State v. Clark

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         /FI·,~E
                                                              This opinion was flied for record

                                                         at     8:,00 OJh     on   fill 2£ )Y1
                                                        6U4J:X       c.;
                                                          SUSAN L. CARLSON
                                                                SUPREMECOURTCLERK
                                                                                                  :




             IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

                                               )
        STATE OF WASHINGTON,                   )
                                               )
                           Respondent,         )      No. 92021-4
                                               )
              v.                               )
                                               )      ENBANC
        ANTHONY TYRONE CLARK,                  )
                                               )
                           Petitioner.         )      Filed:     FEB 0 2 2.011
        _______________________)
              YU, J.- At his trial for premeditated first degree murder, petitioner

        Anthony Tyrone Clark sought to introduce expert testimony regarding his

        intellectual deficits. Clark asserted this testimony would be relevant to contesting

        the State's mens rea evidence and to helping the jury understand Clark's affect

        while testifying. The trial court excluded Clark's proffered expert testimony, but it

        did allow relevant observation testimony about Clark's education history, Social

        Security disability benefits, affect, and actions on the day of the murder.

              We hold that the trial court properly exercised its discretion in making its

        evidentiary rulings. The court did allow relevant observation testimony from lay
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       State v. Clark, No. 92021-4


       witnesses to rebut the State's mens rea evidence, and Clark does not challenge the

        scope of this testimony on review. However, because Clark purposefully did not

        assert or plead diminished capacity and the proposed expert testimony was not
                                                                                     .
        relevant to any other purpose, the expert testimony was properly excluded. Clark

        also cannot establish ineffective assistance of counsel or cumulative error, so we

        affirm his convictions.

                                         FACTUAL BACKGROUND

              Clark killed the victim, D.D., 1 with a single gunshot to the back of his head.

        D.D.'s body was found in a garbage can behind the triplex apartment building

        where Clark lived. There were no eyewitnesses to the shooting other than Clark

        himself. Clark testified that D.D. was trying to get Clark's mother's necklace from

        a high shelf in a closet. Before reaching for the necklace, D.D. removed a gun

        from his coat pocket, removed the "clip" from the gun, and handed the gun to

        Clark. 13 Verbatim Report ofProceedings (VRP) (Apr. 15, 2013) at 1594. Clark

        was sitting on the floor "messing around with the gun," aimed it "towards the

        ceiling of the closet," and shot D.D. Id. at 1595. Several other witnesses testified

        about Clark's actions on the day of the shooting, including Clark asking his

        neighbors to help sell D.D.'s cocaine and get rid ofD.D.'s body. The State

        theorized that Clark killed D.D. with premeditation in order to steal D.D.'s gun and


               1
                   We use the victim's initials because he was a minor at the time of his death.


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        State v. Clark, No. 92021-4


        cocame. Clark contended the shooting was an accident. The primary disputed

        issue was thus Clark's level of intent.

                                        PROCEDURAL HISTORY

               By amended information, the State charged Clark with premeditated first

        degree murder, first degree felony murder, first degree robbery, unlawful

        possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver, and second degree

        unlawful possession of a firearm. Clark pleaded not guilty on all counts.

               Before trial, the defense moved to suppress statements Clark made to police

        after the shooting, contending that he did not validly waive his Miranda 2 rights

        before speaking to police. To support its motion, the defense offered an expert

        evaluation by Dr. Brent OneaP At the suppression hearing, Dr. Oneal testified

        that Clark scored in the bottom first to third percentile in standardized intelligence

        tests. The court found that Dr. Oneal was a credible witness but denied Clark's

        motion to suppress.

               The State then moved to exclude testimony about Clark's "intellectual

        deficits" for trial purposes. Clerk's Papers (CP) at 213 (underlining omitted).

        Clark argued that Dr. Oneal's testimony was admissible for three purposes: (1) to


               2
                 Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436, 86 S. Ct. 1602, 16 L. Ed. 2d 694 (1966).
               3
                 The record contains inconsistent spellings of this expert's last name. See, e.g., Clerk's
        Papers at 25 ("O'Neal"), 56 ("Oneal"). We use the spelling "Oneal" for consistency with the
        Court of Appeals opinion. State v. Clark, No. 45103-4-II, slip op. at 3 (Wash. Ct. App. June 23,
        2015) (unpublished), http://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions/.


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        State v. Clark, No. 92021-4


        help the jury understand Clark's affect during testimony, (2) to explain why Clark

        does not work, and (3) to contest the State's mens rea evidence. The court granted

        the State's motion in part and excluded Dr. Oneal's testimony because, in light of

        the fact that Clark specifically disavowed any intention to argue diminished

        capacity, expert testimony on Clark's intellectual deficits would be irrelevant and

        confusing to the jury. It did, however, allow for relevant observation testimony

        bearing on Clark's intellectual deficits, including his participation in special

        education, his receipt of Social Security disability benefits, and "that people [who]

        knew him considered him slow or tended to discount his testimony." VRP (Dec.

        17, 2012) at 20. The court also left open the possibility for additional evidence

        regarding Clark's circumstances and abilities if the State "unfairly sanitized" those

        facts at trial. VRP (Feb. 15, 2013) at 20.

               At the beginning of jury selection, outside the presence of the jury panel, the

        court noted that some jurors might be confused about whether the death penalty

        was being sought, given that Clark was charged with murder. The court invited

        counsel to handle that issue as it felt was appropriate. During individual

        questioning, the State informed one prospective juror, who was not ultimately

        seated in this case, that it was not seeking the death penalty. 2 VRP (Mar. 11,

        2013) at 120; 5 VRP (Mar. 13, 2013) at 490. It twice repeated that information in




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       State v. Clark, No. 92021-4


        front of all the prospective jurors. 5 VRP (Mar. 13, 2013) at 372, 419. The

        defense did not object at any time.

               The defense renewed its request to admit Dr. Oneal's testimony several

        times throughout the course of the trial, arguing that the testimony was necessary

        to rebut the State's mens rea evidence and to explain Clark's affect when he

        testified. Nevertheless, the defense consistently maintained that it was not

        asserting diminished capacity. The court adhered to its ruling excluding Dr.

        Oneal's testimony and reminded counsel that relevant observation testimony by lay

        witnesses was admissible.

               The defense elicited testimony that Clark had been in special education, had

        an individualized education plan, and received Social Security disability benefits. 4

        It relied on this evidence in its closing argument, emphasizing that Clark was "not

        your average 20 year old" and arguing that in light of Clark's actual intellectual

        abilities, the State had not proved mens rea on the murder change. 15 VRP (Apr.

        17, 2013) at 1826.

               The jury was instructed on premeditated first degree murder and the lesser-

        included offenses of intentional second degree murder, reckless first degree



               4
                 The defense did not elicit testimony that one of Clark's neighbors perceived him as
        slow, believing that was outside the scope of the court's written ruling. Whether the written
        ruling was unduly restrictive and whether trial counsel was ineffective for failing to elicit
        testimony about Clark's perceived slowness are not raised as issues on appeal.


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        State v. Clark, No. 92021-4


        manslaughter, and negligent second degree manslaughter. Clark was convicted of

        premeditated first degree murder as charged, as well as all the other charged

        counts, so no verdict was returned on the lesser-included offenses.

               The court denied Clark's request for an exceptional sentence downward and

        imposed sentences at the bottom of the standard range. 5 The Court of Appeals

        affirmed in all relevant aspects. State v. Clark, No. 451 03-4-II (Wash. Ct. App.

        June 23, 2015) (unpublished), http://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions/. 6 We granted

        Clark's petition for review. State v. Clark, 184 Wn.2d 1019, 361 P.3d 746 (2015).

                                                   ISSUES

               A.     Did the trial court properly exclude expert testimony regarding

        Clark's intellectual deficits?

               B.      Was trial counsel ineffective for failing to object when the State

        informed prospective jurors that it was not seeking the death penalty?

               C.      Did cumulative error deprive Clark of his right to a fair trial?




               5
                 The court did not impose a sentence for the first degree felony murder conviction due to
        double jeopardy concerns. VRP (May 28, 2013) at 7.
               6
                 The State did concede on appeal that the trial court erred in instructing the jury on an
        uncharged alternative means for first degree robbery. Clark, No. 45103-4-II, slip op. at 14-16.
        The Court of Appeals accepted the concession and reversed the robbery conviction because the
        error was not harmless. Id. at 16. That issue is not presented for our review and does not affect
        our analysis.


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        State v. Clark, No. 92021-4


                                      STANDARD OF REVIEW

               We review the trial court's evidentiary rulings for abuse of discretion and

        defer to those rulings unless "'no reasonable person would take the view adopted

        by the trial court."' State v. Atsbeha, 142 Wn.2d 904, 914, 16 P.3d 626 (2001)

        (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting State v. Ellis, 136 Wn;2d 498, 504, 963

        P.2d 843 (1998)). If the court excluded relevant defense evidence, we determine

        as a matter of law whether the exclusion violated the constitutional right to present

        a defense. State v. Jones, 168 Wn.2d 713,719,230 P.3d 576 (2010).

               To prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, a defendant must

        show that trial counsel's performance was "deficient," and that, "but for counsel's

        deficient performance, there is a 'reasonable probability' that the outcome would

        have been different." State v. Hicks, 163 Wn.2d 477,486, 181 P.3d 831 (2008)

        (quoting State v. Cienfuegos, 144 Wn.2d 222, 227, 25 P.3d 1011 (2001)). For

        relief based on the cumulative error doctrine, the defendant must show that while

        multiple trial errors, "standing alone, might not be of sufficient gravity to

        constitute grounds for a new trial, the combined effect of the accumulation of

        errors most certainly requires a new trial." State v. Coe, 101 Wn.2d 772, 789, 684

        P.2d 668 (1984). Both ineffective assistance of counsel and cumulative error

        present constitutional issues, which we review de novo. State v. Samalia, 186

        Wn.2d 262,269, 375 P.3d 1082 (2016).


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        State v. Clark, No. 92021-4


                                             ANALYSIS

               Clark argues the trial court erred in excluding Dr. Oneal's expert testimony

        because it was relevant to his defense, even though he never asserted or pleaded

        diminished capacity. It is true that observation testimony regarding relevant facts

        is generally admissible and does not implicate the pleading requirements for

        diminished capacity, even if offered to rebut the State's mens rea evidence.

        However, expert opinion testimony that a defendant has a mental disorder that

        impaired the defendant's ability to form the requisite mens rea is relevant only to

        diminished capacity. Diminished capacity must be affirmatively pleaded before

        trial, and in this case, Clark specifically disavowed any intent to plead diminished

        capacity. The court thus properly allowed relevant observation testimony tending

        to rebut the State's mens rea evidence and properly excluded expert testimony that

        was not relevant absent a diminished capacity defense. To the extent, if any, that

        the court unduly restricted the scope of allowable observation testimony by lay

        witnesses, Clark does not raise that issue on review. He does not otherwise show

        reversible error, and we therefore affirm.

        A.     The court properly excluded Dr. Oneal's testimony

               Expert testimony is admissible "[i]f scientific, technical, or other specialized

        knowledge will assist the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a

        fact in issue." ER 702. The defense contends that Dr. Oneal's expert testimony


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        State v. Clark, No. 92021-4


        would have assisted the jury to determine a fact in issue-Clark's level of intent-

        and would also have helped the jury to understand the evidence by explaining

        Clark's unusually flat affect while he was testifying. However, because the

        defense did not plead diminished capacity or show that Dr. Oneal's testimony was

        otherwise relevant, his expert testimony was properly excluded.

               1.     Dr. Oneal's testimony was not admissible to rebut the State's mens
                      rea evidence

               Clark argues that Dr. Oneal's expert testimony should have been admitted

        for the purpose of rebutting the State's mens rea evidence even though Clark did

        not plead diminished capacity because Dr. Oneal's testimony was not actually

        diminished capacity evidence. Alternatively, he argues that trial counsel's failure

        to assert diminished capacity did not warrant exclusion of Dr. Oneal's testimony.

        These arguments are inconsistent with both the record and the law.

               Diminished capacity "allows a defendant to undermine a specific element of

        the offense, a culpable mental state, by showing that a given mental disorder had a

        specific effect by which his ability to entertain that mental state was diminished."

        State v. Gough, 53 Wn. App. 619, 622, 768 P.2d 1028 (1989). The intent to assert

        diminished capacity must "be declared pretrial." State v. Harris, 122 Wn. App.

        498, 506, 94 P.3d 379 (2004) (citing CrR 4.7(b)(1), (2)(xiv)). Pretrial disclosure is

        required because when asserting diminished capacity, the defense "must obtain a




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        State v. Clark, No. 92021-4


        corroborating expert opinion and disclose that evidence to the prosecution

        pretrial," giving the State a reasonable opportunity to decide whether to obtain its

        own evaluation "[d]epending on the strength ofthe defense's showing." Id. (citing

        CrR 4.7(b)(l), (b)(2)(viii), (g); In re Pers. Restraint ofHutchinson, 147 Wn.2d

        197, 204, 53 P.3d 17 (2002)). Diminished capacity evidence is thus distinguished

        from observation testimony about relevant facts tending to rebut the State's mens

        rea evidence because diminished capacity requires an expert diagnosis of a mental

        disorder and expert opinion testimony connecting the mental disorder to the

        defendant's inability to form a culpable mental state in a particular case. Atsbeha,

        142 Wn.2d at 918.

               Clark first contends that he was not required to plead diminished capacity

        because Dr. Oneal's expert testimony was not actually diminished capacity

        evidence. The record indicates otherwise. Even though trial counsel rejected the

        diminished capacity label, the primary intended purpose for Dr. Oneal's testimony

        in this case was to rebut the State's mens rea evidence on the basis that Clark's

        clinically evaluated intellectual deficits impaired his ability to understand and

        assess the risks of his behavior, thereby reducing the likelihood that Clark acted

        with a culpable mental state when he shot D.D. As the trial court appropriately

        recognized, that is precisely the purpose of diminished capacity evidence. See,

        e.g., id.; State v. Greene, 139 Wn.2d 64,73-74,984 P.2d 1024 (1999). The label


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       State v. Clark, No. 92021A


        that trial counsel attaches to its proffered evidence cannot change the actual

        purpose for which the evidence is offered. Cf Cienfuegos, 144 Wn.2d at 227-28

        (considering evidence regarding the defendant's ability to form the requisite

        mental state as evidence of diminished capacity even though trial counsel did not

        request a diminished capacity instruction). It is clear from the record that the

        actual purpose for Dr. Oneal's expert testimony was to establish Clark's

        diminished capacity. 7

               Clark also argues that Dr. Oneal's testimony was not diminished capacity

        evidence because Dr. Oneal would not have testified that Clark "lacked the

        capacity or ability to form the requisite mens rea." Pet. for Review at 15. This

        argument shows only that even if Clark had pleaded diminished capacity, Dr.

        Oneal's testimony might still be inadmissible because it did not meet the relevancy

        threshold. It does not change the purpose for which the evidence was offered.

        And while Clark argues on review that we should relax the relevancy threshold for

        expert testimony of diminished capacity, he does not show it is incorrect or

        harmful. See W.G. Clark Constr. Co. v. Pac. Nw. Reg'l Council of Carpenters,

        180 Wn.2d 54, 66, 322 P.3d 1207 (2014). Our diminished capacity precedent



               7
                  We therefore need not look to cases from other jurisdictions analyzing the admissibly of
        expert opinion testimony offered for purposes other than establishing diminished capacity. See,
        e.g., State v. Burr, 195 N.J. 119, 948 A.2d 627 (2008). To the extent Clark argues there were
        other purposes for Dr. Oneal's testimony, we address that issue below.


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        State v. Clark, No. 92021-4


        merely sets forth a specific application of the general standard that expert

        testimony must be relevant and helpful to the trier of fact, which does not

        contravene a defendant's constitutional right to present evidence in his or her own

        defense. ER 401, 402, 702; Jones, 168 Wn.2d at 720; Atsbeha, 142 Wn.2d at 917-

        18. Moreover, a relaxed relevancy threshold for diminished capacity evidence

        would not change the fact that Clark did not plead diminished capacity in this case.

               Clark argues in the alternative that we should treat trial counsel's failure to

        assert diminished capacity as merely a "pleading failure" that did not warrant

        exclusion ofDr. Oneal's testimony. Suppl. Br. ofPet'r at 16 (boldface omitted).

        However, on this record, the failure to assert diminished capacity was

        unquestionably a purposeful decision by trial counsel. That purposeful decision

        has consequences because while the State is always required to prove the

        defendant's actual culpable mental state, it is not automatically required to prove

        the defendant's capacity to form a culpable mental state; such capacity is presumed

        unless the defendant places it at issue. State v. Johnson, 150 Wn. App. 663, 671,

        208 P.3d 1265, review denied, 167 Wn.2d 1012, 220 P.3d 208 (2009). Ifthe

        defendant does not place his or her capacity at issue but is still allowed to present

        expert testimony intended to negate such capacity, the State has no way to

        meaningfully respond and the jury is left to evaluate an expert opinion with no

        context for assessing its relevance to the elements of charged offenses.


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        State v. Clark, No. 92021-4


               We do not question the principle that a criminal defendant has the

        constitutional right to present evidence in his or her own defense, and relevant

        observation testimony tending to rebut any element of the State's case, including

        mens rea, is generally admissible. However, expert opinion testimony that a

        defendant has a mental disorder that impaired the defendant's ability to form a

        culpable mental state is, by definition, evidence of diminished capacity. And

        where, as here, the defense does not plead diminished capacity, such testimony is

        properly excluded.

               2.      Dr. Oneal's testimony was not admissible to explain Clark's affect
                       during testimony

               In addition to rebutting the State's mens rea evidence, the defense contends

        that Dr. Oneal's testimony should have been admitted for the purpose of explaining

        Clark's unusually flat affect while testifying. We do not rule out the possibility

        that expert testimony regarding a defendant's mental disorder may be introduced

        for purposes other than establishing diminished capacity, and admissibility for one

        purpose is not necessarily determinative of admissibility for another. Astbeha, 142

        Wn.2d at 917 (admissibility of expert testimony, including testimony about a

        defendant's mental disorders, is determined according to the Rules ofEvidence).

        However, Clark does not point to anything in Dr. Oneal's proposed testimony that

        would have helped the jury understand Clark's unusual affect, or that would even




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        State v. Clark, No.   92021~4



        support the proposition that Clark had an unusual affect. To the contrary, Dr.

        Oneal described "Clark's participation, motivation, focus, [and] effort" as being

        "entirely within normallimits." 8 2 VRP (Oct. 4, 2012) at 276. The jury had the

        ability to evaluate Clark's affect to the same extent it had the ability to evaluate the

        affect of every testifying witness, and Clark has not shown that Dr. Oneal's expert

        testimony would have been helpful for that purpose.

        B.      Ineffective assistance of counsel

                Clark contends he received ineffective assistance of counsel because trial

        counsel did not object when the State was allowed to inform the prospective jurors

        that it was not seeking the death penalty. Assuming that Clark's trial counsel

        performed deficiently, he does not show prejudice as required by Strickland v.

        Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687, 104 S. Ct. 2052, 80 L. Ed. 2d 674 (1984), and thus

        cannot establish ineffective assistance of counsel. Hicks, 163 Wn.2d at 486-89;

        State v. Townsend, 142 Wn.2d 838, 846-49, 15 P.3d 145 (2001).

                Considered in the full context of the case, Clark does not show that the

        State's remarks and the defense's failure to object were "sufficient to undermine

        confidence in the outcome." Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694. The jury was repeatedly

        and properly informed of its duties, and we presume it followed those instructions.


                8
                 Notably, the trial court stated that it did not notice anything particularly unusual about
        Clark's affect while he was testifying. 14 VRP (Apr. 16, 2013) at 1795. We are in no position to
        second~guess that observation.



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        State v. Clark, No. 92021-4


       !d. at 694-95. When the court made preliminary remarks to the jury panel, it

        reminded them that they would be expected to "accept the instructions of the

        court" and "base any decision upon the law and the facts uninfluenced by any other

        considerations." 5 VRP (Mar. 13, 2013) at 370. After the jury was selected, the

        court again reminded them their evaluation of the case must be "based solely on

        the evidence and my instructions on the law." !d. at 493. And the court's

        instructions on the law properly informed the jury that "[y]ou have nothing

        whatever to do with any punishment that may be imposed in case of a violation of

        the law. You may not consider the fact that punishment may follow conviction

        except insofar as it may tend to make you careful." CP at 277.

               There is no indication that the jury disregarded its instructions or paid less

        attention to the evidence presented throughout Clark's trial because it was told that

        the death penalty was not at issue. Cf State v. Kalebaugh, 183 Wn.2d 578, 586,

        355 P.3d 253 (2015) (rejecting the possibility that a trial court's "offhand

        explanation of reasonable doubt at the beginning of this case" harmed the

        defendant in light of the fact that the jury was repeatedly and properly instructed

        on reasonable doubt and the presumption of innocence). There is also no reason to

        believe that a contemporaneous objection by defense counsel would have reduced

        any potential for prejudice more than the court's proper, written instructions did.




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        State v. Clark, No. 92021-4


        We thus hold that Clark has not carried his burden of showing prejudice and

        therefore has not established ineffective assistance of counsel.

        C.     Cumulative error

               Clark does not show any error, so the cumulative error doctrine does not

        apply. Coe, 101 Wn.2d at 789.

                                           CONCLUSION

               Expert testimony that a defendant suffered a mental disorder not amounting

        to insanity that impaired the defendant's ability to form a culpable mental state is

        diminished capacity evidence. The trial court correctly recognized that and

        properly excluded Dr. Oneal's expert testimony because Clark did not assert or

        plead diminished capacity or show that Dr. Oneal's testimony was otherwise

        relevant. We therefore have no reason to revisitAtsbeha's three-part test for

        determining whether expert testimony of diminished capacity is admissible in

        accordance with the Rules of Evidence. Moreover, the court properly allowed

        relevant observation testimony, which the defense relied on in its attempt to rebut

        the State's mens rea evidence. Clark does not otherwise show reversible error.

        We therefore affirm.




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       State v. Clark, No. 92021-4




        WE CONCUR:




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        State v. Clark (Anthony Tyrone), No. 92021-4
        (Gordon McCloud, J., dissenting)




                                                No. 92021-4

              GORDON McCLOUD, J. ( dissenting)-Anthony Clark was convicted of first

       degree murder of his friend, D.D. 1 The State argued that Clark shot D.D. with

       premeditated intent to kill in the course of stealing D.D. 's drugs; Clark admitted that

       he shot D.D., but claimed that it was an accident because he thought the gun was not

       loaded. Thus, the only question at trial was Clark's mental state. The trial court

       therefore permitted the State to present substantial evidence regarding Clark's

       premeditated intent. And the trial court ultimately instructed the jury on several

        lesser included offenses-intentional second degree murder, reckless first degree

        manslaughter, and negligent second degree manslaughter-all defined by mental

        states less culpable than premeditation. 2 But it barred Clark from presenting most

        of his proffered evidence refuting premeditated intent. Most critically, it excluded


               1
                   D.D. was a minor at the time-initials are used to protect the minor's privacy.
               2
                 See State v. Jones, 95 Wn.2d 616, 621-22, 628 P.2d 472 (1981) (recklessness and
        negligence are lesser mental states "included" in intent; defendant charged with intentional
        murder was entitled to manslaughter instruction where evidence of intoxication supported
        theory that killing was unintentional); State v. Condon, 182 Wn.2d 307, 319, 343 PJd 357
        (20 15) (intentional murder is lesser included offense in premeditated murder).
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        State v. Clark (Anthony Tyrone), No. 92021-4
        (Gordon McCloud, J., dissenting)



       expert testimony about Clark's intellectual disabilities that could have bolstered his

       accident defense, reasoning that such testimony is inadmissible unless the defendant

       pleads diminished capacity.

              The majority approves this distinction between lay and expert testimony. It

       holds that lay "observation testimony" regarding Clark's intellectual disabilities was

       relevant to rebut the element of mens rea even though Clark did not plead a

       diminished capacity defense, but it reaches the opposite conclusion about expert

       testimony on Clark's disability. Majority at 8 ("The court ... properly allowed

       relevant observation testimony tending to rebut the State's mens rea evidence and

       properly excluded expert testimony that was not relevant absent a diminished

       capacity defense."). Thus, the majority holds that the strongest evidence of Clark's

       intellectual disabilities-a psychologist's testimony that Clark had developmental

       disabilities, exceedingly low intelligence quotient (IQ) scores, and a diagnosis of

       mild mental retardation-was inadmissible to support the defense's accident and/or

        lesser included offense theories. 2 Verbatim Report of Proceedings (VRP) (3.5

       Hr'g) (Oct. 4, 2012) at 268-74,314,283.

              This distinction is illogical and violates the constitutional right to present a

        defense. I respectfully dissent.



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        State v. Clark (Anthony Tyrone), No. 92021-4
        (Gordon McCloud, J., dissenting)



              I.    The Trial Court Admitted Certain Lay Observation Testimony
                    Supporting the Defense, but Excluded the More Neutral, More
                    Persuasive Medical Expert Testimony Supporting the Same Defense
                    Theory

              Clark testified that on the morning of the shooting, he was walking from his

       apartment to a neighborhood barbecue when he saw D.D.-an acquaintance from

       school-standing at a crosswalk. The two talked briefly, and Clark then invited D.D.

       over to his apartment.

              At the apartment, D.D. opened his coat pocket and showed Clark a .22 caliber

       gun and an M&M' s container filled with pieces of crack cocaine, and then asked

       Clark to help him sell the drugs. Clark testified that he went upstairs to ask his

       neighbors to buy the drugs, but they declined, so Clark came back downstairs and

        suggested that he and D.D. pawn his mother's gold necklace for money instead.

              According to Clark, the necklace was in a jewelry box on the top shelf of a

        bedroom closet. Clark tried but failed to reach the box, so D.D decided to try. He

        told Clark to move out of his way. Before climbing up to reach for the box, though,

       D.D. disarmed: he pulled the .22 caliber gun out of his coat pocket, removed the

        magazme, and handed the gun without the magazine to Clark.          D .D. kept the

        magazme. Clark testified that as D.D. reached into the closet, still holding that

        magazine, Clark sat on the floor and played with the gun. Thinking the gun was


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        State v. Clark (Anthony Tyrone), No. 92021-4
        (Gordon McCloud, J., dissenting)



       unloaded because the magazine was out, 3 Clark aimed it at the ceiling of the closet

       and pulled the trigger. The bullet struck D.D. in the back of his head.

              Clark claimed that he then tried to resuscitate D.D. 13 VRP (Apr. 15, 2013)

       at 1658-59, 1663. He did one compression. !d. at 1663. He then put the magazine

       back into the gun and hid both the gun and the drugs inside his toilet. !d. at 1672-

       73. (That's where officers later found them.) Clark then went upstairs to ask his

       neighbors for help disposing of a body. He testified that he was crying and shaking

       at the time. Id. at 1666, 1669. As discussed below, that contradicted his neighbors'

       testimony that Clark was oddly calm when talking about the body.

              The prosecution argued that Clark was a sophisticated killer, too familiar with

       guns to have thought that D.D.'s gun was unloaded just because the magazine had

       been removed. 14 VRP (Apr. 16, 2013) at 1764-65. To support that theory, the

        State offered testimony by three of Clark's neighbors regarding conversations that

       they had with Clark on the day of the shooting. These neighbors all agreed that

        Clark asked them to buy or help sell crack cocaine first, and then later asked them



               3 Although Clark said that he thought the gun was unloaded at the time he pulled
        the trigger, he also testified that he knew that guns were dangerous and that he thought the
        gun was capable of firing a bullet at some point in time. 13 VRP (Apr. 15, 2013) at 1595,
        1660 ("Q. Did you, at any time[,] think[ ] that you could fire a bullet out of that gun 7 A.
        Yes. Q. Did you think it was loaded? A. No.").

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        State v. Clark (Anthony Tyrone), No. 92021-4
        (Gordon McCloud, J., dissenting)



       to help him dispose of a body. Specifically, they all testified that Clark told them

       that a friend had given him the cocaine to sell so that he could buy school clothes-

       even though Clark was no longer in school. 8 VRP (Mar. 19, 2013) at 848, 854,

       904-05; 9 VRP (Mar. 20, 2013) at 1002-07, 1026-27. Some said that Clark then left

       and came back to talk about the body; others said that Clark stayed and talked about

       the body. 8 VRP (Mar. 19, 2013) at 850-53; 9 VRP (Mar. 20, 2013) at 1007-08,

        1032. Two neighbors testified that Clark said he "popped" the person in the head

       with a "deuce deuce." 8 VRP (Mar. 19, 2013) at 851, 853, 907. All three neighbors

       recounted that Clark said he did that because that person was hitting "his baby's

       mom" and that he was taught never to let anyone harm his baby's mom-even

       though Clark had no children. 8 VRP (Mar. 19, 2013) at 850; 9 VRP (Mar. 20, 2013)

       at 1035. Despite Clark's confession, the neighbors remained unsure whether Clark

       was joking, partly because of his oddly calm demeanor and partly because he

        sometimes said he was joking. 8 VRP (Mar. 19, 2013) at 850-51, 863-64, 894,906-

        07, 912; 9 VRP (Mar. 20, 2013) at 1010. But Clark eventually took one neighbor to

        the garbage can behind their apartment building and showed herD .D.'s hidden body.

        8 VRP (Mar. 19, 2013) at 863-66, 894, 912; 9 VRP (Mar. 20, 2013) at 1012.




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        State v. Clark (Anthony Tyrone), No. 92021-4
        (Gordon McCloud, J., dissenting)



              The trial court did permit Clark to present lay testimony that he was in high

        school "beyond normal age" and attended special education classes. VRP (Dec. 17,

        20 12) at 20-21. As discussed further below, though, the trial court excluded the bulk

        of the defense-proffered evidence on Clark's diagnoses of "mild mental

       retardation"-evidence from a neutral expert witness. 2 VRP (3.5 Hr'g) (Oct. 4,

        20 12) at 314. On the basis of the testimony about learning problems alone, though,

        the defense argued-apparently not persuasively-that Clark had below average

        intelligence and simply mishandled the gun:

              Would I characterize Anthony as a man? No. You're talking about, at
              the time, a 20 year old who had just graduated from special education .




                    . . . As far as he knew at the time, the bullets had been removed
              from the gun ... which is probably exactly what [D.D.] thought when
              he handed that to Anthony. And he probably did that knowing that
              Anthony's not your average 20 year old.

        15 VRP (Apr. 17, 2013) at 1816, 1826 (emphasis added).

              The defense sought to bolster the lay testimony supporting its accident theory

        with the far more persuasive testimony of Dr. Brent Oneal, a psychologist who

        personally evaluated Clark and diagnosed him with "mild retardation." 2 VRP (3.5

        Hr'g) (Oct. 4, 2012) at 260, 314. The State acknowledged that this testimony tended


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        State v. Clark (Anthony Tyrone), No. 92021-4
        (Gordon McCloud, J., dissenting)



       to rebut the element of mens rea, but moved to exclude the testimony anyway,

       arguing that it would be too confusing for jurors in the absence of a diminished

       capacity defense:

              [T]he jurors would likely be confused about how to evaluate [Dr.
              Oneal's] evidence. They would wonder whether a "mentally retarded"
              person is able to form a specific intent like a person of normal
              intelligence. Such confusion is both needless and patently unfair to the
              State where the defense has not raised a diminished capacity defense.

        Clerk's Papers (CP) at 218. The defense responded that Dr. Oneal's testimony was

        also relevant to "support a finding of recklessness or criminal negligence" as

        opposed to premeditated intent because the diagnosis and associated explanation

        made it less likely that Clark knew or understood the risks posed by firing the gun.

        CP at 225.

              The trial court agreed with the State.      It allowed certain lay testimony

        regarding Clark's intellectual deficits and gave lesser included offense instructions

        on manslaughter (reckless and negligent), but it excluded Dr. Oneal's more

        educated, more neutral medical testimony on the same point as unduly confusing in

        the absence of a diminished capacity defense.




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        State v. Clark (Anthony Tyrone), No. 92021-4
        (Gordon McCloud, J., dissenting)



              II.   The Majority Approves This Distinction between Lay and Expert
                    Testimony Because It Erroneously Equates All Expert Testimony about
                    Intellectual Deficits with a Diminished Capacity Defense

              "Diminished capacity is a mental condition not amounting to insanity which

       prevents the defendant from possessing the requisite mental state necessary to

       commit the crime charged." State v. Furman, 122 Wn.2d 440, 454, 858 P.2d 1092

       (1993) (citing State v. Ferrick, 81 Wn.2d 942, 944, 506 P.2d 860 (1973)). The

       majority is correct that in order to assert a diminished capacity defense, a defendant

       must meet two threshold criteria: ( 1) the defendant must present "substantial

        evidence of such a condition" and (2) "the evidence must logically and reasonably

        connect the defendant's alleged mental condition with the asserted inability to form

       the required specific intent to commit the crime charged." Ferrick, 81 Wn.2d at 944-

        45); State v. Griffin, 100 Wn.2d 417,419, 670 P.2d 265 (1983).

              If Clark had offered Dr. Oneal's testimony as evidence that he lacked the

        capacity or ability to act intentionally when he shot D.D., then I might agree with

        the majority that it was properly excluded. The reason is that Dr. Oneal did not

        testify that Clark was incapable of intentionally shooting D.D. and thus his

        testimony would likely not satisfy the second prerequisite to asserting a diminished

        capacity defense. But, as explained above, Clark did not offer Dr. Oneal's testimony



                                                 8
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        State v. Clark (Anthony Tyrone), No. 92021-4
        (Gordon McCloud, J., dissenting)



       to establish a diminished capacity defense-he offered it to bolster his accident

       theory. In other words, Clark never argued that he was incapable of shooting D.D.

       intentionally; he argued that he did not in fact intend to shoot him.

              The majority fails to appreciate this distinction. Relying on State v. Atsbeha,

        142 Wn.2d 904,918, 16 P.3d 626 (2001) and State v. Greene, 139 Wn.2d 64,73-74,

       984 P.2d 1024 (1999), the majority concludes that expert testimony-i.e., a

       "clinical[] evaluat[ion]"-advances a diminished capacity defense any time it shows

       that "intellectual deficits impaired [a defendant's] ability to understand and assess

       the risks of his behavior, thereby reducing the likelihood that [he] acted with a

        culpable mental state." Majority at 10. But neither case stands for this principle.

       Atsbeha addressed expert testimony that the defendant could intentionally deliver

        drugs but harbored a delusion that he was cooperating in a sting operation with the

        undercover officer who asked him to make the delivery. 142 Wn.2d at 907-08, 910-

        11. It held that this testimony was relevant to an insanity defense, but not to a

        diminished capacity defense (because it did not negate specific intent). Id. at 920.

        And Greene held that testimony regarding the defendant's dissociative identity

        disorder (DID) was properly excluded as unhelpful because, given the state of the

        relevant science at the time, "it was not possible to reliably connect the symptoms



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        State v. Clark (Anthony Tyrone), No. 92021-4
        (Gordon McCloud, J., dissenting)



       of DID to the sanity or mental capacity of the defendant." 139 Wn.2d at 79. These

       cases are straightforward applications of our Evidence Rules in the context of

       insanity and diminished capacity pleas. They do not limit the other purposes for

       which a defendant might admit expert testimony on his cognitive abilities. In other

       words, diminished capacity evidence is a subset of evidence concerning cognition

       and mens rea. But cognition and mens rea are far bigger categories.

              III.   By Excluding Defense Evidence That Could Rebut the State's
                     Evidence on the Element ofMens Rea, the Trial Court Violated Clark's
                     Constitutional Right To Present a Defense

              "Few rights are more fundamental than that of an accused to present witnesses

       in his own defense." Chambers v. Mississippi, 410 U.S. 284, 302, 93 S. Ct. 1038,

        35 L. Ed. 2d 297 (1973). That right is based on the right to due process oflaw (U.S.

        CONST. amend. XIV; CONST. art. I, § 3) and the rights of an accused in a criminal

        proceeding (U.S. CONST. amend. VI; CONST. art. I,§ 22). State v. Jones, 168 Wn.2d

        713, 720, 230 P.3d 576 (2010) ("'The right of an accused in a criminal trial to due

        process is, in essence, the right to a fair opportunity to defend against the State's

        accusations."' (quoting Chambers, 410 U.S. at 294)).

              To be sure, this right to present evidence extends only to relevant evidence.

        State v. Hudlow, 99 Wn.2d 1, 16, 659 P.2d 514 (1983). But evidence is relevant if



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        State v. Clark (Anthony Tyrone), No. 92021-4
        (Gordon McCloud, J., dissenting)



       it tends to make more or less probable the existence of any fact that is of consequence

       to the outcome. ER 401. In this case, the trial court concluded that Dr. Oneal's

       testimony was not relevant unless it was offered to support a diminished capacity

       defense. The majority affirms because it concludes that Clark really was advancing

       such a defense, even though he did not formally plead it-indeed, Clark specifically

       denied it.

              For the reasons given in Part II above, I disagree with that conclusion; Clark's

       accident defense was not the same thing as a diminished capacity defense. Thus,

       this case requires us to answer the following question: Where a defendant offers

       expert testimony regarding his or her intellectual deficits to rebut the State's theory

       of motive or intent, do the prerequisites to the presentation of a diminished capacity

        defense still apply?

              This is a question of first impression in Washington, but the New Jersey

        Supreme Court has addressed it. In State v. Burr, the State charged Burr, a piano

       teacher, with sexual assault and endangering the welfare of a child based on

        allegations that he had fondled one ofhis students. 195 N.J. 119, 122, 948 A.2d 627

        (2008). As proof of Burr's sexual deviance, the State presented evidence that Burr

        would often allow his students to sit on his lap. !d. at 125. To rebut the resulting



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        State v. Clark (Anthony Tyrone), No. 92021-4
        (Gordon McCloud, J., dissenting)



       inference that he was intentionally grooming these students for sexual abuse, Burr

       offered evidence that he suffered from Asperger' s Syndrome and that, as a result of

       this condition, he had a limited understanding of what constitutes basic and

       appropriate social interactions between adults and children. Id. at 129. He also

       offered that evidence to assist the jury in assessing his unusual demeanor at trial. I d.

       The trial court excluded this evidence, ruling that such evidence was admissible only

       to support a diminished capacity defense, which Burr was not seeking. !d. The New

       Jersey Supreme Court reversed, explaining that even though Burr was not seeking a

        diminished capacity defense, evidence of this condition remained relevant and

       therefore should have been admitted to support his claim of innocence. Id. at 129-

        30. As the court explained, evidence of Burr's developmental condition was so

       highly relevant and significant to his claim of innocence that it "def[ied] specific

        enumeration." Id. at 130.

              Evidence of Clark's substantial intellectual deficits and mild mental

        retardation diagnosis was equally relevant and significant to his argument that

        D.D.'s death was an accident or, alternatively, that it was not premeditated or

        intentional.   To convict Clark of first degree murder, the State had to prove

        premeditated intent beyond a reasonable doubt. All Clark needed to do was cast



                                                  12
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        State v. Clark (Anthony Tyrone), No. 92021-4
        (Gordon McCloud, J., dissenting)



       doubt on the State's evidence of premeditated intent. He could also show that the

       homicide was an accident (and not premeditated or intentional or reckless). Clark

       tried to do both by testifying that he believed the gun was unloaded at the time of

       the shooting and that he did not recognize the substantial risk involved in pulling the

       trigger without first checking the chamber for a bullet. The defense focused on

       Clark's poor reasoning abilities. Evidence that he was mentally retarded with an

        exceedingly low IQ score (scoring in the bottom first and second percentile of others

       his age in perceptional reasoning, working memory, and verbal comprehension) was

        certainly relevant to his claim. Evidence of Clark's mental process was also relevant

        because it rebutted the State's evidence of premeditated intent. See State v. Sexton,

        311 N.J. Super. 70, 88, 709 A.2d 288 (1998) (holding in an analogous shooting case

        that evidence of the defendant's limited mental ability and his status as a special

        education student was relevant to his credibility about whether he actually believed

        the gun was unloaded and whether he acted recklessly), aff'd on other grounds, 160

        N.J. 93, 733 A.2d 1125 (1999).

              Thus, I would hold that the trial court erred by excluding expert testimony

        about Clark's intellectual deficits as irrelevant in the absence of a diminished




                                                 13
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        State v. Clark (Anthony Tyrone), No. 92021-4
        (Gordon McCloud, J., dissenting)



       capacity defense. 4 Jones, 168 Wn.2d at 720-21 (exclusion of defense-proffered

       evidence that effectively precludes a criminal defendant entirely from being able to

       present his version of the events or establishing his innocence violates his or her

       right to present a defense). Based on the analysis above, the evidence was highly

       relevant and its exclusion violated not just the Rules of Evidence but also the right

       to present a defense.

              IV.    The Exclusion of Expert Testimony on Clark's Mild Mental
                     Retardation Was Not Harmless Error

              A trial court's decision to exclude defense evidence in a criminal trial is

       generally subject to harmless error analysis under the '"overwhelming untainted

       evidence' test." State v. Lord, 161 Wn.2d 276, 295, 165 P.3d 1251 (2007) (quoting

       State v. Smith, 148 Wn.2d 122, 139, 59 P.3d 74 (2002) (citing State v. Guloy, 104

       Wn.2d 412, 426, 705 P.2d 1182 (1985))). Under that test, error is harmless if the


              4  The United States Supreme Court has held that where state evidentiary rules bar
       evidence of a defendant's diminished capacity to form the requisite mens rea as irrelevant
       absent a full-fledged insanity defense, then that state court can exclude such evidence under
       its state evidentiary rules without violating the federal right to present a defense. Clark v.
       Arizona, 548 U.S. 735, 760-79, 126 S. Ct. 2709, 165 L. Ed. 2d 842 (2006). But our state
       laws make such evidence relevant and admissible where, as here, they bear on the
       defendant's mens rea and rebut the State's evidence of mens rea. The Supreme Court's
       holding in Clark is therefore inapplicable here. See id. at 772-78 (concluding, that if a
       State has such a rule barring a defendant's mental disease and incapacity evidence, then
       that rule might be a sufficiently "good reason" to satisfy federal due process requirements).
       This is likely the reason that neither party cited it.

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        State v. Clark (Anthony Tyrone), No. 92021-4
        (Gordon McCloud, J., dissenting)



       untainted, admitted evidence is so overwhelming as to necessarily lead to a finding

       of guilt. !d. at 296. "[E]rror is not prejudicial if the evidence is of minor significance

       when compared to the overall weight of the evidence." !d. (citing State v. Bourgeois,

        133 Wn.2d 389, 403, 945 P.2d 1120 (1997)).           Where, as here, the error is of

       constitutional magnitude, however, the error is deemed harmless only if the State

       proves '"beyond a reasonable doubt that any reasonable jury would have reached the

       same result without the error."' Smith, 148 Wn.2d at 139 (citing State v. Whelchel,

        115 Wn.2d 708, 728, 801 P.2d 948 (1990))).

              At trial, the State's theory was that Clark lured D.D. to his apartment to kill

       him and steal his drugs. Clark denied that he premeditated or intended the killing

       because he thought the gun was not loaded.            Clark also denied that he acted

       recklessly, claiming that he did not recognize the substantial risk involved in

       pointing a gun that he believed was unloaded at someone and then pulling the trigger

       without first checking to see if a bullet was chambered.

              The State presented evidence in support of its theory that showed that Clark

       had at least some knowledge about guns (or gun rhetoric). He referred to the .22

        caliber gun as a "deuce deuce," called the magazine a "clip," acknowledged that

        guns were dangerous, admitted that he thought the particular gun was capable of



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        State v. Clark (Anthony Tyrone), No. 92021-4
        (Gordon McCloud, J., dissenting)



       shooting a bullet, and was able to insert the magazine back into the gun before hiding

       it in his toilet. The jury also heard that Clark had graduated from high schooV that

       he confessed to shooting D.D. because D.D. had struck his fictitious "baby's mom,"

       and that Clark was strangely calm during that confession.

              To rebut the State's evidence that he was a cold, calculated killer, Clark

       offered lay and expert testimony about how he was slow and did not process

       information the way other people his age did. But the trial court excluded most of

       it. It barred all testimony from Dr. Oneal about Clark's substantial intellectual

       deficits. 6   Dr. Oneal would have testified, based on his personal testing and

       evaluation of Clark, that Clark was born prematurely and with significant

       developmental delays, was highly suggestible and therefore prone to change his

       story when pressured, and had a very low IQ score indicating that he had extremely

       poor perceptional reasoning, working memory, and verbal comprehension skills

       compared to others his age. 2 VRP (3.5 Hr'g) (Oct. 4, 2012) at 268,271-74, 283.


               5
                The jury was not informed that Clark had not technically graduated from high
       school; he only aged out.

               6
                The trial court also barred certain lay testimony from Clark's mother on this same
       topic. She would have confirmed that he was in special education since he was four years
       old, that his so-called friends would take advantage of him because of his limitations, and
       that he could not drive because he could not pass the driver's license exam despite several
       attempts. 11 VRP (Mar. 26, 2013) at 1373-74.

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        State v. Clark (Anthony Tyrone), No. 92021-4
        (Gordon McCloud, J., dissenting)



              The only evidence the trial court clearly permitted the jury to hear about

       Clark's intellectual deficits was that he was enrolled in special education with an

       individualized education plan (but not how long or why he was on it); that neighbors

       thought he was slow (but not the expert testing to show exactly how slow he really

       was); and that he was on Social Security disability (but not that he was on it because

       of his mild mental retardation diagnosis). 7 In essence, the trial court excluded the

       most neutral, educated, and meaningful evidence about Clark's intellectual deficits.

              The only real issue in this case was intent. The trial court excluded proffered

       defense evidence that was directly relevant to mens rea and that rebutted the State's

       evidence of premeditation. The error might well have affected the outcome. We are

       especially certain of this given the fact that the trial court felt that there was sufficient

       evidence of mental states less culpable than premeditation to support jury

       instructions on intentional, reckless, and negligent homicide. CP at 288-95. I would

       therefore conclude that the trial court's error was not harmless under either the

        evidentiary or constitutional standards.




               7 It was unclear from the court's different rulings whether it would have allowed
        Clark to testify about the reason he was on Social Security disability (i.e., because of his
        mild mental retardation diagnosis). 7 VRP (Mar. 18, 2013) at 660-63.

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        State v. Clark (Anthony Tyrone), No. 92021-4
        (Gordon McCloud, J., dissenting)



                                         CONCLUSION

             The trial court improperly excluded evidence of Clark's intellectual deficits

       in violation of the Evidence Rules and Clark's constitutional right to present a

       defense. This error was not harmless. I therefore respectfully dissent.




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        State v. Clark (Anthony Tyrone), No. 92021-4
        (Gordon McCloud, J., dissenting)




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