FILED
GOURT OF APPEALS
DIVISM, 11
2013 APP -2 AM 8:46
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
STATE OF WASHMGTOti
DIVISION II BY-
DEr UT`
STATE OF WASHINGTON No. 41347 7 II
- -
Respondent/
Cross -Appellant,
V.
LARRY EDWARD TARRER, UNPUBLISHED OPINION
Appellant /
Cross -Respondent.
JOHANSON, A. .
J.
C In —
2010, a Pierce County jury convicted Larry Edward Tarrer of
first degree murder, attempted first degree murder, and first degree manslaughter for a 1991
shooting. Tarrer appeals, claiming (1)various evidentiary errors, 2)
( prosecutorial misconduct, .
3)sentencing errors, and (4)ineffective assistance. We reverse and remand because multiple
episodes of prosecutorial misconduct deprived Tarrer of a fair trial. In addition, we address
evidentiary issues that may arise on retrial.'
FACTS
In January 1991, Claudia McCorvey was six months pregnant and living in a Tillicum
apartment. McCorvey's apartment was a known crack house where cocaine addicts and dealers
1 We received supplemental briefing regarding sentencing issues. Because we reverse Tarrer's
conviction and sentence, and remand for retrial, we decline to address those issues here.
Similarly, we do not reach the State's cross appeal because it, too, is moot once we reverse
-
Tarrer's conviction.
No. 41347 7 II
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could obtain and smoke cocaine. Tarrer was a 17- old small time cocaine dealer and Bishop
year - -
Asia Johns was his supplier.
On January 8, Johns was dealing drugs out of McCorvey's apartment, and that evening
McCorvey, Johns, Lavern Simpkins, and others smoked cocaine there into the morning. That
evening, Rickey Owens had visited McCorvey's apartment to obtain cocaine. On the way back
to his car, Owens heard a commotion and turned back toward the apartment and saw a man pull a
silver pistol from a car parked outside.
Just before 1:0 AM, Simpkins and McCorvey were the only people still at McCorvey's
0
apartment when someone opened the front door and fired multiple shots into the unit. Two shots
killed Simpkins, and two more struck McCorvey, rendering her a paraplegic. Medics transported
McCorvey to the hospital where doctors performed an emergency cesarean section and removed
her live baby. The baby's condition, however, rapidly deteriorated and soon died.
Authorities recovered .45 caliber shell casings and slugs from the apartment. Authorities
also found a Tanqueray gin bottle in the apartment with Tarrer's fingerprints on it.
On January 9, Pierce County Sheriff's Detective Fred Reinicke visited McCorvey at the
hospital and showed her a six -picture photo montage of McCorvey's acquaintances. Detective
Reinicke showed McCorvey each of the six pictures, one at a time, and McCorvey identified
Tarrer as her shooter.
2 Known as "Slim"during that time. Verbatim Report of Proceedings (VRP)Sept. 29 30,2010)
( -
at 12.
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No. 41347 7 II
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Detective Reinicke returned to the hospital to speak with McCorvey on January 11. He
took McCorvey's statement and again showed her the photo montageshe again identified
—
Tarrer as her shooter.
On February 12, Detective Reinicke showed Owens the same photo montage he showed
McCorvey. Owens identified Tarrer as the man with the gun outside the apartments on the night
of the shooting.
In 1991, Tarrer entered an AlfordlNewton plea to amended charges of second degree
murder and first degree assault.' In 2004, while serving his sentence, he successfully filed a CrR
7. motion to vacate his conviction.
8 The State then withdrew the May 1991 amended
information.
In 2009, the State filed a corrected information charging Tarrer with premeditated first
degree murder, attempted first degree murder, and first degree manslaughter. It also added three
sentencing aggravators to the attempted first degree murder charge.
Before the 2009 trial, Tarrer moved to dismiss the case or to.suppress McCorvey's
identification of Tarrer in the photo montage because the State provided Tarrer just three of the
six photos used in the January 9, 1991 photo montage with McCorvey, and just four of the six
photos used in the January 11, 1991 montage. He also filed a motion to suppress Tarrer's
3
North Carolina v. Alford, 400 U. .25, 91 S. Ct. 160, 27 L.Ed 2d 162 (1970);
S State v. Newton,
87 Wn. d 363, 552 P. d 682 (
2 2 1976).
Tarrer then unsuccessfully moved to withdraw his plea. He appealed the denial of his motion
to withdraw his plea, and we affirmed. State v. Tarrer, 140 Wn. App. 166, 165 P. d 35 (2007).
3
Tarrer also appealed the trial court's order vacating his conviction under CrR 7. because he
8
sought specific performance of the original plea agreement. We dismissed the appeal,because
Tarrer was not aggrievedhe prevailed in vacating his convictions.
—
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No. 41347 7 II
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identification by McCorvey and Owens because Detective Reinicke used unreliable photo
montage procedures. The trial court denied these motions.
The case went to trial in September and October 2009. During trial, Tarrer moved to
admit McCorvey's medical records from her treatment at .Harborview Medical Center in order to
show which of McCorvey's bullet wounds were entrance or exit points. The trial court denied
this motion because the records constituted inadmissible hearsay. This trial resulted in a mistrial.
The State retried the case in September and October 2010. After jury selection, but
before the trial began, local news outlets carried stories about how Tarrera Muslimand
— —
another inmate had sued the Pierce County Jail and the Pierce County Sheriff's Department for
religious discrimination. Although two jurors admitted seeing the story, the trial court declined
to dismiss them.
At trial, witnesses offered varying accounts of what they could recall from the 1991
incident. The State called Johns, Owens, and McCorvey to offer their accounts. A neighbor,
Monte Moore, and Tarrer testified in Tarrer's defense.
Johns testified that he went to McCorvey's apartment on January 8, 1991, to smoke
cocaine. The apartment was full of people partying and smoking cocaine. Tarrer arrived after
Johns, and while Johns, McCorvey, and Simpkins sat in the back bedroom smoking cocaine,
Tarrer walked into the back bedroom to speak with McCorvey. Tarrer and McCorvey retreated
5
The front page news article in the Tacoma News Tribune, pictured "TARRER"and a headline,
Jail limits religion, lawsuit suggests." Clerk's Papers (CP)at 550. The lead paragraph read,
Two followers of Islam are suing Pierce County, claiming Muslims are prohibited from
practicing their religion appropriately while incarcerated in the county jail." at 550.
CP
4
No.41347 7 II
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to the bathroom to speak privately, and Johns learned from McCorvey that Tarrer mentioned
some missing cocaine. Later, Johns left the apartment, and McCorvey, Simpkins, Tarrer, and
another remained. As Johns walked from McCorvey's apartment, he heard gunfire coming from
inside, though he did not witness the shooting.
Owens testified that at the time of the shooting, he was also a cocaine addict. He had
heard that he could acquire drugs from Tarrer at McCorvey's apartment, so he went to
McCorvey's around 8:0 to 9:0 Pm. Owens claimed that he traded Tarrer a bottle of Tanqueray
0 0
gin for a $ cocaine rock and immediately left. As he left, though, he witnessed Tarrer become
20
accusatory, claiming someone stole his drugs. Though he saw Tarrer retrieve a silver, semi-
automatic pistol from a green and white two door Cutlass, he, did not witness the shooting.
-
McCorvey explained that she was in her bedroom that evening smoking cocaine. She
stated that Tarrer never came into the bedroom to speak with her about missing drugs, though
eventually Tarrer became "loud and rude and obnoxious" and Johns ordered him to leave.
Verbatim Report of Proceedings (VRP)Oct.4,2010)at 23. She believed that Tarrer was drunk
(
and upset because he lost his drug "canister." VRP (Oct. 4, 2010) at 24..
Tarrer left, as did
others, and, soon only McCorvey and Simpkins remained. Later, when McCorvey went into her
front room, the front door opened, and the shooter stepped inside and fired multiple shots in the
apartment. McCorvey recognized Tarrer as the shooter.
Moore lived across from McCorvey in an adjacent apartment. He testified that on the
night of the shooting, he heard a commotion from McCorvey's apartment and a male voice
yelling, then three gunshots. He looked out his window and saw four men walk out of
McCorvey's apartment; the last man out stepped back into the apartment, and with his right
5
No. 41347 7 II
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hand, pulled a gun from his left side and fired two more shots. The four men then departed in a
darker, four door sedan. Moore described the shooter as black, between 6 feet and 6 feet 2
-
inches tall.
Tarrer testified that in January 1991, he was left handed, 5 feet 7 inches, 150 pounds, and
drove a black 1983 two door Cutlass. He also asserted that he had never exchanged drugs for
-
alcohol or anything except money. He had twice been to McCorvey's apartment to buy drugs
from Johnsonce in 1990 and again " losely after New Year's of 1991."VRP (Oct. 7, 2010) at
— c
31. At the 1991 visit, Johns answered the door but instructed Tarrer to join him in Johns's car to
do the deal. The two went to Johns's car where Johns had Tarrer hold the bottle from which
Johns had been drinking while Johns located Tarrer's drugs. Tarrer explained that he did not
know or shoot McCorvey or Simpkins.
During closing argument, the State asked the jury to declare the truth. It argued that a
criminal trial is supposed to be a search for the truth." VRP (Oct. 11, 2010) at 8. Slides
accompanied the State's closing argument. The State also explained the reasonable doubt
standard to the jury using a fill in- blank argument. Tarrer unsuccessfully objected to this
- the -
argument as burden shifting and asked for a curative instruction.
The State further articulated the reasonable doubt standard by equating it to every day
scenarios. It also analogized the jury's responsibility to putting together a puzzle.
Finally, the State compared questions of reasonable doubt to the September 11, 2001
terrorist attacks and invoked the jury's patriotism. The jury convicted Tarrer on all counts and
answered " es"to the aggravators.
y
R
No. 41347 7 II
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ANALYSIS
I. PROSECUTORIAL MISCONDUCT
Tarrer argues that the State committed misconduct during closing and rebuttal arguments
when it ( )
1 tasked the jury with declaring the truth through its verdict, 2)
( used a fill in- blank
- the -
argument, 3)equated the reasonable doubt standard to everyday decisions, and (4)argued the
(
reasonable doubt standard in the context of the 9/1 terrorist attacks. The State did commit
1
misconduct, depriving Tarrer of a fair trial. Therefore, we reverse Tarrer's conviction and
remand for retrial.
A. Standard of Review and Rules of Law
The right to a fair trial is a fundamental liberty secured by the Sixth and Fourteenth
Amendments to the United States Constitution and article I,section 3 and article I,section 22 of
the Washington Constitution. State v. Finch, 137 Wn. d 792, 843, 975 P. d 967, cent. denied,
2 2
528 U. . 922 ( 1999).
S Prosecutorial misconduct may deprive a defendant of her or his
constitutional right to a fair trial. State v. Davenport, 100 Wn. d 757, 762, 675 P. d 1213
2 2
1984).A fair trial requires that the State's attorney not throw the prestige of her public office
and the expression of her own belief,of guilt into the scales against the accused. State v.
Monday, 171 Wn. d 667, 677, 257 P. d 551 (
2 3 2011). The State may not use arguments
calculated to inflame the jury's passions or prejudices. State v. Brett, 126 Wn. d 136, 179, 892
2
P. d 29 (1995),
2 cent. denied, 516 U. . 1121 (1996).
S
To prevail on a prosecutorial misconduct claim, a defendant must show that in the
context of the record and all the trial circumstances, the State's conduct was improper and
prejudicial. State v. Thorgerson, 172 Wn. d 438, 442, 258 P. d 43 (2011).To show prejudice, a
2 3
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No. 41347 7 II
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defendant must show a substantial likelihood that the misconduct affected the jury verdict.
Thorgerson, 172 Wn. d at 442 43. If a defendant fails to object to misconduct at trial, she fails
2 -
to preserve the issue unless she establishes that the misconduct was so flagrant and ill intentioned
that an instruction would not have cured the prejudice. Thorgerson, 172 Wn. d at 443.
2
The cumulative effect of repetitive prejudicial prosecutorial misconduct may be so
flagrant that no instruction can erase their combined prejudicial effect. In re Pers. Restraint of
Glasmann, 175 Wn. d 696, 707, 286 P. d 673 (2012) quoting State v. Walker, 164 Wn. App.
2 3 (
724, 737, 265 P. d
3 adhered to
191 ( 2011), on remand, noted at Wn. App. , 2013 WL
703974, at * 1). We focus less on whether the State's misconduct was flagrant and ill
intentioned and more on whether the resulting prejudice could have been cured. State v. Emery,
174 Wn. d 741, 762, 278 P. d 653 (2012).But highly prejudicial imagery may be very difficult
2 3
to overcome with instruction. Glasmann, 175 Wn. d at .707.
2 And prejudicial imagery may
become all the more problematic when displayed in a trial's closing arguments, when the jury is
particularly aware of, and susceptible to,the arguments being presented. Glasmann, 175 Wn. d
2
at 707 08.
-
In determining whether misconduct requires reversal,.we do not decide if sufficient
evidence justifies upholding the jury verdicts. Glasmann, 175 Wn. d at 711. Rather, we decide
2
whether there is a substantial likelihood that the misconduct affected the jury's verdict. State v.
Dhaliwal, 150 Wn. d 559, 578, 79 P. d
2 3 432 (
2003).
No. 41347 7 II
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B. Analysis
1. Declare the Truth Arguments
Tarrer first argues that the State improperly tasked the jury with declaring the truth
through its verdict. Tarrer is correct that " ruth"arguments are improper.
t
A jury's job is not to determine the truth; a jury speak the truth "'
therefore does not "` or
declare the truth. "' Emery, 174 Wn. d at 760 (quoting State v. Anderson, 153 Wn. App. 417,
2
429, 220 P. d 1273 (2009),
3 review denied, 170 Wn. d 1002 (2010)).
2 Rather, a jury's job is to
determine whether the State has proved the charged offenses beyond a reasonable doubt. Emery,
174 Wn. d at 760. Ultimately, truth"statements are improper. Emery, 174 Wn. d at 760.
2 " 2
Here, the State began its closing argument by telling jurors, A criminal trial is supposed
"
to be a search for the truth."VRP (Oct. 11, 2010) at 8. It also projected a slide image that
described the trial as "A SEARCH FOR THE TRUTH."Clerk's Papers (CP)at 661. The State
argued, B] your verdict in this case, you will be declaring the truth as to the charges in this
"[ y
case. And you will declare the truth about whether Larry Tarrer committed [murder],attempted
murder] and manslaughter." VRP (Oct. 11, 2010) at 11. Another slide read, VERDICT"and
"
below it read " EREDICTUM"and " O DECLARE THE TRUTH."CP at 662.
V T
The State also argued, over Tarrer's unsuccessful objection, On behalf of the State of
"
Washington and all the law abiding citizens in it[,] ask you to render a true verdict in this
I would
case."VRP (Oct. 11, 2010) at 54. It then added, I am asking you to render a true verdict in
"
6
The State argues that jurors take an oath to render a true verdict. While a state statute requires
jurors to render a true verdict in civil proceedings, see RCW 4.4.it requires no such oath in
260,4
criminal matters. See also 11 WASHINGTON PRACTICE: WASHINGTON PATTERN JURY
INSTRUCTIONS: CRIMINAL 1.1, at 4 (3d ed. 2008) asking jurors to affirm that they will " airly
0 ( f
try the issues in this case according to the evidence and the instructions from the court. ").
9
No. 41347 7 II
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this case, the verdict that represents the truth of the charges based on the evidence that you were
presented at this trial and the law that applies." VRP (Oct. 11, 2010) at 54 55. Slides advised
-
the jury to declare the truth. One read, BY YOUR VERDICT, YOU WILL DECLARE THE
"
TRUTH AS TO THE CHARGES IN THIS CASE. YOU WILL DECLARE THE TRUTH
ABOUT WHETHER LARRY TARRER COMMITTED MURDER, [ ATTEMPTED]
MURDER, AND MANSLAUGHTER."CP at 662.
These "truth"references in the State's argument were improper, as the jury's duty is not
to declare, search for,or find the truth. Instead, the jury's role is to determine whether the State
proved its charges beyond a reasonable doubt. See Emery, 174 Wn. d at 760. Accordingly, the
2
State committed misconduct in repeatedly using these "truth"arguments, and it exacerbated its
misconduct by projecting those arguments on slide images. See Glasmann, 175 Wn. d at 707.
2
2. Fill in- Blank Arguments
- the -
Tarrer next argues that the State committed misconduct by using the so-
called fill-n-
the-i
blank argument to shift the burden to Tarrer. Tarrer is again correct because fill in- blank
- the -
arguments improperly shift the burden of proof to the defendant.
The State bears the burden of proving its case beyond a reasonable doubt, and the
defendant bears no burden. State v. Camara, 113 Wn. d 631, 638, 781 P. d 483 (1989). By
2 2
suggesting otherwise, a fill in- blank argument subtly shifts the burden to the defense. See
- the -
State v. Gregory, 158 Wn. d 759, 859 60, 147 P. d 1201 (2006) holding burden shifting to be
2 - 3 (
misconduct).
Our courts have consistently held that fill in- blank arguments improperly shift the
- the -
burden of proof from the State to the defendant. See Walker, 164 Wn. App. at 731 32 ( tating on
- s
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No. 41347 7 II
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a slide, If you were to find the defendant not guilty, you have to say: I had a reasonable doubt'
" `
My reason was "); State v. Johnson, 158 Wn. App. 677, 682, 243 P. d 936 (2010)
3
To be able to find reason to doubt, you have to fill in the blank, that's your review
job. "),
denied, 171 Wn. d 1013 (2011);
2 State v. Venegas, 155 Wn. App. 507, 523, 228 P. d 813 ( "In
3
order to find the defendant not guilty, you have to say to yourselves: ` doubt the defendant is
I
guilty, and my reason is'— review
blank. "), denied, 170 Wn. d 1003 (2010);
2 Anderson, 153 Wn.
App. at 431 ( "[ n order to find the defendant not guilty, you have to say `I don't believe the
I]
defendant is guilty because,'and then you have to fill in the blank. ").
The State offered a similar argument here, when it explained reasonable doubt,
Reasonable doubt] means at the end of this trial, if you were to find the defendant
not guilty and the judge releases you from your restriction about talking about this
case and you go home and your family and friends say, hey, is that trial finally
over and you say, yes, it is. What did you do[ ?] We found the defendant not
guilty. You did? How come? Well, we had a reasonable doubt or I had a
reasonable doubt and then the person says to you, W] at
[` h was it[ ?] have to
You
answer that question.
VRP (Oct. 11, 2010) at 43 44.
- Tarrer unsuccessfully objected to this argument as burden
shifting and asked for a curative instruction. The State added, "[ f you were to find the
I]
defendant not guilty and folks asked you why, you would have to explain it to them. That's what
it means: A doubt for which a reason exists."VRP (Oct. 11, 2010)at 48. Accompanying slides
explained: "WHAT IT SAYS[.] doubt for which a reason exists[.]If you were to find the
A
defendant not guilty, and you were asked why, you have to say `I had a reasonable doubt[.]'
What was the reason for your doubt? My
` reason was CP at 681.
We have consistently held that the State commits misconduct when it instructs the jury to
justify a finding of reasonable doubt with specific explanations. Here, the State explained that a
11
No. 41347 7 II
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finding of reasonable doubt required a concrete explanation. And on its slide, the State expressly
employed a fill in- blank argument using visual imagery. These actions improperly shifted
- the -
the burden of proof to the defendant. See Gregory, 158 Wn. d at 859 60.
2 -
3. Reasonable Doubt in Everyday Life
Tarrer next asserts that the State committed misconduct and minimized the burden of
proof by comparing the reasonable doubt standard to everyday life decisions and scenarios.
Tarrer is correct that comparing reasonable doubt to everyday decision making trivializes and
minimizes the reasonable doubt standard.
Tarrer relies on Anderson to argue that the State committed misconduct by comparing the
burden of proof to everyday decisions and scenarios. In Anderson, we held that comments
regarding whether to leave a child with a babysitter or change lanes on a freeway were improper
because they minimized the importance of the reasonable doubt standard and of the jury's role
in determining whether the State has met its burden."153 Wn. App. at 431. We continued, By
`
comparing the certainty required to convict with the certainty people often require when they
make everyday decisions both important decisions and relatively minor ones the prosecutor
- —
trivialized and ultimately failed to convey the gravity of the State's burden and the jury's role in
assessing its case against Anderson."Anderson, 153 Wn. App. at 431.
Similarly, in Walker, the State argued that reasonable doubt is a "common standard that
you apply every day" and compared it to choosing to have surgery or leave children with a
babysitter. 164 Wn. App. at 732. We held those arguments improper for the same reason.
And in Johnson, the State, without objection, used a puzzle analogy in comparing
reasonable doubt to assembling evidence to determine beyond a reasonable doubt which city is
12
No. 41347 7 II
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pictured in a cityscape. 158 Wn. App. at 682. We held that such an analogy constituted
misconduct because it misstated the reasonable doubt standard. Johnson, 158 Wn. App. at 685.
Here, the State equated reasonable doubt to real life scenarios:
When you're at home and you're trying to reach a decision about your family,
you are going to not make that decision unless you're convinced beyond a
reasonable doubt it' the right decision to make. For example, child care. Each
s
one of us has a different standard at which point we will allow someone else to
care for our children, especially when we're talking about, for example, a daycare
facility. You will research the daycare facility. How long has it been in business?
What's its reputation? Do I know anyone else who is there? Who are the
employees? Do I know any of them? Do they let other younger people have
contact with the kids? What about the other kids in the daycare? What do we
know about them?What do we know about their families?
All of those things are factors you're going to consider and if any one of
those things doesn't meet your level of certainty, you're not going to leave your
child at that daycare and walk out the door. If you do, you have reached a level of
being convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that it' the right decision to make.
s
VRP (Oct. 11, 2010) at 51. A slide described reasonable doubt: A COMMON STANDARD
"
YOU APPLY."CP at 682.
Finally, the State analogized reasonable doubt to putting together a cityscape puzzle.
If you're told that you're supposed to figure out what city this skyline is
and then you get part of the picture, so you get some evidence that's presented
and it includes a mountain, you're going to think to yourself, maybe it' in ...
s
west Tacoma. Then you get more evidence and it' a downtown area. Now it'
s s
maybe Portland, Seattle or Tacoma. And then you get some more evidence. And
that evidence shows you something that is unique to the city of Seattle. Can you
find from this picture whether or not this is Seattle or Tacoma? Seattle or
Portland? The question is what makes it a determination of whether you can find
beyond a reasonable doubt.
This does help to describe the beyond a reasonable doubt standard though,
because the last piece of this puzzle is a giant piece of this puzzle, but it comes in
as individual pieces of evidence and as it starts to come in each of those additional
things is more information than you've been given. This is beyond any doubt.
Beyond a shadow of a doubt or beyond all doubt. That's not what's required in a
criminal case.
13
No. 41347 7 II
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VRP ( ct. 11, 2010)at 98.
O
Like Anderson and Walker, here the State compared the reasonable doubt standard to a
parent's decision to leave a child with a babysitter only after being satisfied by the babysitter's
credentials beyond a reasonable doubt. That argument minimizes and trivializes the jury's role.
Accordingly, the argument was improper. See Anderson, 153 Wn. App. at 431; see also Walker,
164 Wn. App. at 732. And similar to Johnson, the State analogized the reasonable doubt
standard to cityscape puzzle. See Johnson, 158 Wn. App. at 685. The State
assembling a
committed misconduct in making these arguments.
4. Invoking 9/1
1
Tarrer next argues that the State committed misconduct by invoking the 9/1 terrorist
1
attacks in his reasonable doubt 'explanation because, he asserts, it unfairly prejudiced Tarrer, a
Muslim. Tarrer is correct because this analogy improperly infuses nationalism and religion into
this case.
The State has a duty to seek verdicts free from appeals to passion or prejudice. See State
v. Belgarde, 110 Wn. d 504, 507, 755 P. d 174 (1988).Arguments based on racial, ethnic, and
2 2
other stereotypes are antithetical to and impermissible in a fair and impartial trial. Monday, 171
Wn. d at 678. Thus, the State engages in misconduct when making an argument that invokes
2
racial, ethnic, or religious prejudice as a reason to convict. See Belgarde, 110 Wn. d at 507
2
holding that exploiting defendant's American Indian Movement affiliation to be misconduct).
Appeals to prejudice or patriotism are also improper. State v. Neidigh, 78 Wn. App. 71, 79, 895
P. d 423 (1995).
2
14
No. 41347 7 II
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Here, the State compared reasonable doubt to questions involving the September 11,
2001 terrorist attacks and invoked the jury's patriotism.
September 11, 2001, two airplanes flew into the World Trade Center in New
York. I don't know if any of you were there, but I believe probably none of you
were there. Do you have any doubt? Do you have a reasonable doubt about
whether or not that happened?
If you were talking to someone who was actually there, and you asked
them questions like, what tower was hit first? What airline was being flown in
each plane? What type of airplane was each one? What floor did you see the
plane hit?Which tower went first?How many died in those towers?All of those
things are questions that individuals are not going to have the specific answers to.
Would you doubt the person if they said two airplanes flew into the World Trade
Centers in New York?
VRP (Oct. 11, 20 10)at 95 96. Slides accompanied the 9/1 argument, and the State ended with
- 1
a slide titled "THIS COUNTRY." CP at 687. The State concluded, "[ his country is the
T]
greatest country in the entire world,"
because "[we have rights and freedoms that no other
]
country can possibly compare with."
VRP (Oct. 11, 2010) at 101. "In our country what we say
is, is that you have the freedom to do anything you want any time you want to anyone you want,
but that freedom comes with a price."VRP (Oct. 11, 2010) at 101 02. " ive the defendant the
- G
final one of his rights, which is a true and just verdict according to the evidence that was
presented and the law that the Court gave you."
VRP ( ct. 11, 2010)at 102.
O
Tarrer is Muslim. The State and at least two jury members knew of his faith because
they saw the news story detailing Tarrer's religious discrimination lawsuit. Then, in explaining
reasonable doubt, the State invoked the deadliest terrorist act to ever occur on American soil —
one led by Muslim terrorists that prompted America's entering a prolonged war against extremist
Muslim groups. Equally important, the 9/1 attacks initiated a wave of anti -Muslim sentiment.
1
See, e. .,
g Hilal Elver, RACIALIZING ISLAM BEFORE AND AFTER 9/1: FROM MELTING POT TO
1
15
No. 41347 7 II
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ISLAMOPHOBIA, 21 Transnat'l L. & Contemp. Probs. 119 ( 2012). Accordingly, the State
committed misconduct in analogizing the reasonable doubt standard to questions relating to the
9/1 terrorist attacks because referring to 9/1 appeals to the jury's passion, prejudice, and
1 1
patriotism and plays on unfair ethnic and religious stereotypes. See Belgarde, 110 Wn. d at 507;
2
see also Neidigh, 78 Wn.App. at 79.
The State improperly used truth arguments, fill in- blank arguments, comparisons
- the -
between reasonable doubt and everyday decision making, and an analogy likening reasonable
doubt to 9/1. Tarrer unsuccessfully objected to the State's truth arguments and fill in- blank
1 - the -
arguments while other arguments went unchallenged. So to prevail on his prosecutorial
misconduct claim regarding the truth statements and fill in- blank arguments, Tarrer must
- the -
show that in the context of the record and the entire trial, the State's conduct was improper and
prejudicial. See Thorgerson, 172 Wn. d at 442. With the everyday decision comparisons and
2
1
9/ . analogy, Tarrer must show that the misconduct was so flagrant and ill intentioned that an
1
instruction would not have cured the prejudice..Thorgerson, 172 Wn. d at 443.
2
By the time this case was tried, our courts had already established that truth arguments,
fill in- blank arguments, and comparisons between the reasonable doubt standard and
- the -
everyday decision making constitute misconduct. See, e. .,
g Anderson, 153 Wn. App. at 417
decided Dec. 8, 2009). We then held in Walker that, in cases involving credibility contests
between witnesses, i.mproper arguments can easily serve as a deciding factor for the jury.
Walker, 164 Wn. App. at 738 (citing Venegas, 155 Wn. App. 507; Johnson, 158 Wn. App. 677).
7
The State claims that its arguments differ from those that our courts have held constitute
misconduct. Any technical difference is so minor that the arguments here are still improper.
16
No. 41347 7 II
- -
Such was the case here.' Only McCorvey claims to have seen Tarrer shoot, though she had
consumed cocaine and may have been impaired. Owens smoked cocaine that day and was the
only other person who claimed to see Tarrer with a gun. Two witnesses not under the influence
of cocaine, Tarrer and Moore, offered different accounts. The left handed Tarrer denied being at
-
the apartment during the shooting, and Moore said the shooter was with a group of three other
men and fired the gun right handed. So like Walker, Venegas, and Johnson, this case involved a
credibility contest.
Assuming, but not deciding that each individual instance of misconduct was insufficient
to warrant a reversal, we evaluate the cumulative effect of the repeated truth arguments, fill in-
-
the blank arguments, everyday life decision -making comparisons, and the 9/1 analogyand
1 —
consider the imagery of the slides. Because Tarrer failed to object to some arguments, we apply
the heightened test for issue preservation and hold that, cumulatively, the State's arguments and
slides were so flagrant and ill intentioned that no instruction could have erased their combined
prejudicial effect. Like Walker, the conflicting evidence and the frequent use and repetition of
improper arguments created a substantial likelihood that the State's improper arguments affected
the jury's verdict. Further instruction could not have cured the effect of the State's misconduct.
See Glasmann, 175 Wn. d at' 707 (noting that highly prejudicial imagery may be difficult to
2
cure);see also Emery, 174 Wn. d at 762 (emphasizing focus on the curability of improper
2
conduct). Therefore, the State's prosecutorial misconduct deprived Tarrer of a fair trial and
requires reversal of his convictions.
17
No. 41347 7 II
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II. EvIDENTIARY ISSUES
Tarrer also asserts various evidentiary issues in his Statement of Additional Grounds.
He argues that the trial court erred in (1)denying his motion to admit McCorvey's medical
records and the trial court's order denying him his right to a complete defense; ( )admitting
2
Owens's and McCorvey's identifications of Tarrer because of unfair photo montage procedures;
and (3)denying Tarrer's motion to dismiss when the State failed to preserve the original
montage photos and that this failure ( )
4 violated Tarrer's confrontation rights.
.
We review evidentiary rulings for abuse of discretion. Finch, 137 Wn. d at 810. A trial
2
court abuses its discretion when its actions are manifestly unreasonable or based on untenable
grounds or reasons. Finch, 137 Wn. d at 810. We may sustain a trial court's determination to
2
exclude evidence on any proper basis within the record, and we will not reverse simply because
the trial court gave a wrong or insufficient reason for its determination. State v. Markle, 118
Wn. d 424, 438, 823 P. d 1101 (1992).
2 2
A. Admission of Medical Records
Tarrer first argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion to admit McCorvey's
medical records and that its order prevented a complete defense. We disagree.
We review a trial court's ruling on a motion to admit business records for a manifest
abuse of discretion. State v. Ziegler, 114 Wn. d
2 533, 538, 789 P. d 79 ( 1990). Under the
2
business records hearsay exception, an expert witness may testify only to acts, conditions or
events, not to entries in the form of opinions or casual statements. State v. Wicker, 66 Wn. App
409, 413, 832 P. d 127 (1992).
2
s
RAP 10. 0.
1
No. 41347 7 II
- -
Tarrer moved to admit McCorvey's 1991 medical records. He asserted that he could not
locate the physicians who prepared the medical records. He now argues that the medical records
would have contradicted McCorvey's testimony that she was facing Tarrer when he shot her.
The trial court refused to admit the records because the physicians' assessments regarding the
nature of McCorvey's gunshot wounds as either entrance exit wounds were opinion and not fact,
/
as the physicians were not examining McCorvey to characterize her wounds one way or another.
Under the business records exception, witnesses cannot testify to others' opinions. Wicker, 66
Wn. App. at 413. And determinations of whether a gunshot wound is an entrance or exit wound
are opinions. So the trial court did not abuse its discretion when it denied the admission of the
medical records,and we affirm its order. See Finch, 137 Wn. d at 810.
2
B. Admission of Eyewitness Identifications
Tarrer next argues that the trial court erred in admitting Owens's and McCorvey's
identifications of Tarrer because of unfair photo montage procedures. Again, we disagree.
A trial court performs a two step test to determine whether an out ofcourt identification
- - -
is impermissibly suggestive. First, the defendant must show that an identification procedure was
suggestive. State v. Kinard, 109 Wn. App. 428, 33, 36 P. d 573 (2001),
4 3 review denied, 146
Wn. d 1022 (2002).If the defendant fails to meet the initial burden, the inquiry ends. State v.
2
Ramires, 109 Wn. App. 749, 761, 37 P. d 343, review denied, 146 Wn. d 1022 (2002).Second,
3 2
the court must determine whether the identification contained sufficient indicia of reliability
despite the suggestiveness. Ramires, 109 Wn. App. at 761.
Here, the trial court denied Tarrer's motion to suppress Owens's and McCorvey's
identification of Tarrer in photo montages. The trial court found that the montage was not
19
No. 41347 7 II
- -
impermissibly suggestive, reasoning that the people pictured in the photos "have general
similarities, including race, approximate[] age, hair color, and lack of significant identifying
marks like scars or tattoos."CP at 323. So; nothing about the five photographs that are not the
"
defendant that makes the defendant's photograph stand apart from the rest."CP at 323. The trial
court also found that Detective Reinicke's procedures during the identification did not cause
Tarrer's photo to stand out from the rest.
Here, the trial court did not abuse its discretion. Its reasoning followed the inquiry
required to determine if an outofcourt identification is unreasonably suggestive. Accordingly,
- -
we affirm the trial court's admission of Owens's and McCorvey's identifications of Tarrer.
C.'
Failing to Preserve Montage Images
Tarrer next argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion to dismiss because the
State failed to preserve potentially exculpatory evidence, the original montage photos. Tarrer
asserts that the failure to preserve evidence deprived him of his due process and opportunity to
present an effective defense, as well as confront witnesses against him. We disagree.
Before trial,Tarrer moved to dismiss,the case, or in the alternative, to suppress witnesses'
eyewitness identification of Tarrer in photo montages because the State failed to preserve some
of the photos originally included in the montages. Tarrer alleged that, during discovery, the State
provided just three of the six photos used in the montage that Detective Reinicke showed
McCorvey on January 9, 1991. Then, the State provided just four of the six photos it showed
McCorvey in the photo montage she viewed on January 11, 1991. In his motion, Tarrer argued
that the absence of these five photos deprived him of his due process and opportunity to present
an effective defense and confront witnesses against him.
PIN
No. 41347 7 II
- -
1. Due Process
If the State fails to preserve potentially useful evidence that is not material and
exculpatory, the State has not violated the defendant's right to due process unless the defendant
can show that the State acted in bad faith. State v. Wittenbarger, 124 Wn. d 467, 477, 880 P. d
2 2
517 (1994). We review for an abuse of discretion a trial court's order on a motion to dismiss.
State v. Koerber, 85 Wn. App. 1, 3,931 P. d 904 (1996).
2
The trial court denied Tarrer's motion to dismiss, reasoning that although the original
photos were not found during discovery, the State provided Tarrer black and white copies of the
photos, which were sufficient. Consequently, the trial court found that the State did not fail to
preserve evidence, adding that Tarrer had not demonstrated that the missing photos were
exculpatory because the critical photo, Tarrer's, been preserved.
had
Here, the trial court did not abuse its discretion because copies of 18 year old original
-
photos could suffice to prepare one's defense in challenging the photo montage identifications;
and Tarrer's original photo the one witnesses used to identify himstill existed at trial. The
— —
trial court also reasonably determined that Tarrer did not carry his burden to demonstrate that the
missing original photos were exculpatory. See Wittenbarger, 124 Wn. d at 477. Therefore, we
2
affirm the trial court's order denying Tarrer's motion to dismiss.
2. Confrontation Rights
Both the United States and Washington Constitutions grant identical confrontation rights.
State v. Florczak, 76 Wn. App. 55, 71, 882 P. d 199 (1994),
2 review denied, 126 Wn. d 1010
2
1995).
21
No. 41347 7 II
- -
Tarrer argues that the missing original photo montage images deprived him of his right to
adequately confront McCorvey on the stand and question her about her identification of Tarrer.
The trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying Tarrer's motion to dismiss because the
parties had "good enough copies of all the original photos, as well as the originals of Tarrer's
photo and a few others. VRP (Sept. 1, 2009) at 21. Tarrer cannot demonstrate that the trial court
acted unreasonably or based its decision on untenable grounds or reasons in denying his motion
to dismiss. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court's order.
Although Tarrer seeks remand to a different trial judge, he fails to adequately demonstrate
evidence of the trial judge's actual or potential bias at retrial. We reverse his convictions
because of the cumulative effect of multiple instances of prosecutorial misconduct and remand
for retrial.
A majority of the panel having determined that this opinion will not be printed in the
Washington Appellate Reports, but will be filed for public record in accordance with RCW
040,
2.6.it is so ordered.
0
Johanson, A. .
J.
C
We concur:
Pend r,J.
lu-
Brid ewater, J. .
T.
P
22