IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
STATE OF WASHINGTON,
No. 83588-2-I
Respondent,
DIVISION ONE
v.
ORDER DENYING MOTION
ADAM BRANTLY MYERS, FOR RECONSIDERATION
AND WITHDRAWING AND
Appellant. SUBSTITUTING OPINION
Respondent filed a motion for reconsideration on June 26, 2023. A panel
of the court called for an answer on June 28, 2023. Appellant filed an answer to
the motion on July 13, 2023. After review of the motion and answer, a panel of
this court has determined that the motion for reconsideration should be denied.
The panel has also determined that the opinion filed on June 5, 2023 should be
withdrawn and a substitute opinion filed.
Now, therefore, it is hereby
ORDERED that the motion for reconsideration is denied; and it is further
ORDERED that the opinion filed on June 5, 2023 shall be withdrawn and a
substitute opinion shall be filed.
FOR THE COURT:
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
STATE OF WASHINGTON,
No. 83588-2-I
Respondent,
DIVISION ONE
v.
PUBLISHED OPINION
ADAM BRANTLY MYERS,
Appellant.
HAZELRIGG, A.C.J. — Adam Myers appeals from a jury conviction for robbery
in the first degree. Myers contends the trial court erred by denying his pretrial CrR
8.3(b) motion to dismiss due to governmental misconduct. He also assigns error
to the denial of a for cause challenge to a juror. The first issue is independently
dispositive, and accordingly, we reverse and remand for further proceedings.
FACTS
The State charged Adam Myers with one count of robbery in the first degree
based on an incident at a Wells Fargo bank in the city of Snohomish, Washington.
On April 26, 2021, the day of the reported robbery, Detective Judith Saarinen
responded to the scene and took over as the primary investigator. Saarinen was
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an employee of the Snohomish County Sheriff’s Office (SCSO), but was assigned
as a detective for the city of Snohomish, which contracts with Snohomish County
to provide police services for the Snohomish Police Department (SPD). During
her initial investigation, Saarinen discovered that the robbery suspect had passed
a handwritten note to one of the bank tellers. Saarinen then received digital photos
and surveillance footage of the suspect from the day of the incident and ultimately
identified Myers as a suspect. Myers was arrested on May 2, 2021. SPD officers
later searched Myers’ residence pursuant to a search warrant and located a
handwritten note that appeared to be the one given to the bank teller.
On September 21, 2021, Tyler Scott, the deputy prosecuting attorney (DPA)
handling Myers’ case, sent an e-mail to Myers’ trial counsel. In the e-mail, Scott
explained that the investigation had resulted in the discovery of a letter written by
Myers to his former landlord and, in an effort to compare the handwriting, SCSO
corrections deputies had seized five documents from Myers’ jail cell. According to
Scott, Saarinen called him and stated that she received photographs of the
documents and became concerned that they contained privileged attorney-client
communications. To determine whether they were in fact privileged, Scott then
directed that the documents be reviewed by an “uninvolved detective,” SCSO
Detective David Bilyeu, who indicated that several 1 of the five documents that were
ultimately seized may have contained attorney-client communications.
1 Though Scott’s e-mail states that Bilyeu had determined three of the five documents may
have contained attorney-client privileged communications, Bilyeu later testified he believed four of
them did.
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On September 27, 2021, Myers moved to dismiss the case under CrR 8.3(b)
based on governmental misconduct. At the hearing on the motion to dismiss, the
testifying witnesses included Snohomish County Jail Corrections Deputy Pavel
Ryakhovskiy, Bilyeu, Saarinen, and Myers. At the conclusion of the hearing, the
trial court found that a state actor had infringed on Myers’s Sixth Amendment right
to counsel but that the State had rebutted the presumption of prejudice by proof
beyond a reasonable doubt. Accordingly, the trial court denied Myers’ CrR 8.3(b)
motion and instead ordered a lesser remedy of suppression of the documents
collected from Myers’ jail cell. In late November 2021, Myers’ case proceeded to
trial and the jury found him guilty as charged.
Myers timely appealed.
ANALYSIS
I. CrR 8.3(b) Motion to Dismiss for Governmental Misconduct
Myers assigns error to numerous findings of fact and conclusions of law
(FFCL) entered pursuant to the trial court’s order denying his CrR 8.3(b) motion to
dismiss. Myers contends that the trial court erred in denying his motion and in
ordering the lesser remedy of suppression, because the State violated his Sixth
Amendment right to counsel when it intercepted and seized privileged
communications and failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that no prejudice
resulted from that violation.
CrR 8.3(b) provides that a trial court “may dismiss any criminal prosecution
due to arbitrary action or governmental misconduct when there has been prejudice
to the rights of the accused which materially affect the accused's right to a fair trial.”
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“Dismissal under CrR 8.3(b) requires a showing of arbitrary action or governmental
misconduct, but the governmental misconduct need not be of an evil or dishonest
nature; simple mismanagement is enough.” State v. Brooks, 149 Wn. App. 373,
384, 203 P.3d 397 (2009). This court “review[s] the trial court's decision to deny a
motion to dismiss under CrR 8.3 for abuse of discretion, that is, whether the
decision was manifestly unreasonable, based on untenable grounds, or made for
untenable reasons.” State v. Kone, 165 Wn. App. 420, 433, 266 P.3d 916 (2011).
A decision is based on untenable grounds or made for untenable reasons when it
is “reached by applying the wrong legal standard,” and a decision is manifestly
unreasonable when “it falls outside the range of acceptable choices, given the facts
and the applicable legal standard.” State v. Horn, 3 Wn. App. 2d 302, 312, 415
P.3d 1225 (2018). “[A]ppellate courts retain the authority to clarify and refine the
outer bounds of the trial court's available range of choices and, in particular, to
identify appropriate legal standards.” State v. Sisouvanh, 175 Wn.2d 607, 623,
290 P.3d 942 (2012).
“The Sixth Amendment guarantees a criminal defendant the right to
assistance of counsel, which includes the right to confer privately with that
counsel.” State v. Peña Fuentes, 179 Wn.2d 808, 811, 318 P.3d 257 (2014) (citing
U.S. CONST. amend. VI). “State intrusion into those private conversations is a
blatant violation of a foundational right.” Id. In State v. Irby, this court clarified and
reiterated the four-part inquiry used to properly analyze a CrR 8.3(b) motion to
dismiss based on the State’s violation of the defendant’s Sixth Amendment right:
1. Did a state actor participate in the infringing conduct alleged by
the defendant?
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2. If so, did the state actor(s) infringe on a Sixth Amendment right of
the defendant?
3. If so, was there prejudice to the defendant? That is, did the State
fail to overcome the presumption of prejudice arising from the
infringement by not proving the absence of prejudice beyond a
reasonable doubt?
4. If so, what is the appropriate remedy to select and apply,
considering the totality of the circumstances present, including
the degree of prejudice to the defendant's right to a fair trial and
the degree of nefariousness of the conduct by the state actor(s)?
3 Wn. App. 2d 247, 252-53, 415 P.3d 611 (2018). Here, the first two prongs are
not at issue as the parties agree that the conduct of state actors resulted in the
infringement of Myers’ constitutional right to private communication with his
attorney. The trial court properly found, and the State did not dispute, that
Ryakhovskiy, Bilyeu, and Saarinen were all state actors. 2 Before addressing the
third and fourth prongs of the Irby test, we review the evidence adduced at the
hearing on the CrR 8.3(b) motion and the facts expressly found by the court.
On September 14, 2021, while Myers was in custody at the Snohomish
County Jail, Saarinen learned that Myers’ former landlord had received a letter
from him. The letter, which was written in cursive, contained a confession
indicating that Myers was forced to rob the bank by an individual who had
threatened him with a gun. In order to obtain a known handwriting sample to
compare with the letter, Saarinen phoned jail booking desk and requested any
2 The trial court also concluded that “[a] state actor participated in infringing conduct when
the defendant’s legal documents were photographed.” Because this conclusion of law is
unchallenged, it becomes the law of the case. State v. Bilgi, 19 Wn. App. 2d 845, 855, 496 P.3d
1230 (2021), review denied, 199 Wn.2d 1002, 504 P.3d 827 (2022).
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kites 3 that Myers had submitted. The jail provided Saarinen one kite believed to
have been written by Myers. 4
On September 15, 2021, Saarinen consulted with a forensic scientist at the
Washington State Patrol Crime Laboratory who advised that handwriting
comparison could be conducted, but that it would be “beneficial to have additional
documents with cursive writing, and several known handwriting documents.” She
then e-mailed the jail intelligence unit at the Snohomish County Jail, seeking
additional handwriting samples from Myers that could be used to compare to the
cursive handwriting in the letter. Ryakhovskiy responded to Saarinen’s request via
e-mail and told her that he would search Myers’ jail cell. Shortly thereafter,
Ryakhovskiy entered Myers’ cell, noticed several handwritten papers on the desk,
and took photographs of 10 different documents. The record does not establish
how many of those documents were printed or written in cursive and, therefore,
responsive to the guidance of the forensic scientist. Ryakhovskiy then e-mailed
those 10 photographs to Saarinen.
Saarinen testified that, after she opened the e-mail and began saving the
files on her computer, she saw a document with the date April 26 titled “the story”,
another document with the word “haircut,” and another with the phrase “notes
about defense.” She explained that, at that point, she became concerned the
documents may contain privileged material, so she closed her e-mail and did not
3 “Kites” are written jail communications from incarcerated people to jail or medical staff or
to their lawyers.
4 When asked whether that kite was written in cursive or print, Saarinen stated that she
“believe[d] it was print.” When she was asked if she had a cursive handwriting exemplar (known
sample) from Myers at that point in the investigation, she testified that she had obtained “a potential
signature of his.”
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No. 83588-2-I/7
read anything further. She then contacted DPA Scott and informed him about her
concerns regarding the documents, and the two of them developed a plan to retain
them in order to determine whether they contained privileged communications.
Saarinen deleted the folder where she had begun to save the images and then
emptied the recycle bin on her computer, however, she retained the original e-mail
from Ryakhovskiy with the images attached.
Based on her conversation with Scott, Saarinen asked Ryakhovskiy to
return to Myers’ cell and seize documents “that could be described as not
appearing to be legal documents.” (Emphasis added.) The following day,
Ryakhovskiy went back and took 5 documents “that looked like just notes,” but he
later asserted, in his testimony at the motion hearing, that he did not read the
contents of the documents he seized. Each of the 5 documents he collected were
included in the pictures that he had previously sent to Saarinen. According to
Ryakhovskiy, he determined which documents might contain privileged
communications by the “type of paper and then how neat they were written”; of the
10 documents he had originally photographed, Ryakhovskiy decided against
removing those that were written on lined paper 5 and were “neat.” None of these
documents contained a cursive handwriting exemplar, despite the earlier
instructions from the crime lab as conveyed by Saarinen. Ryakhovskiy removed
and kept the other documents in his desk until Bilyeu met him at the jail to collect
them a few days later. Bilyeu reviewed each of the 5 documents and “considered
5 Ryakhovskiy’s description of the type of paper varied, he first described it as “lined legal
paper,” but then backtracked as to whether it was legal size or letter size, yellow or white.
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No. 83588-2-I/8
four to fall in the category of attorney-client privilege.” The 1 document that did not
contain privileged information was a jail kite.
After the conclusion of testimony on the motion, the court heard argument
from the parties and issued its ruling just over two weeks later. In the recitation of
relevant facts in its oral ruling, which were expressly incorporated into the written
FFCL, 6 the court found Ryakhovskiy “did not share the documents with the
prosecutor or anyone else,” but the deputy expressly testified, and all of the
government actors appeared to agree, that he not only shared them with Bilyeu
but did so at the direction of the DPA. 7
The court further found that Scott directed Saarinen to have an “uninvolved
detective” assigned to retrieve Myers’ documents and review them “to determine
if they contained privileged information.” It also noted that Bilyeu testified “he is
aware that attorney-client privileged information should not be in the possession
of the prosecutor or law enforcement as it maintains a case.” The court went to
some lengths to make clear that Bilyeu worked in a different department than
6 In his opening brief, Myers assigns error to a number of the findings of fact (34-38, 63,
65-68) and conclusions of law (3-5) entered by the trial court. We review challenged findings to
determine whether substantial evidence supports them. State v. Dobbs, 180 Wn.2d 1, 10, 320
P.3d 705 (2014). We review conclusions of law de novo to determine whether they are supported
by the findings of fact. State v. Armenta, 134 Wn.2d 1, 9, 948 P.2d 1280 (1997)
However, Myers fails to offer argument as to how findings 34-38, 63, or 65-67 are not
supported by substantial evidence, particularly given that they rest on the judge’s credibility
determinations. This court does not review the credibility determinations made by the trial court.
State v. Cross, 156 Wn. App. 568, 581, 234 P.3d 288 (2010). Accordingly, we decline to review
those findings rooted in the court’s determinations as to credibility or for which no argument is
presented.
Finding 68 and conclusion 4 are analyzed in detail in Parts A and B, and conclusions 3 and
5 in Part C, infra.
7 The court’s various findings on these points are inconsistent and, at times, directly
contradictory. In the written FFCL, the court found both that Ryakhovskiy “did not share or
disseminate the documents with anyone” (Finding 44) and that he “did not disseminate the
documents to anyone other than Detective Saarinen (via email) and then provided the original
documents to Detective Bilyeu.” Finding of Fact 61 (emphasis added).
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Saarinen, that Ryakhovskiy did not enter Myers’ cell “for a nefarious purpose,” and
that the DPA “does not intend to use any of the documents at trial.” Findings like
these, and the court’s conclusion that “the defendant has failed to plead or
demonstrate actual prejudice in this case,” clearly establish that the court both
misinterpreted and misapplied the controlling authority on the issue presented by
Myers’ motion. As a starting point, conclusion of law 2 states that the entirety of
the infringing conduct was when “the defendant’s legal documents were
photographed,” which establishes that the judge failed to recognize each separate
infringement of Myers’ constitutional rights by various government actors. 8 This
fundamental misunderstanding is further demonstrated by the court’s concluding
remarks just before it denied the motion, “the conduct here does not rise to the
level of egregiousness where prejudice should be presumed,” which directly
contradicts well-settled case law.
A. Prejudice Is Presumed
The third prong of the test as articulated in Irby requires the court to address
whether the defendant was prejudiced by the State’s misconduct. 3 Wn. App. 2d
at 256-57. Once it is established that the State has violated the defendant’s Sixth
Amendment right, there is a presumption of prejudice to the defendant that can be
rebutted only if the State proves beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant
suffered no prejudice. Peña Fuentes, 179 Wn.2d at 819-20. Because the
“constitutional right to privately communicate with an attorney is a foundational
8 The separate and compounded infringements are reviewed greater detail in Part C,
infra.
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No. 83588-2-I/10
right,” the State must be held to the “highest burden of proof to ensure that it is
protected.” Id. at 820. Myers argues the trial court erroneously concluded that the
State met this burden.
As a preliminary matter, the court appeared disinclined to even apply the
required presumption of prejudice once it had determined that a state actor
infringed on Myers’ right to counsel by intercepting privileged communications. In
issuing its oral ruling on the motion, the court stated:
[T]he conduct here does not rise to the level of egregiousness where
prejudice should be presumed. As such, this court cannot find that
arbitrary government action or misconduct that prejudices the
defendant and materially affects the defendant’s right to a fair trial
has occurred.
This is a clear misinterpretation and misapplication of the controlling authority. The
determination of prejudice is not dependent on the court’s assessment of the
intention of the government actors or the degree of interference with the Sixth
Amendment rights of the accused; it is presumed. While conclusion 4 says the
“State overcame a presumption of prejudice,” the oral ruling establishes that the
court’s starting point in the analysis was misguided, both in its clear reluctance to
apply the required presumption and its assertion that Myers’ failed to demonstrate
prejudice. Over a half-century of case law explicitly holds that where government
acts interfere in the attorney-client relationship by intercepting privileged
communications, prejudice is presumed. Where the court had already found that
Ryakhovskiy, Saarinen, and Bilyeu were state actors and they variously possessed
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or read the privileged communication, Myers was not required to make any
additional showing of prejudice. 9
In State v. Cory, our Supreme Court reversed a conviction and ordered
dismissal of five counts of “second-degree burglary and larceny” due to the State’s
violation of Cory’s Sixth Amendment right, which occurred when sheriff’s deputies
recorded and listened to conversations he had with counsel while in the county jail.
62 Wn.2d 371, 372, 378, 382 P.2d 1019 (1963). The court emphasized that there
was “no way to isolate the prejudice resulting from an eavesdropping activity, such
as this.” Id. at 377. Accordingly, the court assumed that the information gained by
the sheriff was provided to the prosecutor, noting that “the opportunity and the
motive were there and the defendant ha[d] no way of knowing what was
communicated to the prosecutor.” Id. at 377 n.3. The court in Cory quoted the
United States Supreme Court for the proposition that “[t]he right to have the
assistance of counsel is too fundamental and absolute to allow courts to indulge in
nice calculations as to the amount of prejudice arising from its denial.” Glasser v.
9 Citing examples of prejudice provided in State v. Garza, the State argues the only way
Myers could have been prejudiced here was “that the intrusions ha[d] destroyed [Myers’]
confidence in [his] attorney.” 99 Wn. App. 291, 301, 994 P.2d 868 (2000). According to the State,
however, “this was not such a case” because Myers’ counsel was not involved in the State’s
misconduct and “his attorney responded by filing a motion to dismiss the case based on the
violation.” The State further contends that Myers’ posttrial motion for new counsel demonstrated
that the intrusion had not “destroyed [Myers’] confidence” in his attorney because “[n]othing in the
defendant’s motion argued or suggested that he was concerned with his attorney’s performance
because of the privileged documents.”
First, the mere fact that his counsel was not involved in the misconduct does not establish
beyond a reasonable doubt that there was no harm to the attorney-client relationship. Second, the
four examples of prejudice listed in Garza were not exhaustive and the State’s argument that other
types of prejudice “could not have occurred” requires a thorough examination by the trial court on
remand. Finally, the examples set out in Garza were prefaced with the following language: “even
if there is no presumption of prejudice, the defendants still may demonstrate prejudice by
demonstrating . . . .” Id. (emphasis added). Because prejudice is presumed here and the burden
is on the State to disprove it, Myers’ posttrial motion and argument therein is not determinative on
this issue.
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United States, 315 U.S. 60, 76, 62 S. Ct. 457, 86 L. Ed. 680 (1942), quoted in Cory,
62 Wn.2d at 376.
In Peña Fuentes, the court expanded on Cory and explained that only when
“there is no possibility of prejudice to the defendant” resulting from an
eavesdropping violation of a defendant’s Sixth Amendment right is dismissal of the
charges not “required.” 179 Wn.2d at 819 (emphasis added). However, the court
continued, even in those “rare circumstances where there is no possibility of
prejudice,” the presumption of prejudice remains unless and until the State proves
beyond a reasonable doubt that there was no prejudice suffered by the defendant
due to the Sixth Amendment violation. Id. at 819-20. In that case, Peña Fuentes
was incarcerated pending trial on one count of rape of a child in the first degree,
three counts of child molestation in the first degree, and three counts of child
molestation in the second degree. Id. at 812. The prosecutor asked a detective
to listen to Peña Fuentes’ telephone calls from jail; the detective listened to six
conversations between Peña Fuentes and his attorney. Id. at 816. The prosecutor
told the detective to stop listening to the calls and not to disclose the content of
those conversations with anyone. Id. at 817. The prosecutor then informed
defense counsel and submitted a declaration stating that the detective had not
disclosed the substance of the communications. Id. Because the record was
unclear on whether the trial court held the State to its burden of proving that no
prejudice resulted from the eavesdropping violation, the court reversed the trial
court’s denial of Peña Fuentes’ motion to dismiss and remanded to the trial court.
Id. at 820.
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Similarly, in Irby, this court reversed the trial court’s order denying Irby’s
CrR 8.3 motion to dismiss and remanded for further proceedings. 3 Wn. App. 2d
at 250. Irby’s motion was based on the misconduct of corrections deputies at the
jail who had opened his outgoing mail containing privileged communications
intended for his attorney. Id. at 251. Although the trial court concluded that the
corrections deputies’ conduct had violated Irby’s Sixth Amendment right to
counsel, it placed the burden on Irby to show prejudice, reasoning that “state
misconduct by law enforcement is more likely to prejudice a defendant’s fair trial
right than is state misconduct by jail security.” Id. at 251, 257. On review, this
court rejected the trial court’s distinction between corrections deputies and other
law enforcement officers and held that the judge had erred by not applying the
presumption of prejudice. Id. at 258-59. We then looked to the evidence the State
provided to demonstrate a lack of prejudice, primarily, the prosecutor’s declaration
in which he attested he was not aware of the contents of the privileged
communications. Id. at 260-61. Because that declaration “did not eliminate the
possibility that Irby’s right to a fair trial was prejudiced,” we concluded that the
record did not establish that the State had met its burden to prove beyond a
reasonable doubt that Irby was not prejudiced. Id. at 262.
As the trial judge did in Irby, the trial court here, too, appears to draw a false
distinction between types of state actors: the law enforcement officers involved in
investigating and prosecuting Myers’ pending criminal charges and those in other
units of the same agency who were not assigned to the case at issue. The panel
in Irby was clear: where the court attempted to delineate and apportion prejudice
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based on the roles of the state actors, “[t]he trial court’s reasoning was flawed.” Id.
at 257. Bilyeu was a government actor who expressly received, retained, and
reviewed Myers’ privileged communications to counsel at the express direction of
other government actors. Accordingly, finding 68, which states that Myers “was
not prejudiced when a state actor obtained his letter,” is contradicted by the record
and inconsistent with the law as set out in Peña Fuentes, which clearly holds,
“State intrusion into those private [attorney-client] conversations is a blatant
violation of a foundational right.” 179 Wn.2d at 811. The trial court abused its
discretion by misapplying controlling law as to the presumption of prejudice and
issuing findings contrary to the law and evidence.
B. State Must Disprove Prejudice Beyond a Reasonable Doubt
With the presumption of prejudice as the starting point, the court was
required to hold the State to its burden to disprove any prejudice to Myers beyond
a reasonable doubt. While here the court so concluded, the record again
establishes that it applied an improper standard. Irby relies on Peña Fuentes to
reiterate that a simple declaration (or in this case, testimony) from the prosecutor
that the detective did not communicate the privileged information to them was
insufficient to carry the State’s burden. 3 Wn. App. 2d at 260-61. Here, Saarinen
assured the court that she did not read the contents of the privileged
communication (but also specifically recalled precise wording contained in some
of the documents) and the DPA purportedly declared under penalty of perjury10
that he did not read or become aware of the contents of the intercepted
10 No such declaration is in the record transmitted on appeal.
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communications. However, while Saarinen testified, and the trial court accepted
as true, that she did not read the documents in the photographs other than certain
specific words, she never confirmed that the subsequent steps she took in the work
up of Myers’ case were not influenced in any way by the interception of his
privileged communication or the information contained therein. Under the plain
language of Peña Fuentes and Irby, these claims of ignorance by certain key
government actors are insufficient to meet the State’s appropriately high burden of
proof.
More critical to our conclusion that the court applied the wrong standard is
the fact that there is definitive evidence in the record that a government actor
unquestionably read the privileged attorney-client communications. Bilyeu
expressly confirmed that he reviewed the documents in their entirety. Further, he
testified that he did so at the explicit direction of the lead detective on the case with
the agreement of the attorney representing the people of the State of Washington
in prosecuting the case against Myers. Regardless of the purpose behind the
intrusion into the protected attorney-client relationship (here, purportedly to have
a nonlawyer make the definitive legal determination as to whether they were, in
fact, privileged communications), there is uncontroverted evidence in the record of
a state actor reading protected correspondence.
Further, conclusion of law 4, which Myers also challenges, says, “The State
overcame a presumption of prejudice when it established beyond a reasonable
doubt that the defendant’s right to a fair trial was not prejudiced by the procedure
implemented in this case.” Setting aside the fact that this conclusion does not
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properly flow from the findings, in part, for the reasons set out above, it further
demonstrates the court’s use of an incorrect legal standard. This conclusion sets
out the standard for CrR 8.3(b) motions generally, but fails to apply the overlay
required when the motion is premised on a violation of the Sixth Amendment based
on interception of privileged communication. Myers’ right to a fair trial is impacted
by his denial of the Sixth Amendment right to counsel because the government
intruded on that protected relationship. Cory establishes that this is the question
at the heart of the inquiry when the court is presented with a CrR 8.3(b) motion in
this particular procedural posture:
It is also obvious that an attorney cannot make a “full and
complete investigation of both the facts and the law” unless [they]
ha[ve] the full and complete confidence of [their] client, and such
confidence cannot exist if the client cannot have the assurance that
[their] disclosures to [their] counsel are strictly confidential.
62 Wn.2d at 374 (quoting State v. Hartwig, 36 Wn.2d 598, 601, 219 P.2d 564
(1950)). While it is clear the court considered whether the lead detective or DPA
had access to any defense strategy as a result of the violation, the record before
us is silent on whether the trial court ever actually considered the government
misconduct that gave rise to the motion to dismiss in the first place, the very breach
of the confidentiality promised to an accused person when communicating with
their counsel. This misapplication of the guiding standard is also an abuse of
discretion.
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C. Fashioning an Appropriate Remedy Considering the Totality of
Circumstances
The final step in the analysis set out in Irby is to determine the appropriate
remedy, “considering the totality of the circumstances present, including the
degree of prejudice to the defendant’s right to a fair trial and the degree of
nefariousness of the conduct by the state actor(s).” 3 Wn. App. 2d at 252-53. As
to a remedy for the violation of Myers’ rights under the Sixth Amendment, the
court’s conclusion suffers from the same misapplication of the law that infiltrated
its consideration of the third prong under Irby in that the court seemed to minimize
the conduct by the government officials and only begrudgingly conclude that Myers
was prejudiced. In its ruling denying the motion to dismiss, the court expressly
stated:
While the State’s decision to use a detective from the same agency,
albeit one unconnected to the case, was not a proper decision, the
sole reason of Detective Bilyeu’s review of the protected document
was to ensure that any privileged information of the defendant was
properly screened off from the prosecution of the defendant. . . .
While the more preferred cause [sic] of action would have been for
the DPA to use a more neutral source for review like the courts, the
conduct here does not rise to the level of egregiousness where
prejudice should be presumed.
The first misinterpretation and misapplication of the law, as discussed in the
previous section, is that the jurisprudence is clear that once privileged attorney-
client communications are intercepted by a government actor like an investigating
officer (Peña Fuentes), a corrections deputy (Irby), or a prosecutor, prejudice is
presumed. The presumption of prejudice is not triggered by a court’s
determination as to the “level of egregiousness” of the incursion into this
constitutionally protected relationship.
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The next misinterpretation of the law that occurred here is where the court
weakly asserted that the decision to have another SCSO detective review the
protected materials to determine whether they were privileged was “not a proper
decision,” and then failed to clearly state that such a decision by the government
was not only inconsistent with the law but was also a further government
interception of protected communications. Bilyeu’s review of the privileged
documents was yet another a violation of Myer’s Sixth Amendment right to private
communications with defense counsel. 11 Where concerns arise that a government
actor may have come across privileged communications, the appropriate party to
review the intercepted information is a neutral judicial officer who can employ
additional protections for the accused such as in camera review.
There is little in the trial court’s oral ruling to dissuade the SCSO or the
prosecutor’s office from repeating this conduct in the future, and it was utterly silent
on the fact that each of those government entities lacks the authority to render
such opinions without further violating the Sixth Amendment rights of the accused.
The written FFCL are virtually silent on this aspect of the issue. The need for a
clear ruling prohibiting such practices became abundantly apparent at oral
argument before this court. When asked whether a detective was the proper party
to make a determination as to what constitutes communication protected by
attorney-client privilege, the State answered in the affirmative and further claimed
11 At oral argument, the State ultimately conceded that Bilyeu’s review of the privileged
communications was itself a violation of Myers’ Sixth Amendment right. Wash. Ct. of Appeals oral
argument, State v. Myers, No. 83588-2-I (Apr. 25, 2023), at 12 min., 40 sec., video recording by
TVW, Washington State’s Public Affairs Network, https://tvw.org/video/division-1-court-of-appeals-
2023041313.
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No. 83588-2-I/19
that “the court has approved of the use of what is colloquially referred to as a ‘taint
team’ in other situations analogous to this.” 12 When the panel inquired into this
practice of having a “taint team” of detectives review and determine whether
documents contain privileged attorney-client information, the State said it was “not
regular” but “it appeared to the [prosecutor’s] office to be a permissible way to deal
with an unknown document.” 13
While a “taint team” may be an appropriate way to approach other
evidentiary issues that could arise in the investigation of a criminal case, this
method fails to recognize, much less honor, the unique nature of this
constitutionally protected relationship. This is not a matter that can be sanitized
by the same sort of screening as may be employed where one attorney in an office
is conflicted off of a matter handled by a colleague. The portion of the court’s oral
ruling that emphasized Bilyeu’s role in this endeavor was “to ensure that any
privileged information” was “properly screened off from the prosecution of the
defendant” was simply incorrect. The government’s possession of protected
communications, regardless of the role the individual actor has in the prosecution
of the defendant, is itself the constitutional violation. It is clear from the trial court’s
ruling and the State’s argument before this panel that this impermissible practice
has apparently become institutionalized to some extent and is found acceptable
by the government attorneys in the local prosecutor’s office. This is despite the
fact that all of the law enforcement officers who testified at the motion hearing
12 Wash. Ct. of Appeals oral argument, supra, at 13 min., 15 sec. It is unclear to which
“court” the prosecutor was referring, the trial court or an appellate court. Case law cited herein
suggests it could not be the latter.
13 Wash. Ct. of Appeals oral argument, supra, at 13 min., 40 sec.
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No. 83588-2-I/20
indicated that they were aware that they should avoid contact with or otherwise
intercepting privileged communications between an accused person and their
attorney. Consequently, we must reiterate that in a criminal prosecution when a
state actor may have obtained privileged attorney-client communications, the sole
reviewer of those communications for purposes of making a definitive conclusion
on that issue is to be a neutral judicial officer.
The manner by which the trial court here appears to have minimized the
layers of governmental misconduct by the SCSO and DPA establishes that the
court abused its discretion by misapprehending and misapplying the controlling
authority. Proper review of the totality of the circumstances in order to select an
appropriate remedy must necessarily include the following facts as established in
the record, consistent with the court’s credibility determinations which we leave
undisturbed:
• Prior to Ryakhovskiy entering Myers’ jail cell in search of handwritten
documents, Saarinen had already obtained a jail kite with Myers’
handwriting and a potential signature of his.
• Ryakhovskiy was trained on handling legal documents, yet
proceeded to photograph 10 documents in Myers’ cell on September
16, 2021 without regard for their possible contents.
• The same day, Ryakhovskiy disseminated those documents via e-
mail to Saarinen, another government actor and the lead detective
on Myers’ case.
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No. 83588-2-I/21
• Saarinen reviewed the documents with at least enough attention to
read and recall certain words within them.
• On one of the documents, Saarinen saw the date written as “April
26,” which she recognized that as the date of the alleged robbery.
• Saarinen deleted the images, and emptied her recycle bin on her
computer, sometime contemporaneous to her communication with
the DPA on Myers’ case.
• DPA Scott called Saarinen and advised retention of the intercepted
communication.
• Scott and Saarinen apparently agreed that the best course of action
in light of the possible Sixth Amendment violation was to seize the
documents and disseminate them to yet another government actor
for review.
• This practice had become normalized to the extent that detectives
who review potentially privileged communications are “colloquially
referred to as a taint team.”
• Saarinen communicated with Ryakhovskiy again, after advising
Scott that nothing had been seized from Myers’ cell previously, and
directed him to now seize the original “handwriting samples” that he
had photographed, excluding any that contained privileged
information. 14
14 From a practical standpoint, it is unclear to this panel how Saarinen expected
Ryakhovskiy to exclude items containing privileged information without first reading them, which
would then be yet another violation of Myers’ Sixth Amendment rights.
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No. 83588-2-I/22
• When Ryakhovskiy returned to Myers’ cell on September 16 and
seized 5 documents therein, he believed that the documents
containing “neat” handwriting on lined paper were likely privileged
and left those documents in the cell—a standard he did not apply
when he originally took pictures of the 10 documents and sent them
to Saarinen.
• Bilyeu was directed by his supervisor, the sergeant of the major
crimes unit, to contact Scott regarding involvement in the Myers
case.
• Scott, an attorney representing the State, directed Bilyeu to review
the documents seized from Myers’ cell by Ryakhovskiy and “let the
prosecutor’s office, [Scott], know if there was anything in there that
would be related to the attorney-client privilege.”
• On September 20, Bilyeu retrieved the documents seized by
Ryakhovskiy at Saarinen’s direction and reviewed them in their
entirety for the express purpose of identifying information protected
by attorney-client privilege.
• Bilyeu concluded that 4 of the 5 documents seized from Myers’ cell
were privileged and “the State maybe shouldn’t be in possession” of
them, so he sought further instruction from DPA Scott.
• On September 21, DPA Scott finally notified Myers’ attorney that the
State had intercepted, and retained, documents suspected to contain
privileged communications to her from her client and asked her to
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No. 83588-2-I/23
retrieve them from Bilyeu and confirm whether they were, in fact,
privileged.
• Scott had concluded that he would seek in camera review by a
judicial officer only after confirmation from defense counsel about
whether the documents seized were protected communications.
Review of the transcript and FFCL issued after the hearing demonstrate that the
court either failed to identify or properly consider many of these facts or failed to
appropriately evaluate how they compounded both the government infringement
on Myers’ Sixth Amendment rights and the utter mishandling of the incident by
almost every State actor involved.
This last issue is necessarily a part of the court’s fashioning of an
appropriate remedy, as the other stated purpose of the remedy in a case like this
is expressly to deter the government from engaging in conduct known to violate
the rights of the accused:
if the investigating officers and the prosecution know that the most
severe consequence which can follow from their violation of one of
the most valuable rights of a defendant, is that they will have to try
the case twice, it can hardly be supposed that they will be seriously
deterred from indulging in this very simple and convenient method of
obtaining evidence and knowledge of the defendant's trial strategy.
Cory, 62 Wn.2d at 377. In State v. Garza, Division Three of this court recognized
federal precedent and noted that a per se prejudice rule was adopted by the Tenth
Circuit in cases such as these because that circuit concluded “‘that no other
standard can adequately deter this sort of misconduct.’” 99 Wn. App. 291, 299,
994 P.2d 868 (2000) (quoting Shillinger v. Haworth, 70 F.3d 1132, 1142 (10th Cir.
1995)). While “dismissal is an extraordinary remedy” under CrR 8.3(b), it is one
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No. 83588-2-I/24
that should be thoroughly and meaningfully considered, along with other options
available to the court. Id. at 301-02.
In State v. Granacki, we reiterated the importance of deterrence in crafting
an appropriate remedy. 90 Wn. App. 598, 959 P.2d 667 (1998). In that case, we
affirmed the trial court’s dismissal of two counts of robbery in the second degree,
one count of attempted robbery in the second degree, one count of theft in the third
degree, and one count of assault in the fourth degree based on the misconduct of
the lead detective for the State. Id. at 599-600. During a brief recess at the
beginning of trial, the court clerk witnessed the detective looking at the top page of
defense counsel’s legal pad that contained privileged attorney-client
communications. Id. at 600. The clerk testified that she did not know how long the
detective was looking at the documents, but she saw him looking at them for
“several seconds.” Id. The detective admitted to viewing the materials but
asserted that he had only noticed and read his own name. Id. Even though the
detective had not communicated to the prosecutor about what he had seen,
prejudice was still presumed. Id. at 604.
On review, we explained that “any intrusion into a defendant’s confidential
communications with [their] attorney is sanctionable” and emphasized that
“dismissal not only affords the defendant an adequate remedy” but it also serves
the additional purpose of discouraging “‘the odious practice of eavesdropping on
privileged communication.’” Id. at 603 (quoting Cory, 62 Wn.2d at 378). We
affirmed the dismissal and further noted that the following remedy would have also
been appropriate under the circumstances: banning the detective from the
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No. 83588-2-I/25
courtroom, excluding his testimony, and prohibiting him from discussing the case
with anyone. Id. at 604.
In briefing, the State contends that the trial court “fashioned a remedy
consistent with the discretion the Granacki court explicitly identified.” We disagree.
Here, the court’s remedy, as set out in conclusion 5, was “suppression of any
documents collected from the defendant’s cell and [to] order that persons with
knowledge of such documents do not share or disseminate the substance of [sic]
contents of those documents.” This ordering language does nothing more than
affirm the existing state of the law with regard to the seized documents or
information contained therein. The documents were already inadmissible, absent
a waiver by Myers, precisely because they are privileged attorney-client
communications, and ordering government actors to not disseminate information
intercepted in violation of the Sixth Amendment is simply a command to follow
rules by which they are already bound and, more critically, that they have already
violated. This is no sanction at all on the government actors, who appear to have
genuinely believed that their conduct was wholly appropriate, so there is no
discouragement from engaging in similar behavior in the future.
The remedy here is woefully inadequate and further demonstrates that the
trial court did not apply the standard set out in Irby, wherein we set out a
non-exhaustive list of other remedies short of a dismissal, which were likely to
further the other goal of deterring future government misconduct:
If called on to fashion a remedy on remand, the trial court
should consider the totality of the circumstances, evaluating both the
degree of prejudice to [the accused’s] right to a fair trial and the
degree of nefariousness of the conduct by the state actors. This
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No. 83588-2-I/26
might include considering the motivations of the jail guards . . . and
the extent to which, if at all, [the accused’s] privileged attorney-client
communications were utilized by the State in its . . . prosecution of
[the accused] or could be so utilized in the future.
In the event that the trial court determines that a remedy short
of dismissal is warranted, vacation of the judgment will nevertheless
be necessary. In addition, in anticipation of yet another trial, other
remedies might include—singularly or in combination—suppression
of evidence, disqualification of specific attorneys from [the
accused’s] prosecution, disqualification of the . . . County
Prosecuting Attorney’s Office from further participation in this case,
or exclusion of witnesses tainted by the governmental misconduct.
3 Wn. App. 2d at 264-65. In fashioning an appropriate remedy under CrR 8.3(b),
the court must necessarily look beyond whether the DPA reviewed the privileged
material, but rather to the broader impact of the government intrusion into a
protected relationship, how that constitutional violation may have deprived Myers
of his right to a fair trial, and how to disincentivize such governmental violations
going forward.
We reverse the denial of the CrR 8.3(b) motion to dismiss and remand for
the court to apply the proper standard established by controlling case law. If the
court determines that dismissal is proper, that necessarily terminates the case.
Pursuant to Irby, even if “the trial court determines that a remedy short of dismissal
is warranted, vacation of the judgment will nevertheless be necessary.” Id. This
is because anything that is short of dismissal, but goes beyond the ineffective
suppression previously ordered, will require the State to decide whether it will retry
Myers under those new remedial constraints (i.e., “disqualification of specific
attorneys . . ., disqualification of the . . . County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office from
further participation in this case, or exclusion of witnesses tainted by the
governmental misconduct.”). Id. On remand, the trial court must determine
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No. 83588-2-I/27
whether to grant the CrR 8.3(b) motion to dismiss, or to impose some lesser
remedy that goes beyond mere suppression of already inadmissible material, by
conducting a proper inquiry under Irby and considering the totality of the
circumstances as established by the testimony of the various government actors. 15
Reversed and remanded.
WE CONCUR:
15 Because Irby establishes that this reversal vacates the judgment and sentence, we
decline to reach Myers’ remaining assignment of error regarding jury selection.
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