FILE THIS OPINION WAS FILED
FOR RECORD AT 8 A.M. ON
APRIL 18, 2024
IN CLERK’S OFFICE
SUPREME COURT, STATE OF WASHINGTON
APRIL 18, 2024
ERIN L. LENNON
SUPREME COURT CLERK
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
SPOKANE COUNTY, )
) No. 101520-8
Petitioner, )
)
v. ) En Banc
)
JILMA MENESES, in her official )
capacity as Secretary of the )
Filed: April 18, 2024
Washington State Department of )
Social and Health Services, )
)
Respondent. )
)
JOHNSON, J.—This case presents an original action filed by Spokane
County Prosecuting Attorney Lawrence Haskell (Prosecutor), requesting this court
exercise our original jurisdiction under article IV, section 4 of the Washington
Constitution.1 The Prosecutor seeks issuance of a writ of mandamus directing
Jilma Meneses, the secretary of the Washington State Department of Social and
Health Services (DSHS), to comply with statutory duties under chapter 10.77
1
“The supreme court shall have original jurisdiction in habeas corpus, and quo warranto
and mandamus as to all state officers . . . .” WASH. CONST. art. IV, § 4.
Spokane County v. Meneses, No. 101520-8
RCW and timely provide competency services in criminal proceedings. We
conclude Secretary Meneses is not a state officer and dismiss.2
BACKGROUND
DSHS, through its Behavioral Health Administration (BHA), provides
behavioral health intervention, treatment, and education to Washington residents. 3
Relevant to this petition 4 are the services offered to criminal defendants by the
Office of Forensic Mental Health Services (OFMHS), a division of the BHA
created in 2015. The OFMHS provides competency related services to criminal
defendants, including evaluations for defendants whose competency to stand trial
is questioned and competency restoration treatment for persons found incompetent
to proceed to trial.
DSHS has a statutory duty to provide competency services when a court so
orders. Under RCW 10.77.060(1)(b)(i), whenever there is doubt as to a defendant’s
competency, “the court on its own motion or on the motion of any party” must
2
Disability Rights Washington, American Civil Liberties Union of Washington, and
Washington Defender Association jointly filed an amicus brief in support of DSHS.
3
The parties submitted an agreed statement of facts and do not dispute the veracity of the
factual assertions made therein.
4
The BHA serves a number of different populations that are not at issue in this petition,
including criminal defendants found to be not guilty by reason of insanity, felony conversions
(i.e., criminal defendants whose felony charges are dismissed for reasons of incompetency and
are ordered to be committed to a state hospital for evaluation and possible commitment under the
involuntary treatment act (ITA), ch. 71.05 RCW, and RCW 10.77.086(5)), and civil patients (i.e.,
persons committed under the ITA for long-term treatment). See 1 Agreed Statement of Facts at
7-11.
2
Spokane County v. Meneses, No. 101520-8
review the allegations of incompetency and determine whether a genuine doubt
exists.5 Where there exists a genuine doubt as to a defendant’s competency, “the
court shall either appoint or request the secretary [of DSHS] to designate a
qualified expert or professional person . . . to evaluate and report upon the mental
condition of the defendant.” RCW 10.77.060(1)(b)(i). Once a competency
evaluation is ordered, the evaluation may occur in jail, in the community, or in a
DSHS facility, depending on the circumstances. RCW 10.77.060(1)(d); 1 Agreed
Statement of Facts at 7-8.
Ultimately, the court determines a defendant’s competency to stand trial. If
the court finds the defendant incompetent, the criminal case is stayed, and the court
must—depending on the circumstances—order the defendant to undergo inpatient
or outpatient competency restoration treatment or dismiss the proceedings without
prejudice upon agreement of the parties if there exists “an appropriate and
available diversion program willing to accept the defendant.” RCW
10.77.084(1)(a), .086(1)(b). 6
5
In May 2023, the Washington Legislature enacted the Engrossed Second Substitute
Senate Bill 5440, which amended chapter 10.77 RCW and title 71 RCW to address the
“unprecedented wait times in jail” for admission to a psychiatric facility for services related to
competency to stand trial. ENGROSSED SECOND SUBSTITUTE S.B. 5440, at 1-2, 68th Leg., Reg.
Sess. (Wash. 2023) (E2SSB 5440). This petition was filed before the enactment of E2SSB 5440.
The Prosecutor asserts these changes to the statute are not material to this petition. Where
relevant, we note how the newly enacted statute differs from the statute in effect at the time this
petition was filed.
6
Prior to the 2023 amendments, former RCW 10.77.086(1) (2022) stated that “the court
shall commit the defendant to the custody of the secretary for inpatient competency restoration”
3
Spokane County v. Meneses, No. 101520-8
Over the last decade, the number of court orders entered for competency
services has greatly increased. 7 DSHS has been unable to meet this demand,
resulting in significant delays in offering competency services to defendants.
Consequently, a class action was filed in federal court, challenging as
unconstitutional DSHS’s delays in providing competency services to criminal
defendants in pretrial custody. The United States District Court for the Western
District of Washington held these delays violated the class members’ due process
rights and issued a permanent injunction against DSHS. The injunction set strict
time limits for providing competency services to defendants in pretrial custody,
appointed a special court monitor, and began oversight of DSHS’s efforts to
comply with the injunction. See, e.g., Trueblood v. Wash. State Dep’t of Soc. &
Health Servs., 101 F. Supp. 3d 1010 (W.D. Wash. 2015), modified on remand, No.
or, in the alternative, order outpatient restoration treatment based on a recommendation from
DSHS and input from the parties. The amended statute added subsection (b), which requires that
the court first consider “all available and appropriate alternatives to inpatient competency
restoration” for certain eligible incompetent defendants. RCW 10.77.086(1)(b). It also requires
that the court “dismiss the proceedings without prejudice upon agreement of the parties” if
DSHS has found “an appropriate and available diversion program willing to accept” the eligible
defendant. RCW 10.77.086(1)(b).
7
“The number of competency evaluations requiring evaluation of a defendant held in jail
have more than tripled from 2,064 in 2013 to 6,199 in 2022.” 1 Agreed Statement of Facts at 22-
23. “Court orders for persons who are not in jail and are evaluated in the community while on
personal recognizance, have grown from 1,623 in 2019 to 2,087 in 2022, a 28.6% increase.” 1
Agreed Statement of Facts at 23. The demand for competency evaluations of defendants that
require admission into a DSHS facility “have remained flat at 292 per year.” 1 Agreed Statement
of Facts at 23. “Inpatient competency restoration orders have tripled from 694 in 2013 to 2,105
in 2022.” 1 Agreed Statement of Facts at 23.
4
Spokane County v. Meneses, No. 101520-8
C14-1178 MJP, 2016 WL 4268933 (W.D. Wash. Aug. 15, 2016) (court order);8 1
Agreed Statement of Facts at 25 n.2, 38-40.
The Trueblood injunction and corresponding federal court oversight of
DSHS’s compliance are ongoing. As part of the injunction, DSHS is required to
submit monthly reports to the court monitor, detailing its compliance.9 The court
monitor regularly conducts on-site visits to DSHS treatment facilities to review
implementation efforts and issues reports following these visits. The federal court
holds quarterly status hearings to review DSHS’s efforts to timely provide
competency services to class members and imposes monthly contempt fines
against DSHS for its continued failure to comply with the injunction. 1 Agreed
Statement of Facts at 43-45, 40 (showing that as of January 2023, DSHS has paid
over $100 million in contempt fines).
Despite these efforts, DSHS’s delay in providing competency services to
criminal defendants continues. And, as noted by the Trueblood court, the
individuals awaiting these services are some of our most vulnerable. The average
Trueblood member “is a male, person of color . . . living in desperate poverty; . . .
experiencing homelessness or living without stable housing; . . . possessing little
8
The United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit’s vacatur and remand concerns
a group of defendants not at issue in this petition.
9
These monthly reports are published and may be found at
https://www.dshs.wa.gov/bha/court-monitor-reports.
5
Spokane County v. Meneses, No. 101520-8
likelihood of employment; . . . suffering from a serious mental illness . . . ; [and]
requiring substance use disorder treatment.” A.B. by and through Trueblood v.
Wash. State Dep’t of Soc. & Health Servs., ___ F. Supp. 3d ___ (W.D. Wash. July
7, 2023), 2023 WL 4407539, at *5. “‘These vulnerable people too often find
themselves involved with the criminal justice system because of nonresponsive
health and human services systems upon which they would better depend for care,
treatment, rehabilitation, and recovery support services.’” A.B., 2023 WL 4407539,
at *4 (quoting court monitor’s quarterly report at 1 (June 8, 2023)). Most of these
individuals have contact with the criminal justice system for “commit[ting] crimes
linked to poverty and homelessness in which they live and their underlying mental
health conditions. . . . [such as] theft of food, indecent exposure for urinating or
defecating in public due to the lack of an available restroom[], or trespassing on
private property to sleep.” A.B., 2023 WL 4407539, at *5. And Trueblood
members—who await competency services in jail—“face serious harms to their
physical and mental safety and wellbeing.” A.B., 2023 WL 4407539, at *5.
DSHS’s delay in complying with its statutory obligation to provide
competency services to criminal defendants is the basis for this petition for writ of
mandamus. The petition specifically concerns three categories of Spokane County
defendants in felony criminal proceedings ordered to receive competency services
from DSHS.
6
Spokane County v. Meneses, No. 101520-8
The first group is out of custody defendants ordered to undergo a
competency evaluation by DSHS in the community. The legislature has established
a statutory “performance target of 21 days or fewer to complete a competency
evaluation in the community.” RCW 10.77.068(1)(c). However, according to
DSHS, “most out-of-custody defendants are evaluated within 11-13 months of a
court order.” 1 Agreed Statement of Facts at 18. The Prosecutor asserts, and DSHS
does not dispute, that some Spokane County defendants have waited well over a
year for an outpatient competency evaluation. 1 Agreed Statement of Facts at 17; 3
Agreed Statement of Facts (3 Agreed Exs.), Ex. 16, at 2150 (showing one
defendant waited over two years for an evaluation; ultimately, the State moved to
dismiss the case while still awaiting completion of the evaluation).
The second group is out of custody defendants who have been found
incompetent to stand trial and await inpatient competency restoration services.
These defendants wait in the community for admission to inpatient restoration
treatment in a DSHS facility. The legislature has not established any statutory time
frame related to this competency service. DSHS does not prioritize this group over
defendants in pretrial custody, and this group faces unknown wait times for
admission into a facility. The Prosecutor alleges that as of January 31, 2023, two
Spokane County defendants had waited 13 and 18 months to be admitted to
inpatient restoration treatment. 3 Agreed Exs., Ex. 15, at 2109.
7
Spokane County v. Meneses, No. 101520-8
The third group is defendants in pretrial custody awaiting inpatient
competency restoration services. These defendants have been found incompetent
and ordered to undergo inpatient competency restoration treatment provided by
DSHS. DSHS is statutorily required to extend an offer of admission to these
defendants within 7 days from DSHS’s receipt of the court order or 14 days from
signature of the court order, whichever is shorter. RCW 10.77.068(1)(a), (2)(a).
This group is subject to the Trueblood injunction, which—based on a settlement
agreement by the parties—adopted the statutory time limits. Trueblood, 2017 WL
1488479, at *1 (modifying the injunction to provide that “DSHS shall admit class
members for either inpatient competency evaluation or restoration within the
shorter of either a) 7 days from receipt of order or b) 14 days from signature of
order”); 2 Agreed Statement of Facts (Agreed Exs.), Ex. 11, at 1827 (am.
settlement agreement). In early 2023, DSHS estimated that these defendants wait
approximately 5 to 6 months in pretrial custody before receiving inpatient
restoration treatment.
In response to DSHS’s continued delay in providing these competency
services, the Prosecutor requests we issue a writ of mandamus compelling DSHS
to perform its statutory obligations within reasonable timelines or, where
applicable, within the specified time frames set out in RCW 10.77.068 and the
Trueblood injunction. While DSHS’s failure to comply with its statutory
8
Spokane County v. Meneses, No. 101520-8
obligations under chapter 10.76 RCW is of great concern, an original action in this
court is not the proper avenue to obtain the relief sought by the Prosecutor.
ANALYSIS
The Washington Supreme Court has “original jurisdiction in . . . mandamus
as to all state officers.” WASH. CONST. art. IV, § 4. The Prosecutor requests that
this court exercise its original jurisdiction to issue a writ of mandamus to the
secretary of DSHS under article IV, section 4 of the Washington Constitution and
chapter 7.16 RCW. DSHS argues we must dismiss the petition for lack of original
jurisdiction because the secretary is not a state officer within the meaning of our
state constitution. We conclude the secretary is not a state officer.
We recently analyzed the “state officer” question in Ladenburg v. Henke,
197 Wn.2d 645, 486 P.3d 866 (2021), where we discussed and applied the
analytical framework this court has followed for over 100 years. In Ladenburg, we
considered whether municipal court judges are state officers under article IV,
section 4. We concluded they are not. In reaching this conclusion, we recognized
that under our case law, “‘state officers’ refers to a narrow set of elected officials
who exercise state-level authority and are in turn controlled by constitutional
provisions directly governing their appointment, salary, and impeachment.”
Ladenburg, 197 Wn.2d at 650. We highlighted that the references to “state
officers” in the state constitution as it existed in 1889 indicated “that when our
9
Spokane County v. Meneses, No. 101520-8
constitution was enacted, ‘state officers’ were, at a minimum, elected officers and
subject to impeachment.” Ladenburg, 197 Wn.2d at 651.
DSHS argues that Ladenburg established a bright line rule that a state officer
must be elected and subject to impeachment. The Prosecutor counters that
Ladenburg and “state officer” should not be interpreted so narrowly. Instead, he
argues, we should interpret Ladenburg as establishing a list of factors to consider
in assessing whether a public official is a state officer under article IV, section 4.
Under this argument, impeachment and the manner of appointment are
nondispositive factors. The Prosecutor argues this approach is consistent with the
Ladenburg analysis and our case law.
While we expressly stated that a state officer must be elected and subject to
impeachment, our analysis in Ladenburg treats these characteristics as factors
rather than requirements. For instance, in Ladenburg, the municipal court judges
were elected officials but were not subject to removal through impeachment. If
state officers are, “at a minimum, elected officers and subject to impeachment,”
then we could have ended our inquiry after concluding that municipal judges were
not subject to impeachment. We did not. Instead, we discussed the four
characteristics that make a public official a state officer, as established by our
precedent: (1) the manner in which the official was appointed to their position, (2)
the source of their salary, (3) whether they are subject to impeachment, and (4) the
10
Spokane County v. Meneses, No. 101520-8
official’s jurisdictional reach. Ladenburg, 197 Wn.2d at 653-59. And we called
these characteristics “factors” throughout the opinion.
Additionally, Ladenburg suggests that the ultimate question in determining
whether a public official is a state officer is whether the official is part of the
“narrow group of high-ranking public officials” that is subject to state control.
Ladenburg, 197 Wn.2d at 652. The Ladenburg factors help answer this question by
considering whether the “state controls” the official “through appointment, salary,
and impeachment” and whether the official “wield[s] some state-level authority” or
“‘repose[s] some part of the state’s sovereign power.’” Ladenburg, 197 Wn.2d at
653, 652 (quoting State ex rel. Dunbar v. State Bd. of Equalization, 140 Wash.
433, 437, 249 P. 996 (1926)).
First, we consider the manner in which the position is appointed. Ladenburg
summarized our case law as establishing that state officers are “limited to those
elected officials whom the state controls.” Ladenburg, 197 Wn.2d at 653
(emphasis added). The secretary is not an elected position.
Second, we consider whether the public official is subject to impeachment.
In Ladenburg, we identified that impeachment has been treated as the primary
factor in determining whether a public official was a state officer. We concluded
the framers intended state officers to be limited to those superior officers subject to
impeachment under article V, section 2 of the Washington Constitution. WASH.
11
Spokane County v. Meneses, No. 101520-8
CONST. art. V, § 2 (“The governor and other state and judicial officers . . . shall be
liable to impeachment for high crimes or misdemeanors, or malfeasance in
office.”); Ladenburg, 197 Wn.2d at 652 (citing State ex rel. Stearns v. Smith, 6
Wash. 496, 497-98, 33 P. 974 (1893)). The secretary “hold[s] office at the pleasure
of the governor” and is not subject to impeachment. RCW 43.17.020; RCW
43.20A.040; RCW 43.06.070 (“The governor may remove from office any state
officer appointed by him or her not liable to impeachment, for incompetency,
misconduct, or malfeasance in office.”).
Third, we consider the source of the official’s salary. A salary that is paid by
the State weighs in favor of the position being a state officer. Ladenburg, 197
Wn.2d at 654-55. The source of the secretary’s salary is the State, and the
secretary’s salary is fixed by the governor. RCW 43.03.028, .040; RCW
43.20A.040; 1 Agreed Statement of Facts at 3; see also Resp’t’s Br. at 35
(acknowledging the secretary’s salary is paid by the State).
Fourth, an official that “wield[s] some state-level authority” weighs in favor
of concluding they are a state officer. Ladenburg, 197 Wn.2d at 653. However, this
factor is not dispositive and has previously been significant where the public
official wielded part of the State’s sovereign power. For instance, in Dunbar, we
concluded that members of the State Board of Equalization—a position that was
neither elected nor subject to impeachment—were state officers because the
12
Spokane County v. Meneses, No. 101520-8
position “reposed some part of the state’s sovereign power.” Dunbar, 140 Wash. at
437. Specifically, board members had the State’s sovereign power to levy taxes.
Here, the secretary’s statutorily created duties, while statewide in nature, are not
equivalent to a sovereign power. The legislature designed DSHS to “integrate and
coordinate all those activities involving provision of care for individuals who, as a
result of their economic, social or health condition, require financial assistance,
institutional care, rehabilitation or other social and health services.” RCW
43.20A.010. And DSHS carries out its duties and administers its programs across
the state of Washington, with the secretary acting as the chief executive officer.
RCW 43.17.020; RCW 43.20A.050. However, the secretary’s statutory duties are
not comparable to the State’s sovereign powers.
Because the secretary is not elected, subject to impeachment, or granted a
State sovereign power, we conclude the position is not a state officer under article
IV, section 4 of the Washington Constitution. Accordingly, we dismiss the petition
for writ of mandamus.
13
Spokane County v. Meneses, No. 101520-8
:(&21&85
Keenan, J.P.T.
14
Spokane County v. Meneses
(Montoya-Lewis, J., concurring)
No. 101520-8
MONTOYA-LEWIS, J. (concurring)—I agree with the majority but write
separately to emphasize the complexity of the procedures involved that would allow
this court to address the underlying issues raised by this writ of mandamus. The
issue of how trial courts ensure that those who come before the courts with
competency issues are treated fairly gave me grave concern during my time as a
Whatcom County Superior Court judge. There, I signed hundreds of orders for both
in-custody and out-of-custody competency evaluations and restoration orders, and,
eventually, signed many orders holding the Washington State Department of Social
and Health Services (DSHS) in contempt for failing to timely provide these services.
The federal Trueblood 1 litigation has provided some relief for its class
members (in-custody defendants) by reducing the wait times for competency
evaluations. But, as the majority notes, millions of dollars of contempt fines have
been issued and are still being issued against the State for violations of federal orders
under Trueblood and of state court orders finding repeated violations of court orders
1
Trueblood v. Wash. State Dep’t of Soc. & Health Servs., 101 F. Supp. 3d 1010 (W.D.
Wash. 2015), modified on remand, No. C14-1178 MJP, 2016 WL 4268933 (W.D. Wash. Aug.
15, 2016) (court order).
1
Spokane County v. Meneses
(Montoya-Lewis, J., concurring)
requiring that services be performed within a certain time frame. Majority at 4-5.
During the last several years, the backlog of people needing such services has only
grown. The growth in the need for such services has been the subject of much
speculation, but the reason for the need matters less than the demand for the services.
As the State emphasized during oral argument in this case, it has sought and received
additional funding from the legislature for additional evaluation and restoration
beds, more staffing, and even additional hospitals. Wash. Sup. Ct. oral arg., Spokane
County v. Jilma Meneses, No. 101520-8, at 28 min., 9 sec. through 29 min., 1 sec.,
video recording by TVW, Washington State’s Public Affairs Network,
https://tvw.org/video/washington-state-supreme-court-2024011343/. Even as these
services are being added, wait times for many of these services has either stayed the
same or increased. The consequences for this situation are dire and, in my view,
should be viewed as tragic for the people waiting for services and risky for the public
when people with outstanding criminal cases cannot get to trial because they are
waiting for competency evaluations or restoration services; and it should serve to
remind our judicial system that “justice too long delayed is justice denied.” MARTIN
LUTHER KING, JR., Letter from Birmingham Jail, in WHY WE CAN’T WAIT (1964).
I had hoped that a writ such as this one or some similar procedure would bring
this crisis to this court in a way that would allow us to be part of the solution to this
enduring problem. Though I do not believe that this court possesses a singular
2
Spokane County v. Meneses
(Montoya-Lewis, J., concurring)
solution, I do understand why the plaintiffs attempted to get the court’s involvement:
because the issue appears intractable. As amici suggested in their briefing, counties
facing this issue could divert those with mental health issues from the criminal
justice system into community based mental health services, and could choose not
to file so many of these cases as criminal cases when they stem from mental health
issues. Br. of Amici Curiae Disability Rts. Wash., Am. Civ. Liberties Union of
Wash., and Wash. Def. Ass’n at 3, 20-24. Even where there have been attempts to
address this issue within communities, a lack of funding and increasing demand for
such services has proved that diversion can be only part of the solution.
The primary reason I write separately is to note that there does not appear to
me to be any obvious legal procedure by which a case involving competency or
restoration wait times gets to an appellate court. Allow me to explain via three
hypothetical scenarios that illuminate the problem.
SCENARIO #1: A person is charged with two felonies for entering a grocery
store from which they are trespassed and stealing a cart full of food, then gets
arrested and comes before a judge for arraignment. Prior to the hearing, the person
meets with assigned defense counsel, who finds the person to be responding to
external stimuli that is not there (talking back to voices, seeing people who are not
in the room). Defense counsel motions the court for a competency evaluation and
the State recommends that the person be held on $50,000 bail. The judge sets that
3
Spokane County v. Meneses
(Montoya-Lewis, J., concurring)
bail and orders a competency evaluation be completed in accordance with the statute.
That deadline passes, the person remains in custody without evaluation or mental
health support and requires significant time from correctional officers due to the
ongoing mental health crisis. The judge finds DSHS in contempt and orders a daily
fine until an evaluation is performed, and eventually the person is taken to an
inpatient state-run facility and evaluated.
The evaluator finds the person is suffering from a serious mental health
disorder and also finds that with in-patient treatment for competency restoration, the
person is reasonably expected to be rendered competent. The person returns back to
the county jail to wait for an open restoration bed, while continuing to decompensate
in jail. Eventually, a restoration bed opens, the person is transported there, spends
90 days receiving medications and treatment, and is restored to competency. They
are transported back to the county jail to address the charges for which they were
arrested. Since the date of arrest and the return after restoration services, six months
has elapsed.
The defendant and defense counsel meet to decide how to proceed in the case.
The prosecutor makes an offer to the defendant to plead guilty to one of the charges
and receive credit for time served. The defendant accepts that offer, pleads guilty,
and gets released from custody into the community (probably without any ongoing
care plan in place). At this point, the case ends and no appeal occurs.
4
Spokane County v. Meneses
(Montoya-Lewis, J., concurring)
SCENARIO #2: A young person is found setting fire to a local library and is
arrested at the scene and booked into custody. Upon being charged for arson, the
police note that the person has five prior convictions for arson. At arraignment, the
defendant pleads not guilty and bail is set at $250,000. Defense counsel meets with
the defendant a few days later, in custody, and believes the defendant is suffering
from a mental illness. Defense counsel asks for a hearing at which the judge orders
a competency evaluation. Again, the defendant waits longer than the statutory
minimum for an evaluation but ultimately receives one. The defendant is referred
to restoration, but after multiple restoration periods, experts determine the defendant
to be unrestorable, and the case resolves either by (1) the State dropping the charges
entirely or (2) proceeding to a trial with an insanity plea. If found not guilty by
reason of insanity, the defendant may be committed to a mental health facility for
years. Again, I see very few ways the issue—waiting longer than the statutory
minimum for an evaluation and being deemed unrestorable—may become an
appealable issue.
SCENARIO #3: A defendant is charged with a low-level felony theft and is
released without having to post bail. After some initial meetings with the defense
counsel, counsel believes the client is unable to participate in their own defense due
to a multitude of conspiracy theories they advance that led them to commit a crime.
At a pretrial hearing, defense counsel seeks an out-of-custody competency
5
Spokane County v. Meneses
(Montoya-Lewis, J., concurring)
evaluation. The defendant is placed on a waiting list, which is several months long.
When an appointment opens for their evaluation, the defendant’s location has
become impossible to determine because they have lost their housing. The court
issues a bench warrant for failure to appear at their next hearing and they remain on
bench warrant status for years. The case does not advance past this stage given the
defendant’s unknown whereabouts. Should the defendant be arrested while on
warrant status, the defendant would likely need the same competency evaluation,
which, again, may not happen for months.
I could advance multiple other scenarios demonstrating the complexity of how
these cases evolve. But primarily, I am showing that there are few scenarios, if any,
that lead an appellate court to be able to grapple with the problems of competency
evaluations and restoration orders being provided in a timely way under the statute,
or in a timely way for a case to be resolved in the instance that the statute does not
set out a statutory time period for the completion of evaluations.
Thus, it remains an ongoing and daily frustration of the trial courts who have
to manage huge backlogs of competency evaluations and restorations, which then
results in the resolution of cases, either through trial, plea, or dismissal. Trial courts
have limited enforcement authority beyond contempt findings and fines. Ultimately,
the payment of contempt fines comes from public budgets that are also needed to
address the underlying issue. Consequently, many judges are reluctant to assess
6
Spokane County v. Meneses
(Montoya-Lewis, J., concurring)
those fines but see little else that can move the State forward in meeting this
extraordinary and growing need.
Again, I do not think the appellate courts necessarily have an answer to this
problem either. I recognize that the federal court in Trueblood has undertaken a
tremendous, yearslong effort to get the State closer to compliance for in-custody
defendants, and there has been improvement. But this does not address out-of-
custody matters and has not solved this issue overall. While I agree with the
majority that this writ has not been the appropriate vehicle for this case to be
addressed by this court, I struggle to see how this issue ever reaches this court to
begin with and, therefore, worry that this problem will continue to worsen and
become an intractable barrier that trial judges struggle to solve alone.
Therefore, I respectfully concur.
7