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IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON f
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STATE OF WASHINGTON,
No. 69894-0-1 - * ZT.y.
Respondent, ,
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DIVISION ONE
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DONALD DAVID MCKNIGHT, UNPUBLISHED OPINION
AKA DONALD D.ABDICH,
FILED: April 29, 2013
Appellant.
Becker, J. — Donald McKnight appeals his convictions for first degree
burglary with a deadly weapon enhancement, residential burglary, and
possessing burglar tools. The charges stemmed from three separate incidents,
and McKnight moved to sever the charges. The trial court denied severance
after properly balancing the potential for prejudice and the concern for judicial
economy. We affirm because the court did not abuse its discretion in denying the
motion and McKnight's other claims are meritless.
CHARGES
First Degree Burglary with a Deadly Weapon
On the morning of December 30, 2010, Jennifer Herrman woke up to the
sound of her puppy barking in the living room of her Longview house. Hermann
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left her three-year-old son sleeping in her bed and got up to investigate. She
saw a man rummaging through a drawer in the kitchen. The intruder was
wearing a dark hood and carrying a small flashlight and a backpack. She turned
on a light and yelled repeatedly, "What are you doing in my house?"
The intruder ran toward Hermann, holding a yellow bar over his head as if
to hit her. As he got within three feet of Hermann, she recognized his face and
said, "I know who you are." Hermann grabbed the man's backpack. The intruder
struck her on the side of the face, knocking her down. Hermann heard her son
crying and saw him standing in the living room. Hermann grabbed the yellow
club and began hitting the intruder with it and chasing him out of her house. As
the man ran, he knocked Hermann's son into a wall and went out the back door.
Although Hermann recognized the intruder's face, she could not
immediately remember his name. Days later, she recalled his name and told the
investigating officer that it was Donny Abdich who had broken into her home.
Abdich also goes by the name Donald McKnight. The officer showed Hermann
the pictures of six men, and she singled out McKnight as the intruder.
Residential Burglary
On the night of April 12, 2011, Ashley Rae's house, located about seven
blocks from Hermann's, was burglarized. Rae was working at a gas station near
her home. She asked a co-worker, Brad Lowe, and his friend to drive to her
house to pick up something she had forgotten. Lowe testified that when he tried
the house key Rae gave him, the front door would not open. Lowe struggled with
the door, gave it a shove, and heard something fall on the other side. Once
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inside, Lowe discovered that a steak knife had been wedged in the door frame.
Lowe then saw a man turn, run toward the back of the house, and escape
through an open window. As the intruder ran, he lost a Nike tennis shoe.
The investigating officer, Mike Watts, was unable to retrieve finger prints,
but he found two backpacks in the living room. One backpack contained gloves,
screwdrivers, pliers, a file, a magnifying glass, a small flashlight, and several
documents bearing McKnight's name.
At trial, Lowe identified McKnight, although he initially told Officer Watts he
did not think he would be able to. Watts testified that he took the backpack,
shoe, and knife to McKnight's mother's house, a few blocks away from Rae's
house, to see if she could identify them. He said Dorthea McKnight identified the
items as belonging to her son. At trial, Dorthea testified that she only told the
officer she thought the backpack was her son's, but she did not know to whom
the shoe belonged and was not shown a knife.
Burglary Tools
On April 28, 2011, Dorthea called Longview police asking them to remove
her son, who did not have permission to be in her house but had crawled in
through a back window. The officer who responded arrested McKnight and
searched him incident to arrest, finding a Phillips screwdriver, wrench, large file,
rod, and Craftsman's tool with a knife on it.
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DENIAL OF SEVERANCE
The trial court denied McKnight's motion to sever the first degree burglary
charge from the other two charges. After a three-day trial, a jury found McKnight
guilty as charged. McKnight first assigns error to the court's denial ofseverance.
Atrial court's refusal to sever charges is reversible only for a manifest
abuse of discretion. State v. Bvthrow, 114 Wn.2d 713, 717, 790 P.2d 154 (1990).
Adefendant seeking severance has the burden of demonstrating that a trial
involving both counts would be "so manifestly prejudicial as to outweigh the
concern for judicial economy." Bvthrow, 114 Wn.2d at 718. Prejudice may result
from joinder if the defendant is embarrassed by the presentation ofseparate
defenses, or if use of a single trial invites the jury to cumulate the evidence to find
guilt or infer criminal disposition. State v. Russell. 125 Wn.2d 24, 62-63, 882 P.2d
747 (1994), cert denjed, 514 U.S. 1129(1995).
In determining whether the potential for prejudice requires severance, a
trial court must consider: (1) the strength ofthe State's evidence on each count,
(2) the clarity of the defenses as to each count, (3) the court's instructions to the
jury to consider each count separately, and (4) the admissibility of evidence of
the other charges even if not joined for trial. Russell, 125 Wn.2d at 63. These
same factors are applied by reviewing courts to determine if a trial court's denial
of severance was unduly prejudicial. State v. Cotten. 75 Wn. App. 669, 687, 879
P.2d971 (1994). review denied. 126Wn.2d 1004(1995).
Concerning the first factor, McKnight argues the State's evidence on the
first degree burglary count was stronger than on the residential burglary charge
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because Hermann told police she recognized him at first sight. He argues the
evidence "was not as compelling on identification" in the residential burglary at
Rae's house.
Evidence is sufficiently strong if it would allow a rational jury to find the
defendant guilty of each charge independently. State v. Bryant. 89 Wn. App. 857,
867, 950 P.2d 1004 (1998). review denied. 137 Wn.2d 1017 (1999). The
evidence in the Rae burglary meets this test, particularly considering the
backpack the burglar left in Rae's house that was full of documents with
McKnight's name on them. McKnight contends the jury was entitled to believe
that the true burglar at Rae's house was someone who had stolen his backpack.
This is possible, but unlikely, considering Lowe's identification of McKnight and
Dorthea's tentative identification of the backpack as belonging to her son. The
jury was also entitled to infer from the documents that McKnight was the burglar
at Rae's house and to add that inference to Lowe's identification of McKnight at
trial.
As to the second factor, clarity of defenses, McKnight contends on appeal
that he would have taken the stand to defend himself against the first degree
burglary count involving Hermann, but for his desire to exercise his right to
remain silent on the residential burglary at Rae's house. At the hearing on the
motion to sever, McKnight's attorney explained there was a potential alibi witness
the defense had been unable to locate, and McKnight's "litany of prior
convictions" made it undesirable for him to take the stand on the second burglary.
"The problem is that if I have to put him on the stand for that count, there is too
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much potential bleed over towards Count 1, which is a really serious case -- a
really serious count, burglary in the first degree with a deadly weapon
enhancement."
A defendant's desire to testify only on one count requires severance only if
he makes a convincing showing that he has important testimony to give concerning
one count and a strong need to refrain from testifying about another. Russell, 125
Wn.2d at 65 (finding defendant was not unduly prejudiced by joinder of three
counts of murder, each involving separate murder; defendant had made no offer of
proof as to anticipated testimony); see also State v. Weddel. 29 Wn. App. 461, 468,
629 P.2d 912 ("In the absence of evidence to the contrary, we conclude that the
overriding reason why defendant chose not to testify was not his fear of
incriminating himself on the attempted burglary count, but rather his realization that
the State would use a prior burglary conviction for impeachment."), review denied,
96 Wn.2d 1009 (1981).
McKnight, like the defendant in Russell, made no offer of proof. The
record does not indicate what testimony he wanted to give concerning the
burglary at Hermann's house. The only comments his attorney made about that
burglary were to the effect that McKnight's sister's testimony and the testimony of
other witnesses would cast doubt on Hermann's identification of McKnight.
McKnight's argument on appeal does not go beyond a general desire to testify as
to one count but not the other. As in Russell, absent an offer of proof, we cannot
conclude that joinder affected McKnight's decision not to testify. Russell, 125
Wn.2d at 65-66.
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Concerning the third factor, McKnight challenges instruction 7, which told
the jury to "decide each count separately." He contends the instruction falls
"miserably short" in telling the jury to parse out the evidence it could consider as
to each count because jurors were not specifically told, for example, that they
could not consider the paperwork with McKnight's name, which was found at
Rae's house, to support the conclusion that he was the intruder at Hermann's
house.
Instruction 7 stated, "A separate crime is charged in each count. You must
decide each count separately. Your verdict on one count should not control your
verdict on any other count." Instruction 5 told the jury not to "use the fact that the
defendant has not testified to infer guilt or to prejudice him in any way."
Instruction 6 told them to "consider evidence that a witness has been convicted
of a crime only in deciding what weight or credibility to give to the testimony of
the witness, and for no other purpose." These are standard pattern instructions.
McKnight points to no objection in the record preserving the issue for appeal and
does not argue his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to propose an
alternative instruction, so he fails to raise a manifest error affecting a
constitutional right.
Concerning the fourth factor, cross-admissibility, McKnight argues on
appeal that none of the evidence in the first degree burglary at Hermann's house
"should have been admissible" in a trial for the burglary at Rae's house because
its "sole purpose would have been" to establish guilt through propensity evidence
barred by ER 404(b). He cites a trio of cases: State v. Pogue. 104 Wn. App.
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981, 17 P.3d 1272 (2001) (finding prior conviction for delivery of cocaine was
inadmissible under rule about prior bad acts); State v. Acosta. 123 Wn. App. 424,
98 P.3d 503 (2004) (finding criminal history was inadmissible to show state of
mind or to support expert opinion and potential for prejudice far outweighed
probative value); and State v. Escalona. 49 Wn. App. 251. 742 P.2d 190(1987)
(finding court should have granted mistrial where assault complainant testified as
to defendant's record of stabbing someone else).
None of these cases involved severance, and while they do analyze the
specific prejudice each defendant encountered, McKnight fails to do the same, to
show how he specifically was prejudiced at trial. A more analogous case is
Bvthrow. where the Supreme Court considered two separate robberies and held
that severance was not automatically required where evidence of one would not
have been admissible in a separate trial on the other. Bvthrow, 114 Wn.2d at
720. In Bvthrow, the court determined that the manner in which the two
robberies were committed, one of a donut shop and the other of a gas station,
was not so unique as to help prove identity under ER 404(b). Bvthrow, 114
Wn.2d at 720. Nonetheless, where the issues were relatively simple, the trial
was short, and the jury could be reasonably expected to compartmentalize the
evidence, "there may be no prejudicial effect from joinder even when the
evidence would not have been admissible in separate trials." Bvthrow, 114
Wn.2d at 721. "In order to support a finding that the trial court abused its
discretion in denying severance, the defendant must be able to point to specific
prejudice." Bvthrow, 114 Wn.2d at 720.
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Here, the trial court did find the evidence of the two burglaries cross-
admissible for identification purposes:
I think there is an issue of identification. That will be a major issue in this
case. And, because of that, the evidence of the backpack being found at
the location of Count 2 during the process of a burglary with a Defendant
who meets the description of the Defendant generally makes it cross-
admissible on - on Count 1.
Giving due weight to all the factors, the trial court concluded that trying the
counts together was not so unfairly prejudicial as to outweigh the value of judicial
economy. See Bvthrow. 114 Wn.2d at 722 (defendant must not only establish
prejudice but "also demonstrate that a joint trial would be so prejudicial as to
outweigh concern for judicial economy.") The court did not abuse its discretion
by denying severance.
INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL
McKnight argues his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to object when
Officer Watts testified he went to McKnight's mother's house on the night of the
second burglary and Dorthea McKnight positively identified the backpack, tennis
shoe, and knife found at Rae's house as her son's and confirmed McKnight had
not been home. McKnight contends the testimony was inadmissible hearsay and
there was no possible tactical reason for not objecting.
To prevail on this claim, McKnight must show his counsel's performance
fell below that of a reasonably competent attorney and that prejudice resulted
from that deficiency. Strickland v. Washington. 466 U.S. 668, 687, 104 S. Ct.
2052, 80 L. Ed. 2d 674 (1984). Prejudice is not established unless "there is a
reasonable probability that, except for counsel's unprofessional errors, the result
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of the proceeding would have been different." State v. McFarland. 127 Wn.2d
322, 335-36, 899 P.2d 1251 (1995).
McKnight fails to demonstrate the requisite prejudice. Dorthea herself
testified she thought the backpack Officer Watts showed her belonged to
McKnight. Her testimony as to the shoe and the knife differed from Officer Watts'
testimony, but that is of no import. Aside from the various documents found
inside the backpack which identified McKnight, both Hermann and Lowe
positively identified McKnight as the intruder they saw in the respective
burglaries. We see no reasonable possibility that the result would have been
different if counsel had objected to Officer Watts' testimony.
SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE
McKnight was charged with making or having burglar tools under RCW
9A.52.060(1) after he was searched incident to arrest at his mother's home and
found in possession of a Phillips screwdriver, wrench, file, rod, and Craftsman
tool. McKnight contends the testimony of the arresting officer, Emilio Villagrann,
was insufficient to support the conviction because the officer testified only that
these items "could be used" in a burglary, not that they definitely were burglary
tools.
RCW 9A.52.060(1) makes it a crime to make or possess any "tool, false
key, pick lock, ... or implement adapted, designed, or commonly used for the
commission of burglary under circumstances evincing an intent" to use such tools
to commit burglary.
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Evidence is sufficient to support a conviction if, viewed in the light most
favorable to the prosecution, it permits any rational trier of fact to find the
essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. State v. Salinas,
119 Wn.2d 192, 201, 829 P.2d 1068 (1992). All reasonable inferences from the
evidence must be drawn in favor of the State and interpreted strongly against the
defendant. Salinas, 119 Wn.2d at 201.
McKnight was found in possession of the incriminating tools after he had
entered his mother's house without permission through a window and she called
police to have him ejected. Given these circumstances, and the officer's
testimony that the tools could be used to unscrew hinges, break locks, cut
window screens, and pry open doors and windows, as well as the jury's general
experience with tools and how they are used, the evidence was sufficient for a
rational jury to conclude McKnight possessed tools adapted, designed, or
commonly used for the commission of burglary under circumstances evincing an
intent to use them to commit burglary.
STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL GROUNDS
In a letter to the court, McKnight raises the denial of severance,
evidentiary issues regarding the lack of DNA and fingerprint evidence and the
credibility of witnesses, and an allegation that his jury was "tainted" because
potential jurors saw him being escorted into the courtroom by an armed officer.
For purposes of analysis, we will treat McKnight's letter of October 2011 as a
statement of additional grounds pursuant to RAP 10.10, even though it was not
designated as such.
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McKnight's claim regarding severance was adequately addressed by his
appellate attorney and fails for the reasons discussed above. This court defers
to the trier of fact on issues of credibility of the witnesses and persuasiveness of
the evidence. State v. J.P. 130Wn.App. 887, 891-92, 125 P3d 215 (2005).
McKnight's claim about the incident with the armed officer is not supported by
evidence in the record, so we cannot review it. See RAP 10.10(c).
Affirmed.
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WE CONCUR:
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