FILED
DECEMBER 21, 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. 37634-6-III
Respondent, )
)
v. )
)
SARAH JESSICA PORTER, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION
)
Appellant. )
SIDDOWAY, J. — Sarah Porter appeals convictions for felony harassment and
felony violation of a protection order. She challenges the sufficiency of the evidence,
alleged instructional error, and the admission of certain evidence. We find no error or
abuse of discretion and affirm.
No. 37634-6-III
State v. Porter
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Sarah and Michael Porter were married for seven years before divorcing in 2015.
Ms. Porter was awarded sole custody of their twin children for several years. Michael1
struggled during the marriage and for a time thereafter with brain damage from an injury
sustained while in the military, but he obtained treatment, and sometime in 2018, he was
awarded visitation with the children. Ms. Porter refused to follow the court’s visitation
order, leading to sole custody of the children being awarded to Michael in September
2018.
Concerning behavior by Ms. Porter escalated the day Michael assumed custody.
He picked up the children from school and drove to his home, where Ms. Porter was
trying to break in. Upon Michael’s arrival with his parents and the children, and the
arrival in a separate car of his girlfriend and her children, Ms. Porter attacked all of them,
physically assaulting Michael and his father.
Michael had sought a protection order for himself a couple of months earlier, and
after the attack, he sought and obtained an order that protected the children as well. The
protection order prohibited Ms. Porter from (among other things), contacting Michael or
the children directly or indirectly, attempting or threatening to cause them bodily injury,
1
Given the common last name, we refer to Michael Porter by his first name for
ease in reading. We intend no disrespect.
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State v. Porter
or knowingly coming within 1,000 feet of their home or Michael’s workplace. Ms.
Porter continually failed to abide by the protection order.
In June 2019, on what was the children’s birthday, Ms. Porter called 911 and
requested a welfare check of Michael’s home. Among her requests of the dispatcher was
to “[m]ake sure [officers] do a search.” Report of Proceedings (RP) at 270. The 911
dispatcher relayed the information to Officer Jason Ramsey, who called Ms. Porter to
follow up. Officer Ramsey would later testify it was not uncommon for Ms. Porter to
request welfare checks on her children. Officer Ramsey’s supervisor, Corporal Josh
Ingraham would testify similarly, estimating that although he was only one of 27 officers
in the Ellensburg Police Department, he had personally had 15 to 20 contacts with Ms.
Porter about her concerns for her children or something concerning Michael.
When Officer Ramsey called Ms. Porter on June 2, Ms. Porter explained to the
officer that Michael was supposed to have turned in his weapons and she believed he still
had weapons in the home. Officer Ramsey spoke to Corporal Ingraham about the call.
Satisfied that Ms. Porter’s concerns about Michael’s weapons had been taken care of
previously, no one from the department performed the welfare check and search she had
requested.
Later in the day, Ms. Porter called 911 a second time. It is uncontested that Ms.
Porter was screaming during the second phone call. She was understood by police
department personnel to threaten to kill Mr. Porter.
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State v. Porter
Even later in the day, 911 was contacted with a request to perform a welfare check
on Ms. Porter. Reportedly, she was making statements about self-harm and harming
others. Corporal Ingraham and Officer Ramsey sought to locate her based not only on
that report, but also on two other citizen reports to 911 of erratic behavior by a woman
meeting Ms. Porter’s description, and which turned out to be her. The citizen callers
reported seeing a woman in the middle of the road, seemingly trying to be hit by cars, and
at one point throwing a brick-sized rock at a car.
Corporal Ingraham and Officer Ramsey located Ms. Porter, handcuffed her, and
transported her to the Kittitas Valley Hospital to have her evaluated by mental health
professionals. Corporal Ingraham then contacted Michael to let him know of Ms.
Porter’s threats against him. Michael had already received a call from a 911 dispatcher
informing him of Ms. Porter’s threats.
Ms. Porter was charged with felony harassment (threat to kill) and felony violation
of a protection order.
Before trial, defense counsel raised a concern about Michael testifying to the
couple’s contentious history other than Ms. Porter’s two prior convictions for violating
orders. The State was required to prove the prior convictions as an element of the felony
violation of a protection order charge. The State responded that to establish felony
harassment it was required to prove Michael’s reasonable fear that the threat would be
carried out, so it intended to offer some evidence of the couple’s deteriorated relationship
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State v. Porter
and Ms. Porter’s escalating behaviors. The trial court declined to issue a ruling, stating it
would “see how the questions are asked and how the answers come out.” RP at 38.
During trial, the State offered an audio recording of all the 911 calls. The defense
had no objection. Indeed, in opening statement, defense counsel told jurors, “[Y]ou’re
going to hear, and I hope, and I pray that you will listen very carefully to the evidence
that’s admitted as I anticipate the State will play the 9-1-1 call, which is actually what she
said.” RP at 191. The recording of the calls was admitted as exhibit 2 and was played
for jurors once during the trial.
Ms. Porter raised no objections to the State’s proposed jury instructions. At the
conclusion of the evidence, the trial court read its instructions to the jury and, according
to the verbatim report of proceedings, mistakenly inserted the word “or” in reading the
elements instruction for the felony violation of a protection order charge. The defense
did not object.
In closing argument, the lawyers disagreed about what Ms. Porter could be heard
saying in the critical, second recorded call to 911. The prosecutor began her closing
argument:
[PROSECUTOR]: Thank you. Kill Michael Porter. Kill Michael
Porter. It’s the first things you hear on the 9-1-1 call. And I know it’s hard
to hear, especially here in court and listening for the first time. You will—
you will have the 9-1-1 calls to listen to, as admitted exhibits, and I
encourage you to listen to them.
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State v. Porter
Repeatedly Sarah Porter says kill Michael Porter. Get my kids for
me. Kill them for me, would you? Kill Michael Porter. Kill him. He
should have done it himself. I should have done it. I’m not the bad guy,
but I will fucking do it. Kill Michael Porter. I am going to kill someone.
These are all direct quotes from the 9-1-1 call that Sarah Porter
made, of her own accord, to KittCom[2] on June 2nd, 2019 . . . .
....
Now, defense, in—in his opening statements, said you listen to the
9-1-1, don’t believe the prosecutor. And I agree with [defense counsel]
100%. Don’t go by my words to find Sarah Porter guilty, go by her words
because she’s the one that called 9-1-1 and said over and over again that
she wanted to kill Michael Porter. She wanted him killed. That she was
going to kill him.
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Objection. Facts not in evidence.
THE COURT: Alright. The jury will decide what the facts are in
this case.
[PROSECUTOR]: The facts are as indicated by Sarah Porter’s
words on the 9-1-1 call. Just because [defense counsel] couldn’t hear what
Sarah Porter said or that he disagrees with it, doesn’t mean that you can’t.
Listen to the 9-1-1 call. The 9-1-1 operator, Officer Ingraham, everyone
who heard it agreed, and—and you can agree too by when you listen to the
evidence for yourself. Don’t take my word for it, listen to the evidence.
It’s on there. I’m going to kill someone. Direct quote in the fourth phone
call at fifty seconds in. Kill Michael Porter—those are the first things she
says on there.
RP at 315-17. In defense counsel’s closing argument, he responded:
[A]s we talked about in jury instruction—or in voir dire, you guys just get
the snapshot, and you have to decide what happened that day. Okay? It’s
not how I hear it; it’s not how the State hears it; it’s how you hear it. It’s
how you decide what happened that day and whether or not my client
threatened to kill Michael Porter. I would beg you and implore you, don’t
2
KITTCOM is a 911 center that serves public safety agencies in Kittitas County.
See www.kittcom.org/ (last visited Dec. 9, 2021).
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No. 37634-6-III
State v. Porter
just listen to the one tape that we’ve been focused on. Listen to all of the
tapes to see what she said. Was there ever any intent to kill Michael Porter
that day?
RP at 326. Later, defense counsel said,
If she is calling 9-1-1, is she evidencing a serious expression that she
wants to go kill him? Wouldn’t that be the last people you were going to
say that to? This is a cry for help. She had talked to them, as Officer
Ingraham testified, several times. Numerous times. And she continued to
talk to them and was trying to get their attention to get some help. That’s
what this was. Listen to the tape. You will hear that. It wasn’t all directed
at Michael Porter. She said she was going to stab herself in the head.
RP at 328.
Jurors were excused to begin deliberations at 9:58 a.m. They had reached a
verdict and the parties had reconvened by 11:26 a.m. The jury found Ms. Porter guilty as
charged. She appeals.
ANALYSIS
Ms. Porter challenges the sufficiency of the evidence, complains of instructional
error, and contends that the trial court abused its discretion in allowing excessive
evidence that should have been excluded under ER 403 or 404.
I. SUFFICIENCY CHALLENGE
To convict Ms. Porter of felony harassment under RCW 9A.46.020, the State was
required to prove 1) she knowingly threatened to kill Michael; and 2) her words or
conduct placed Michael in reasonable fear that the threat to kill would be carried out.
RCW 9A.46.020(2)(b)(ii); State v. C.G., 150 Wn.2d 604, 607, 80 P.3d 594 (2003). Ms.
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No. 37634-6-III
State v. Porter
Porter’s first and second assignments of error contend that the State’s evidence of these
two elements was insufficient.
“Under both the federal and state constitutions, due process requires that the State
prove every element of a crime beyond a reasonable doubt.” State v. Johnson, 188
Wn.2d 742, 750, 399 P.3d 507 (2017). In reviewing a claim for insufficient evidence, we
consider “‘whether, after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the
prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime
beyond a reasonable doubt.’” Id. at 751 (quoting State v. Green, 94 Wn.2d 216, 221, 616
P.2d 628 (1980)). “A claim of insufficiency admits the truth of the State’s evidence and
all inferences that reasonably can be drawn therefrom.” State v. Salinas, 119 Wn.2d 192,
201, 829 P.2d 1068 (1992). “[A]ll reasonable inferences from the evidence must be
drawn in favor of the State and interpreted most strongly against the defendant.” Id.
We defer to the fact finder on the resolution of conflicting testimony, credibility
determinations, and the persuasiveness of the evidence. State v. Thomas, 150 Wn.2d 821,
874-75, 83 P.3d 970 (2004).
Central to Ms. Porter’s argument of evidence insufficiency are gaps in the part of
the verbatim report of proceedings of the trial that reports the playing of the exhibit 2
recording of the 911 calls. Ms. Porter argues that it cannot be determined from the
verbatim report of the trial whether she ever made a threat at all, given many parts of the
playing of the recording that are designated “inaudible” and “muffled.” But the evidence
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No. 37634-6-III
State v. Porter
of the 911 call was not the verbatim report created after the trial was over. It was exhibit
2. Ms. Porter failed to designate exhibit 2 as part of the record on appeal. See Index,
Designation of Clerk’s Papers, Washington v. Porter, Ct. of Appeals No. 37643-6-III
(July 21, 2020) (on file with court).
“The party presenting an issue for review has the burden of providing an adequate
record to establish such error.” State v. Sisouvanh, 175 Wn.2d 607, 619, 290 P.3d 942
(2012). “In general, ‘[a]n insufficient record on appeal precludes review of the alleged
errors.’” Cuesta v. Emp’t Sec. Dep’t, 200 Wn. App. 560, 568, 402 P.3d 898 (2017)
(alteration in original) (quoting Bulzomi v. Dep’t of Labor & Indus., 72 Wn. App. 522,
525, 864 P.2d 996 (1994)). We “will ‘decline to address a claimed error when faced with
a material omission in the record.’” Id. (quoting State v. Wade, 138 Wn.2d 460, 465, 979
P.2d 850 (1999)).
We can see from closing argument that the lawyers and trial court agreed the
jurors should listen to exhibit 2 and, from that, determine for themselves whether Ms.
Porter made a threat to kill Michael. Before being excused for their deliberations, jurors
were squarely presented with the parties’ positions. To paraphrase the closing arguments,
they heard from the State, “listen to exhibit 2 and you will hear her make threats;” they
heard from the defense, “listen to exhibit 2 and you will not hear a threat.” It did not take
long for them to reach a verdict.
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No. 37634-6-III
State v. Porter
We will not rely on a verbatim report of the audio evidence that we have every
reason to believe is inferior to the audio evidence itself: what jurors would have heard by
listening to exhibit 2. The verbatim report is based on what the reporter was able to hear
the one time the recording was played in court. And it might have been played from a
location that disadvantaged the court reporter, since the primary concern would have
been the ability of the jurors to hear it. Exhibit 2 could have, and according to the jury’s
verdict, did include intelligible threats to kill Michael, and it is not in our record. Given
Ms. Porter’s failure to provide the necessary record, we decline to consider her evidence
sufficiency challenge.
Ms. Porter’s only other sufficiency challenge is that Michael’s testimony belies the
contention that he believed the threat. She quotes the following trial testimony:
Q. Okay. Are you afraid that Sarah could kill you now if she were to
threaten you?
A. I—with her—with where her mental state’s been, with the behavior
she’s shown, it’s just—I have no idea and it does scare me.
Br. of Appellant at 19 (quoting RP at 229-30). Ms. Porter does not include Michael’s
entire answer. He continued, “It does scare our children. We’ve done everything we can
to move from the previous address to a confidential location.” RP at 230.
Ms. Porter likens Michael’s statement that he has “no idea” what Ms. Porter could
do to evidence in C.G. that was held to be insufficient proof that the victim was placed in
reasonable fear. In C.G., the Washington Supreme Court held that reasonable fear was
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No. 37634-6-III
State v. Porter
not proved by evidence that a school principal was “cause[d] . . . concern” by a student’s
statement, his concern being that C.G. “might try to harm him or someone else in the
future.” 150 Wn.2d at 607. The insufficiency of the evidence in C.G. was because the
principal expressed no concern about C.G. carrying out her threat to kill, only a concern
about the possibility of future bodily harm to someone. The court held that concern about
someone being killed must be shown.
Michael’s testimony on which Ms. Porter relies was a concern about being killed,
not bodily harmed (“are you afraid that Sarah could kill you now” (RP at 229)), so C.G.
does not apply. Michael also testified that on days with family significance, Ms. Porter
had exhibited “[e]motional actions that are unusual or very extreme or scary.” RP at 233.
A victim need not testify that he believes the defendant will kill him. Evidence that the
person threatened was “scared” is sufficient. State v. Trey M., 186 Wn.2d 884, 905-06,
383 P.3d 474 (2016).
And, as always, circumstantial evidence carries the same weight as direct
evidence. Id. at 905. Michael testified that when he was awarded sole custody of the
children, Ms. Porter broke into his home and attacked him and his father. He testified he
obtained an order of protection from Ms. Porter, which Ms. Porter continually violated.
He testified that Ms. Porter was capable of carrying out threats and that he and the
children had made changes to their lives based on a fear of Ms. Porter. The evidence that
he reasonably feared the threat to kill would be carried out is sufficient.
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No. 37634-6-III
State v. Porter
II. ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR TO THE TRIAL COURT’S INSTRUCTIONS ON “THREAT”
Ms. Porter next contends that the jury instructions incorrectly defined the term
“threat” for purposes of the felony harassment charge. The definitional instruction,
instruction 10, stated:
Threat means to communicate, directly or indirectly, the intent to
cause bodily injury in the future to the person threatened or to any other
person.
To be a threat, a statement or act must occur in a context or under
such circumstances where a reasonable person, in the position of the
speaker, would foresee that the statement or act would be interpreted as a
serious expression of intention to carry out the threat rather than as
something said in jest or idle talk.
Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 110. The instruction was based on the pattern definition
instruction for “threat,” which is based in turn on the statutory definition of
“threat” in the Washington Criminal Code. 11 WASHINGTON PRACTICE: PATTERN
JURY INSTRUCTION: CRIMINAL § 2.24, at 81-82 (5th ed. 2021) (WPIC); RCW
9A.04.110(28). Defense counsel did not object to the instruction at trial. Ms.
Porter does not identify any respect in which it deviates from the language in the
pattern instruction that is to be used in harassment prosecutions.
For the first time on appeal, Ms. Porter argues that “[t]he trial court’s instruction
only requires intent to cause bodily injury, however the felony statute which Ms. Porter
was charged and convicted [sic] required threat to kill.” Br. of Appellant at 23. But the
definition instruction did not tell jurors what type of threat the State was required to
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No. 37634-6-III
State v. Porter
prove for its charge. Other instructions did. Instruction 9, the elements instruction, told
jurors that to convict Ms. Porter it must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt (among
other elements) that she “knowingly threatened to kill Michael Porter immediately or in
the future,” and that her words or conduct put Michael in reasonable fear “that the threat
to kill would be carried out.” CP at 109. Instruction 8, which described the crime of
harassment, stated it is committed when a person knowingly threatens to cause bodily
injury to another person, adding, “and the threat to cause bodily harm consists of a threat
to kill the threatened person or another person.” CP at 108.
Failure to object to a jury instruction in the trial court generally operates as a
waiver of the issue on appeal. State v. Hood, 196 Wn. App. 127, 135, 382 P.3d 710
(2016); RAP 2.5(a). While appellate courts may review an unchallenged error if the
appellant can demonstrate it was manifest error affecting a constitutional right, RAP
2.5(a)(3), errors in the pattern jury instructions generally do not rise to the level of
“manifest.” Hood, 196 Wn. App. at 135.
In any event, no error is shown. “Instructions satisfy the requirement of a fair trial
when, taken as a whole, they properly inform the jury of the applicable law, are not
misleading, and permit the defendant to argue his theory of the case.” State v. Tili, 139
Wn.2d 107, 126, 985 P.2d 365 (1999), aff’d, 148 Wn.2d 350, 60 P.3d 1192 (2003). The
criminal code’s definition of “threat” applies to a number of crimes, including
harassment. To prove gross misdemeanor harassment and a number of other crimes, the
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No. 37634-6-III
State v. Porter
threat need not be one to kill. E.g., RCW 9A.46.020(1). The State was required to prove
a threat to kill here, because it charged felony harassment under RCW 9A.46.020(2)(b).
But it reasonably proposed, and the trial court reasonably gave the criminal code
definition of “threat” without alteration, because the court’s other instructions made clear
that a particular type of threat was required to prove the crime charged.
III. MISREADING OF ELEMENTS INSTRUCTION
Ms. Porter next contends she was denied her right to a unanimous jury verdict
when the trial court, while reading its instructions to the jury at the conclusion of the
evidence, misread the elements instruction for the charge of felony violation of a
protection order.
The court’s written instructions correctly informed the jury that to find Ms. Porter
guilty of violating a court order it had to find, among other elements, “(3) [t]hat on or
about said date, the defendant knowingly violated a provision of this order; (4) [t]hat the
defendant had twice been previously convicted for violating the provisions of a court
order; and (5) [t]hat the defendant’s act occurred in the State of Washington.” CP at 112.
In reading the instruction, however, the trial court inserted an “or” between the
third and fourth elements, reading, “[t]hat on or about said date the defendant knowingly
violated a provision of this order, or . . . [t]hat the defendant had twice been previously
convicted for violating a provisions [sic] of a court order.” RP at 310-11 (emphasis
added) (alteration in original). It continued,
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No. 37634-6-III
State v. Porter
If you find from the evidence that elements (1.), (2.), (3.), (4.) and
(5.) have been proved beyond a reasonable doubt, then it will be your duty
to return a verdict of guilty.
On the other hand, if, after weighing all of the evidence you have a
reasonable doubt as to any one of five elements, then it will be your duty to
return a verdict of not guilty.
RP at 311. Neither party objected to the misreading of the instruction.
Here again, we need not review a claimed error when the appellant fails to object
in the trial court. Ms. Porter contends that the error was manifest constitutional error
reviewable under RAP 2.5(a)(3), however. Citing State v. Mills, 154 Wn.2d 1, 109 P.3d
415 (2005), she contends it was a failure to instruct the jury on every element of the
crime charged. For us to find manifest constitutional error, there must be a “‘plausible
showing by the [appellant] that the asserted error had practical and identifiable
consequences in the trial of the case.’” State v. A.M., 194 Wn.2d 33, 38, 448 P.3d 35
(2019) (alteration in original) (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting State v.
O’Hara, 167 Wn.2d 91, 99, 217 P.3d 756 (2009)).
Contrary to Ms. Porter’s argument, however, the jury was instructed on every
element of the crime, both in the court’s written instructions and in its oral instruction
that the jury must find “that elements (1.), (2.), (3.), (4.) and (5.)” have been proved
beyond a reasonable doubt, and must return a verdict of not guilty if it has “a reasonable
doubt as to any one of [the] five elements.” RP at 311. The error was not a failure to
instruct, it was a misreading of the written instructions. Nothing in the record suggests
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No. 37634-6-III
State v. Porter
the trial court’s misreading actually prejudiced Ms. Porter or had practical and
identifiable consequences in the trial. And see State v. Smissaert, 41 Wn. App. 813, 815
n.1, 706 P.2d 647 (1985) (“[The defendant] complains that the trial court misread the
instruction. Nothing was said about it to the trial court and the correct instruction was
given to the jury to read. The error, if any, was harmless.”).
The court’s error in reading the instruction was not manifest constitutional error
and was not preserved.
IV. ALLEGED ERROR UNDER ER 403 AND 404(b)
Finally, Ms. Porter contends the trial court abused its discretion when it “allow[ed]
excessive evidence of other bad acts, in violation of ER 404 and ER 403.” Br. of
Appellant at 2. Notably absent from her assignment of error is the identification of any
defense objection that was overruled.
When it comes to the failure to object to evidence in the trial court, an appellant
encounters not only the error preservation requirement of RAP 2.5(a), but ER 103(a)(1),
which provides that “[e]rror may not be predicated upon a ruling which admits . . .
evidence unless a substantial right of the party is affected, and . . . a timely objection or
motion to strike is made, stating the specific ground of objection, if the specific ground
was not apparent from the context.” Ms. Porter’s trial lawyer raised a pretrial concern
about the extent of Ms. Porter’s prior conduct that might be offered to establish Michael’s
reasonable fear, but since some of that conduct would likely prove admissible, the trial
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No. 37634-6-III
State v. Porter
court reserved ruling. “When a trial court makes a ruling ‘subject to [the] evidence [to
be] developed at trial, the parties are under a duty to raise the issue at the appropriate time
with proper objections at trial.’” State v. Roosma, ___ Wn. App. 2d ___, 498 P.3d 59, 63
(2021) (alterations in original) (quoting State v. Koloske, 100 Wn.2d 889, 896, 676 P.2d
456 (1984), overruled on other grounds by State v. Brown, 113 Wn.2d 520, 782 P.2d
1013 (1989)). An evidentiary error such as the erroneous admission of ER 404(b)
evidence is not of constitutional magnitude, nor is it manifest. State v. Powell, 166
Wn.2d 73, 84, 206 P.3d 321 (2009).
Ms. Porter did not raise any ER 403 or 404 objections when the State predictably
questioned Michael about the history with his ex-wife that caused him fear. Defense
counsel objected to evidence of any order violations beyond what had been stipulated to,
to which the prosecutor responded, “Okay,” and asked no further questions about order
violations. RP at 231. Defense counsel objected when the prosecutor asked Michael if
he believed Ms. Porter was capable of carrying out her threats, but he stated no basis for
the objection and quickly withdrew it.
A trial court does not err or abuse its discretion by “allowing excessive evidence
of . . . bad acts,” when no objection is made. Br. of Appellant at 2 (emphasis added).
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Affirmed.3
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:
_____________________________
Pennell, C.J.
_____________________________
Lawrence-Berrey, J.
3
Ms. Porter also assigns error under the cumulative error doctrine, which applies
when multiple preserved, but individually harmless errors, combine to deny the defendant
a fair trial. State v. Lazcano, 188 Wn. App. 338, 370, 354 P.3d 233 (2015). Ms. Porter
raises no preserved error, so the doctrine does not apply.
18