating the order in
2018 on the same day this order [exhibit 1] was issued?
Br. of Appellant at 6-8 (last alteration in original) (citing RP at 170-72).
At this point, the defense requested a sidebar and the trial court excused the jury.
The following argument occurred:
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Your Honor, we had—put the stipulation
in, stipulating to the prior no-contact orders, specifically in that keeping out
the dates and incidents of those no-contact orders. I think—violated the
stipulation by introducing the dates of each and every no-contact order and
going into those no-contact orders.
THE COURT: [Addressing the prosecutor] [Y]our response?
[PROSECUTOR]: Your Honor, I’m not violating any stipulation.
She—she put that into issue when she—in her answers. She’s—she’s—
claiming that she’s willfully doesn’t know anything about the no-contact
orders, and I’m asking her if she is aware of any other prior convictions.
I wasn’t getting into the facts and the—the—other convictions except that
there were two prior convictions and the dates.
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: He is providing dates. The stipulation and
the jury instruction—
THE COURT: Well, what’s the concern—Well, whether or not—the
state has the opportunity they can go ahead and provide—have an
opportunity to go ahead and present evidence as to each and every of the
elements that are out there.
Regarding this, this is the first time I’ve ever seen a stipulation done
with regards to a domestic—prior convictions for domestic violence orders
out there. It’s usually because we’re trying to keep something else that is
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No. 37521-8-III
State v. Castillo
out that’s inadmissible, such as the nature of a sex offense or something
that prohibits somebody from—possessing a firearm.
So, with regards to that—what’s—what are you requesting? That
because he—you’re saying he violated the stipulation.
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: I think that the date should be stricken
because I think it’s prejudicial.
THE COURT: All right. Overruled.
RP at 173-74.
Mr. Castillo testified in his direct examination that he was aware of the no-contact
order at the time of the traffic stop but did not believe it was violated if his daughters
were present. Defense counsel handed him exhibit 1 and, directing his attention to
specific language, asked him to read it. He answered:
A (Inaudible) third party—suspense—contact is allowed. Or,—
(inaudible). Supervised contact is allowed.
Q And what does that mean to you.
A To me it’s—to me—it means that—(inaudible) I’m not—if—if we
are in a group as we—as we were, with my two daughters and my
son, that’s—I mean—that’s okay. And it was okay. I mean, I—.
If I—I did not—if that isn’t so then I did not do this (inaudible), to—
to (inaudible).
RP at 178. Defense counsel asked Mr. Castillo about the nature of his daughter’s special
needs and he testified, “She just can’t talk,” but she could write, and “she understands
everything.” RP at 179.
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No. 37521-8-III
State v. Castillo
In cross-examining Mr. Castillo, the prosecutor challenged the notion that his
eight- and nine-year-old daughters could provide “third party supervised contact” with
E.C.
When the time came for closing arguments, the prosecutor began his as follows:
Before I start [ap]plying the law that the court—has given you to the
evidence and trying to persuade you why I believe that the defendant is
guilty and why he is in fact guilty, I’d like to talk a little bit about the
instructions the court gave you about certain types of evidence (inaudible)
instructions.
RP at 213 (emphasis added). Defense counsel did not object. The prosecutor did not
speak again of whether or why he believed Mr. Castillo was guilty.
Later, the prosecutor argued to jurors that there were ways of getting out of a
restraining order, such as appeal, but “you can’t ignore it and you can’t twist its
meaning.” RP at 216. He argued this was especially true after someone has been
punished for violating two no-contact orders already. Addressing Mr. Castillo’s asserted
understanding that he did not violate the order if other people were present, the
prosecutor argued:
He didn’t just violate a provision of the order; he violated the order,
the spirit of the order and the purpose of what the order is there for. The
order is for the protection of his son. It says don’t go to his home, don’t go
to his school, don’t go to his workplace, don’t be within 1,000 feet of him.
But somehow, the defendant thinks if he has a warm body available, he can
say, “Well, it was other people—as long as I have other people around then
I—I’m not going to violate the order.”
Well, that’s not right. I mean, yeah, as we go through life with our
children, as long as there’s other people around if you’re inclined to beat
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No. 37521-8-III
State v. Castillo
your child you’re probably not going to beat your child when other people
are around. But this is a special case. This is a guy who’s violated no-
contact orders in the past, that knows there’s consequences for him, and he
chooses to violate ‘em anyway, and he says, “Well, I got my— a ten-year-
old.” What’s a ten-year-old—ten-year-old’s going to tell her dad not to
violate the order?
RP at 218. On appeal, Mr. Castillo emphasizes the prosecutor’s statement “you’re
probably not going to beat your child when other people are around,” but no objection to
that statement was made at trial.
Defense counsel argued in closing that nothing in the order told Mr. Castillo “what
a supervisor is or what a third party is.” RP at 222. She argued that jurors should
reasonably doubt that Mr. Castillo knowingly violated the no-contact order.
Instead, the jury found Mr. Castillo guilty as charged and made a special finding
that the violation was a domestic violence offense. The court imposed a standard range
sentence. Mr. Castillo appeals.
ANALYSIS
Mr. Castillo contends on appeal that he was denied a fair trial through a
combination of prosecutorial misconduct, trial court error and ineffective assistance of
counsel. We address the alleged errors in that order. First, however, we review the
extent to which ER 403 does and does not limit the State’s ability to present evidence of a
defendant’s prior convictions.
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I. ER 403 AND OLD CHIEF
In Old Chief, the United States Supreme Court held that in a federal prosecution
for felon in possession of a firearm, the nature of the defendant’s prior crime of
conviction is not irrelevant, but it can be unfairly prejudicial under Federal Rule of
Evidence 403. 519 U.S. at 179. The risk of prejudice will be substantial if the evidence
offered by the State “would be arresting enough to lure a juror into a sequence of bad
character reasoning.” Id. at 185. The Court held that “what counts as the Rule 403
‘probative value’ of an item of evidence, as distinct from its Rule 401 ‘relevance,’ may
be calculated by comparing evidentiary alternatives,” so when a defendant offers to admit
convicted felon status, and the admission has “no cognizable difference” from the official
record a prosecutor would prefer to use, the court will err if it spurns the admission. Id.
at 184, 191.
The Court recognized, however, that many times there will be a relevant,
admissible, cognizable difference between a defendant’s admission and evidence of the
prior conviction that the prosecutor proposes to offer. Accordingly, “[t]he issue of
substituting one statement for the other normally arises only when the record of
conviction would not be admissible for any purpose beyond proving status, so that
excluding it would not deprive the prosecution of evidence with multiple utility.” Id. at
190. It continued, “[I]f, indeed, there were a justification for receiving evidence of the
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nature of prior acts on some issue other than status . . . Rule 404(b) guarantees the
opportunity to seek its admission.” Id.
Applying ER 403,Washington courts have adopted Old Chief’s exception to the
State’s general right to prove its case by evidence of its own choosing. State v. Taylor,
193 Wn.2d 691, 699, 444 P.3d 1194 (2019). The Washington Supreme Court has
acknowledged the narrowness of the exception; in Taylor, it observed that past crimes
can prove multiple elements of a current charged offense. Id. at 700.
The parties’ positions on appeal present the question of how the trial court
properly addresses the situation where the State stipulates to a defendant’s prior
convictions and only later sees that they are relevant to an unanticipated defense. “‘A
“stipulation” is an express waiver that concedes, for purposes of trial, the truth of some
alleged fact, with the effect that one party need offer no evidence to prove it and the other
is not allowed to disprove it.’” Id. at 697 (quoting State v. Case, 187 Wn.2d 85, 90, 384
P.3d 1140 (2016)) (emphasis added). It is not, as Mr. Castillo would characterize it, a
promise by the State not to offer evidence of the prior conviction for any purpose. 2
2
Conceivably, the State could make such a promise, just as it can make binding
promises in the plea bargain context. E.g., State v. Harrison, 148 Wn.2d 550, 556, 61
P.3d 1104 (2003). But we doubt the State would make such a promise, and it did not
make such a promise here. Nothing in the parties’ stipulation foreclosed the State from
offering evidence of Mr. Castillo’s prior convictions for a purpose other than the mere
fact that they exist.
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The issue presented when the State stipulates to the existence of a prior conviction
and later wishes to offer evidence about the prior conviction for a different purpose is the
ER 403 issue addressed in Old Chief: does the State’s evidence have a significance in the
current prosecution different from the status the defendant has admitted? And does its
probative value outweigh its prejudicial effect? Cf. State v. Feely, 192 Wn. App. 751,
768, 368 P.3d 514 (2016) (where an order in limine restricts the use of ER 404(b)
evidence to a particular purpose, the State may seek court permission to offer it for
another ER 404(b) purpose). With that in mind, we turn to Mr. Castillo’s assignments of
error.
II. PROSECUTORIAL MISCONDUCT
Mr. Castillo contends the State committed prosecutorial misconduct in two ways:
by revealing to jurors details about his prior convictions and by improper closing
argument.
Prosecutorial misconduct is not attorney misconduct in the sense of violating rules
of professional conduct. State v. Fisher, 165 Wn.2d 727, 740 n.1, 202 P.3d 937 (2009).
It is, instead, a term of art that refers to “prosecutorial mistakes or actions [that] are not
harmless and deny a defendant [a] fair trial.” Id. To succeed on a prosecutorial
misconduct claim, an appellant has the burden of establishing that the prosecutor’s
conduct was improper (as being at least mistaken) and was prejudicial. State v. Stenson,
132 Wn.2d 668, 718-19, 940 P.2d 1239 (1997). To show prejudice requires that the
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No. 37521-8-III
State v. Castillo
defendant show a substantial likelihood that the misconduct affected the jury verdict.
In re Pers. Restraint of Glasmann, 175 Wn.2d 696, 704, 286 P.3d 673 (2012).
A. Revealing details about Mr. Castillo’s prior convictions
Mr. Castillo contends the State improperly and prejudicially revealed to jurors five
facts about his prior convictions. Jurors learned from Ms. Baez that Mr. Castillo had
once spanked E.C., and that Mr. Castillo had been required to take some classes
connected to the no-contact order. The prosecutor’s questions suggested that one of the
prior convictions was in 2013, one was in 2018, and the latter conviction occurred on the
same day as the order Mr. Castillo was currently charged with violating.
To begin with, we agree with the State that Ms. Baez’s testimony that Mr. Castillo
spanked E.C. and that he had to take classes could not possibly be characterized as
prosecutorial misconduct because those matters were volunteered by her,
nonresponsively. Asked by the prosecutor if it was fair to say she did not want to see the
no-contact order protecting E.C., she answered, “I wasn’t worried about it. He had never
—he had never spanked my son before.” RP at 163. Asked by the prosecutor if she was
not concerned or curious about the no-contact order in place in 2019, she answered,
“Well I knew he had to take some classes and he took them.” RP at 163. The prosecutor
asked no follow-up questions about the spanking or the classes. Mr. Castillo does not
demonstrate that the prosecutor’s questions were improper; the fact that there was no
objection to either question suggests that defense counsel did not perceive them as
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No. 37521-8-III
State v. Castillo
improper at the time. E.g., State v. Gauthier, 189 Wn. App. 30, 38-39, 354 P.3d 900
(2015) (defense counsel’s decision not to object or request a curative instruction strongly
suggests that the argument or event in question did not appear critically prejudicial to an
appellant in the context of the trial).
The prosecutor’s questions to Ms. Baez about prior convictions occurring in 2013
and 2018 were relevant cross-examination after she claimed to believe that Mr. Castillo
was only prohibited from being alone with E.C. Faced with defense witnesses portraying
confusion on the part of Castillo family members, the State had the right to explore
whether there was bona fide confusion or whether, instead, Ms. Baez and Mr. Castillo
had good reason to be knowledgeable about the no-contact order’s terms but did not take
it seriously. Evidence is relevant if it has “any tendency to make the existence of any fact
that is of consequence to the determination of the action more probable than it would be
without the evidence.” ER 401. It represents a low bar, such that “[e]ven minimally
relevant evidence is admissible.” State v. Darden, 145 Wn.2d 612, 621, 41 P.3d 1189
(2002). Generally, evidence is relevant to attack a witness’ credibility or to show bias or
prejudice. State v. Lee, 188 Wn.2d 473, 488, 396 P.3d 316 (2017) (citing Davis v.
Alaska, 415 U.S. 308, 316, 94 S. Ct. 1105, 39 L. Ed. 2d 347 (1974)).
Mr. Castillo could object to the prosecutor’s questions, of course, and eventually
he did, as we discuss in section III. But asking a question that draws an objection (even
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No. 37521-8-III
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an objection that is sustained) does not, standing alone, demonstrate the “improper”
conduct required for prosecutorial misconduct.
Nor does Mr. Castillo make a persuasive case that revealing the dates of the
convictions was prejudicial. He contends on appeal that revealing the dates made clear to
jurors that Mr. Castillo “had a long history of violating orders, going back at least six
years,” Br. of Appellant at 12, but it is pure speculation that lacking that information
jurors would have made more favorable assumptions about Mr. Castillo’s conviction
history. He argues that “by revealing that the very order Castillo was now accused of
violating was entered the same day as his 2018 conviction, the prosecutor conveyed to
jurors that Castillo was not just violating orders, he was treating them with contempt and
disdain.” Id. He does not explain why the common dates reveal a contempt and disdain
for court orders that other violations would not. The prosecutor’s question implied that
the prior violation also involved E.C., which might be prejudicial to Mr. Castillo, but not
unfairly so. That is a permissible use of information about a prior conviction. State v.
Nguyen, 10 Wn. App. 2d 797, 820-21, 450 P.3d 630 (2019) (evidence of prior
convictions “as part of [the State’s] narrative of [the defendant’s] ‘thoughts and actions in
perpetrating the offense’” is permissible) (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Old
Chief, 519 U.S. at 192).
And we note, on the issue of prejudice, that the trial court overruled what might
have been a misconduct-based objection by Mr. Castillo that the prosecutor “violated the
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stipulation by introducing the dates . . . and going into those no-contact orders.” RP at
173. When a defendant has complained of prosecutorial misconduct in the trial court, we
will give deference to the trial court’s ruling on the matter, because it is in the best
position to determine if prosecutorial misconduct prejudiced a defendant’s right to a fair
trial. Stenson, 132 Wn.2d at 719.
B. Closing argument
Mr. Castillo contends it was misconduct for the prosecutor to say, in introducing
his closing argument, “Before I start [ap]plying the law that the court—has given you to
the evidence and trying to persuade you why I believe the defendant is guilty and why he
is in fact guilty, I’d like to talk a little bit about the instructions . . . .” RP at 213
(emphasis added). No objection was made in the trial court. When a defendant fails to
object in the trial court to a prosecutor’s statements, he waives his right to raise a
challenge on appeal unless the remark was so flagrant and ill-intentioned that it evinced
an enduring and resulting prejudice that could not have been neutralized by an
admonition to the jury. Stenson, 132 Wn.2d at 719.
To say to jurors, “I believe the defendant is guilty” is a paradigm of improper
conduct by a prosecutor. The “fair trial” to which a defendant is constitutionally entitled
“certainly implies a trial in which the attorney representing the state does not throw the
prestige of his public office, information from its records, and the expression of his own
belief of guilt into the scales against the accused.” State v. Case, 49 Wn.2d 66, 71, 298
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P.2d 500 (1956); Glasmann, 175 Wn.2d at 704. It is “well established that a prosecutor
cannot use his or her position of power and prestige to sway the jury and may not express
an individual opinion of the defendant’s guilt, independent of the evidence actually in the
case.” Glasmann, 175 Wn.2d at 706.
The State concedes it was misconduct for the prosecutor to speak of his belief in
Mr. Castillo’s guilt. It argues, however, that not only was it not a theme of the
prosecutor’s closing, the prosecutor never spoke of his personal beliefs again. Given its
place in the argument, the State suggests it was an “awkward segue into a discussion of
the Court’s instructions.” Br. of Resp’t at 14.
Relying on State v. McKenzie, 157 Wn.2d 44, 53-54, 134 P.3d 221 (2006), Mr.
Castillo argues that because the State concedes the comment was an improper statement
of opinion, it was prejudicial. Reply Br. of Appellant at 5. That is not what McKenzie
says. In that case, the Supreme Court rejected a claim of prosecutorial misconduct
because it construed the complained-of statements in closing argument as suggesting
inferences from the evidence rather than the personal opinion of the prosecutor. 157
Wn.2d at 54-56. But it then addressed how it would evaluate prejudice if the prosecutor
had improperly stated a personal opinion:
Moreover, even if we were to conclude that the references were improper,
we could not deem them to be “so flagrant and ill-intentioned [as to]
cause[ ] an enduring and resulting prejudice that could not have been
neutralized by a curative instruction to the jury.” [State v. ]Brown, 132
Wn.2d [529,] 561, [940 P.2d 546 (1997)] (emphasis added). We note that,
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No. 37521-8-III
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had defense counsel objected to the first of the four instances, the alleged
harm would not have been compounded and would have been readily cured
by an instruction to the jury. In any case, particularly when placed in the
context of the whole argument, the evidence referred to in the argument,
and the court’s prior instructions to the jury, the challenged comments do
not rise to the level of prejudice required for a new trial.
Id. at 57 (footnote omitted). Prejudice remains to be examined.
While a prosecutor’s statement of personal belief in a defendant’s guilt clearly
violates the prosecutor’s role in a criminal trial, the statement in this case was so fleeting,
and so divorced from the remainder of the prosecutor’s argument, that it could not have
caused an enduring prejudice. As was true in McKenzie, the challenged comment could
have been readily cured by instruction and does not rise to the level of prejudice required
for a new trial.
III. THE TRIAL COURT DID NOT ABUSE ITS DISCRETION IN OVERRULING MR.
CASTILLO’S OBJECTION TO QUESTIONS ABOUT PRIOR CONVICTIONS
Mr. Castillo contends the trial court erred by overruling his objection when the
prosecutor identified the dates of his prior convictions when cross-examining Ms. Baez.
Only two objections to those questions were made.3 When the prosecutor asked Ms.Baez
if she knew about Mr. Castillo’s conviction in 2018 for violating a no-contact order,
defense counsel objected, but without identifying a ground for her objection. It was only
3
Defense counsel objected when the prosecutor asked Ms. Baez about Mr.
Castillo’s prior convictions, with no reference to dates, stating “[h]e’s asking her to
speculate about things that she said she had no knowledge of.” RP at 171. The court’s
ruling—that “[s]he can answer if she knows”—is not challenged on appeal. Id.
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when the prosecutor asked Ms. Baez the following question that defense counsel objected
on the basis of the stipulation and alleged prejudice:
Q Would it surprise you that he was convicted of violating the order in
2018 on the same day this order was issued?
RP at 172.
To predicate error on a ruling admitting evidence, a party must make a timely
objection, stating the specific ground unless the ground was apparent. ER 103(a)(1). A
claim of error in applying the evidence rules is reviewed for abuse of discretion. State v.
Orn, 197 Wn.2d 343, 351, 482 P.3d 913 (2021).
If error, the only evidentiary ruling as to which error was preserved is the trial
court’s ruling on this last question. RAP 2.5(a). Defense counsel’s exact objection was:
Your Honor, we had—put the stipulation in, stipulating to the prior no-
contact orders, specifically in that keeping out the dates and incidents those
no-contact orders. I think—violated the stipulation by introducing the dates
of each and every no-contact order and going into those no-contact orders.
RP at 173.
The prosecutor responded that he was not violating the stipulation, and Ms. Baez’s
direct testimony put her knowledge of Mr. Castillo’s violations at issue. After hearing
that response, the trial court pointed out the State’s right to “present evidence as to each
and every of the elements” [sic], questioned the reason for the stipulation, and asked
defense counsel, “[W]hat are you requesting? That because he—you’re saying he
violated the stipulation.” RP at 173-74. Defense counsel replied, “I think that the date
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No. 37521-8-III
State v. Castillo
should be stricken because I think it’s prejudicial.” RP at 174. Defense counsel cited no
rule and offered no explanation of the prejudice. It is not clear whether she was objecting
to the questions as misconduct, or under ER 403, or both. The objection was overruled.
Id.
The questions did not violate the stipulation, and if the objection was misconduct-
based, we defer to the trial court on the issue of prejudice, as earlier noted. It is not
apparent that the dates were prejudicial, and defense counsel offered no explanation why
she believed they were. No abuse of discretion is shown.
IV. INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL IS NOT SHOWN
As an alternative to his contention that it was prosecutorial misconduct for the
prosecutor to state a belief in his guilt, Mr. Castillo submits that he received ineffective
assistance of counsel when his lawyer failed to object. He also contends he received
ineffective assistance of trial counsel in two other instances: when his lawyer failed to
object to evidence that the no-contact order he was charged with violating stemmed from
spanking his son and when she failed to object to the admission of exhibit 1 (the order he
was charged with violating) without insisting on redactions.
To demonstrate ineffective assistance of counsel, a defendant must show 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
21
No. 37521-8-III
State v. Castillo
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 one prong, the court need not consider the other. State v.
Hendrickson, 129 Wn.2d 61, 78, 917 P.2d 563 (1996).
For this court to find deficient performance, the defendant must establish “that
counsel made errors so serious that counsel was not functioning as the ‘counsel’
guaranteed the defendant by the Sixth Amendment [to the United States Contitution].”
State v. Grier, 171 Wn.2d 17, 32-33, 246 P.3d 1260 (2011) (quoting State v. Thomas, 109
Wn.2d 222, 225-26, 743 P.2d 816 (1987)). There is “‘a strong presumption that
counsel’s performance was reasonable.’” Id. at 33 (quoting State v. Kyllo, 166 Wn.2d
856, 862, 215 P.3d 177 (2009).
Opinion on Guilt
Had defense counsel objected to the prosecutor’s statement that he believed Mr.
Castillo was guilty, the objection presumably would have been sustained. Nevertheless,
as the State points out, lawyers commonly forego even valid objections during closing
argument. Jurors interested in the parties’ summations can find objections annoying
rather than enlightening and in this case, defense counsel would be objecting to the first
statement out of the prosecutor’s mouth following his salutation to the judge and jury. If
(as the State suggests) the prosecutor’s first statement came across more as segue than
substance, an objection might be viewed by jurors as nitpicking. Defense counsel knew
22
No. 37521-8-III
State v. Castillo
there would be an opportunity to object to any further statement of personal opinion by
the prosecutor. In short, the decision not to object could have been legitimately tactical.
Mr. Castillo also fails to show prejudice. As he acknowledges, the only disputed
issue at trial was whether the State proved a knowing violation of the no-contact order.
His evidence and argument on that issue were fully developed. We are unpersuaded that
the prosecutor’s fleeting statement of opinion created a reasonable probability that jurors
would be distracted from deciding that issue on the merits. We are unpersuaded that the
failure to object could have made a difference.
Evidence of spanking
Mr. Castillo next argues that his lawyer should have objected when the prosecutor
posed to Ms. Baez a question about the no-contact order that led her to reveal that the
current order stemmed from Mr. Castillo spanking E.C. He characterizes the revelation
as harmful, because it was “a spanking so severe it necessitated a court’s intervention and
protection.” Br. of Appellant at 18.
To demonstrate that his trial lawyer’s failure to object fell below an objective
standard of reasonableness, a defendant must demonstrate that the objection would have
been sustained. In re Pers. Restraint of Davis, 152 Wn.2d 647, 748, 101 P.3d 1 (2004).
As previously observed, Ms. Baez’s answer about the spanking was volunteered and
nonresponsive. Mr. Castillo suggests that the trial court’s own comments demonstrate
that an objection on relevance grounds would have been sustained, however. He points
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No. 37521-8-III
State v. Castillo
out that during the sidebar at the conclusion of Ms. Baez’s testimony, the trial court said
it doubted more than “one question or two questions . . . during both parties’ questioning
of Ms. Baez” was admissible evidence. RP at 174.
The trial court was speaking of Ms. Baez’s examination by both sides, and we can
infer what it had in mind: Ms. Baez’s understanding of what was prohibited by the no-
contact order was either speculative and irrelevant, or, if it was based on what she was
told by Mr. Castillo, it was inadmissible hearsay. That said, however, because the
defense opened the door, the trial court was unlikely to shut the door to the State. E.g.,
State v. Gefeller, 76 Wn.2d 449, 455, 458 P.2d 17 (1969) (“It would be a curious rule of
evidence which allowed one party to bring up a subject, drop it at a point where it might
appear advantageous to him, and then bar the other party from all further inquiries about
it.”). That the court would not have sustained an objection is borne out by what it later
did: when defense counsel eventually objected to the prosecutor “going into those no-
contact orders,” the court overruled the objection. RP at 173-74. Mr. Castillo does not
demonstrate that an objection to the prosecutor’s question would have been sustained.
Here, too, Mr. Castillo does not demonstrate prejudice. For the jurors to hear that
Mr. Castillo gave E.C. a spanking, particularly one that did not concern Ms. Baez, was
less prejudicial than the evidence that Mr. Castillo had a history of conduct serious
enough to result in no-contact orders and two convictions for violating them.
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No. 37521-8-III
State v. Castillo
We also reject Mr. Castillo’s argument that when the prosecutor stated in closing
argument, “you’re probably not going to beat your child when other people are around,”
he was talking about the spanking and about Mr. Castillo. RP at 218 (emphasis added).
The point of that part of the prosecutor’s argument is not entirely clear, but if he was
talking about Mr. Castillo and the spanking, there would be no reason not to say so. It
appears, instead, that the prosecutor was talking about whether “third party supervised
contact is allowed” language in a no-contact order merely requires the presence of some
“other people” or is much more restrictive.
Exhibit 1
Finally, Mr. Castillo contends his lawyer provided deficient representation when
she did not object to the admission of exhibit 1 (the no-contact order) unless redacted to
hide (1) a marked box near the top of the first page reading “Post-Conviction,” (2) its
statement that Mr. Castillo “has been charged with, arrested for, or convicted of a
domestic violence offense,” and (3) a marked box stating that it is a postconviction order
prohibiting possession of firearms. Ex. 1, at 1; Br. of Appellant at 20. In Taylor, our
Supreme Court held that in a prosecution for felony violation of a no-contact order, the
State is entitled to have the order admitted as evidence. 193 Wn.2d at 703. The issue of
whether such an order can be redacted was not preserved in Taylor, but the Court
commented that “a trial court may redact any portion of a no-contact order that poses a
risk of unfair prejudice.” Id. at 702.
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No. 37521-8-III
State v. Castillo
The State responds to this claim of ineffective assistance by arguing that defense
counsel could have made the tactical judgment that juror speculation about redactions
would be more prejudicial than the information redacted. In reply, appellate counsel
provides a proposed redacted exhibit 1 on which nothing is blacked out—instead, it has
three blocks of white space that may or may not be recognizable as redactions. See Reply
Br. of Appellant (App.).
Appellate counsel’s proposed redaction of the exhibit is the best that could have
been achieved, but it does not refute the possibility that defense counsel had tactical
reasons for not requesting redaction. First, in appellate counsel’s best-case redaction, two
of the blocks of white space are anomalous, appearing as they do in the body of a
document that is otherwise packed with small single-spaced text. And the first block of
white space appearing in the body of the order is followed by an incomplete sentence. At
least two of the redactions were discernable as redactions, then, albeit less so than if text
was obviously blacked out.
Perhaps more importantly, the jury was aware that at the time of the traffic stop
Mr. Castillo was subject to the no-contact order protecting E.C. and that he had two prior
convictions for violating provisions of a domestic violence court order. Defense counsel
could have reasonably concluded that it would be better for the jury to understand that
Mr. Castillo had a history of two domestic violence incidents (two convictions and an
associated no-contact order) than to assume that he had a history of three domestic
26
No. 37521-8-III
State v. Castillo
violence incidents (two convictions and a third, unassociated no-contact order). Deficient
representation is not shown.
Affirmed.4
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, A.C.J.
WE CONCUR:
_____________________________
Fearing, J.
_____________________________
Staab, J.
4
Mr. Castillo also assigns error under the cumulative error doctrine, which applies
when the trial court’s multiple errors combine to deny the defendant a fair trial. State v.
Lazcano, 188 Wn. App. 338, 370, 354 P.3d 233 (2015). It has no application where, as
here, multiple errors are not found.
27