State v. Lindsay ( 2014 )


Menu:
  •      Fll E
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,                               NO. 88437-4
    Respondent,                      ENBANC
    v.
    Filed   MAY 0 8 2014
    JAMES LEROY LINDSAY, SR.,
    Petitioner.
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,
    Respondent,
    v.
    JENNIFER SARAH HOLMES,
    Petitioner.
    GORDON MCCLOUD, I.-Jennifer Holmes and James Lindsay entered the
    home of Laurence Wilkey, Holmes's former boyfriend. They tied him up, beat him,
    and took a number of items from his home. The State charged Holmes and Lindsay
    State v. Lindsay (James Leroy)/State v. Holmes (Jennifer), No. 88437-4
    with first degree robbery, burglary, kidnapping, and assault, as well as firearm theft.
    Holmes and Lindsay argued that they did not intend to commit a felony but were
    instead repossessing things that Wilkey had originally stolen from Holmes. A jury
    convicted them on most, but not all, counts.
    The trial was plagued by misconduct. The prosecutor and the lawyer for
    Holmes (but not Lindsay) engaged in unprofessional behavior, trading verbal jabs
    and snide remarks throughout over 90 volumes of proceedings in this case. On
    appeal, Holmes and Lindsay argued that the prosecutor's remarks, particularly
    during closing arguments, constituted misconduct that prejudiced both defendants.
    The Court of Appeals agreed that the prosecutor committed misconduct but split as
    to whether that misconduct caused prejudice. State v. Lindsay, 
    171 Wn. App. 808
    ,
    
    288 P.3d 641
     (2012) (Lindsay & Holmes).           Two judges thought it did not; one
    dissenter thought that it did. Although Holmes and Lindsay submitted several issues
    to this court in their petitions for review, we accepted review of only the
    prosecutorial misconduct issue. State v. Lindsay, 
    177 Wn.2d 1023
    , 
    303 P.3d 1064
    (2013).
    We reverse. To be sure, the jury did its best to focus on the facts: it made
    separate decisions on each of the separate crimes charged against each defendant
    and it convicted on some, acquitted on some, and convicted of lesser offenses on
    others. In addition, the trial court attempted to maintain civility. But given the
    2
    State v. Lindsay (James Leroy)/State v. Holmes (Jennifer), No. 88437-4
    magnitude of the problem and the two lawyers' inability to control their conduct, we
    agree with the Court of Appeals dissent that reversal is required.
    FACTS
    Jennifer Holmes met James Lindsay and decided to marry him. This ended
    her relationship with Laurence Wilkey, with whom she had been living in Idaho.
    Wilkey moved out while Holmes and Lindsay were away on a trip together, and he
    took several things of value with him. When Holmes returned to an empty house,
    she called the police. After investigating, the police in Idaho advised her that it was
    a civil matter and that she should get a civil attorney.
    Holmes did not follow this advice. Instead, she and Lindsay tracked Wilkey
    down to his new home in Pierce County. The precise details of their encounter are
    disputed, and Lindsay, Holmes, and Wilkey all gave significantly different accounts
    of what happened. Taking the facts in the light most favorable to the State, though,
    Lindsay and Holmes entered the house; Lindsay and Wilkey scuffled; Wilkey got
    the worst of it and ended up tied up on the floor. He may have been threatened with
    a gun and beaten with a pipe after he was tied up. Lindsay and Holmes then took a
    number of things that they claimed belonged to Holmes and left.
    The State charged Lindsay and Holmes with one count each of first degree
    burglary, first degree robbery, first degree kidnapping, and first degree assault, and
    four counts each of theft of a firearm. At a joint trial, the jury convicted Lindsay of
    3
    State v. Lindsay (James Leroy)/State v. Holmes (Jennifer), No. 88437-4
    first degree burglary, first degree robbery, one of the four counts of firearm theft,
    and the lesser included crimes of second degree kidnapping and second degree
    assault. Clerk's Papers (CP) (Lindsay) at 382-89. It also convicted Holmes of first
    degree burglary, first degree robbery, one of the four counts of firearm theft, and the
    lesser included crimes of unlawful imprisonment and second degree assault. CP
    (Holmes) at 708-27.
    The record shows that the prosecutor, John Sheeran, and Holmes's defense
    counsel, Barbara Corey, engaged in unprofessional exchanges throughout the trial.
    The dissent in the Court of Appeals accurately describes some of those exchanges: 1
    For example, not only did the prosecutor and Holmes's counsel
    interrupt each other, they interrupted the trial court, at one point causing
    the trial court to ask, "Can I finish for once?" 42 [Report ofProceedings ·
    (RP)] RP at 3569. Other examples of disrespect to the trial court
    include the prosecutor telling the trial court that Holmes's counsel's
    request to interrupt the trial was "a joke" and "ridiculous" and that
    Holmes's counsel wanted a "Burger King trial ... [h]ave it my way."
    34 RP at 2557. At another point, the prosecutor told the trial court, "I
    didn't object [earlier] because I was laughing so hard it was so stupid."
    53 RP at 4572-73. Later, the prosecutor told Holmes's counsel that she
    was repeating herself[;] she replied by telling him to "kindly shut up."
    51 RP at 4309. The prosecutor then asked the trial court to instruct
    Holmes's counsel not to repeat herself; Holmes's counsel replied,
    "Maybe [the prosecutor] could borrow Your Honor's gown and tell us
    all how to run this trial." 51 RP at 4309.
    1
    Note that the following exchanges took place outside the presence of the jury; we
    cite it only as context for the general tenor of the trial. All other statements presented in
    this opinion are statements that were said in front of the jury, unless otherwise noted.
    4
    State v. Lindsay (James Leroy)/State v. Holmes (Jennifer), No. 88437-4
    In another instance, Holmes's counsel told the trial court that the
    prosecutor's comments were "obnoxious." 44 RP at 3831. In response,
    the prosecutor said, "This is the same garbage that I was talking about
    days ago when I lost my temper in this courtroom, because it's what
    she does." 44 RP at 3833.
    Lindsay & Holmes, 171 Wn. App. at 850 (Armstrong, J. Pro Tern., dissenting)
    (most alterations in original).
    The record is filled with similar acrimony.         The primary source of the
    misconduct, however-according to the parties and the Court of Appeals-was the
    prosecutor's closing argument.
    In his closing, the prosecutor called the defense's closing argument "a crock."
    95 Verbatim Report of Proceedings (VRP) at 8877.
    The prosecutor also stated that the defendant Holmes's testimony was
    "funny," "disgusting," "comical," and "the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard."
    Id. at 8717, 8722, 8708. He told the jury that Holmes should not "get up here and
    sit here and lie." Id. at 8882.
    The prosecutor described the beyond a reasonable doubt standard as follows:
    "[Y]ou put in about 10 more pieces and see this picture .... [Y]ou can be halfway
    done with that puzzle .... You could have 50 percent of those puzzle pieces missing
    and you know it's Seattle." Id. at 8727. He also compared it to the amount of
    certainty one needs to cross the street in a crosswalk. Id. at 8728 ("You're walking
    because beyond a reasonable doubt you're confident you can walk across that
    5
    State v. Lindsay (James Leroy)/State v. Holmes (Jennifer), No. 88437-4
    crosswalk without getting run over."). Further, the prosecutor exhorted the jury to
    "[s]peak the truth." ld. at 8730. He asked the jury "only to do what you swore to
    do: Render verdicts." I d. He explained that "verdict" is Latin for "to speak the truth"
    and that "voir dire" means the same in French. Id. Finally, he stated, "You start
    with one, voir dire, when you started this trial, and you end with one, verdictum,
    verdict. So I'm just asking you to do what you know is true: Speak the truth. Convict
    both ofthese defendants .... " Id.
    Finally, the prosecutor spoke so quietly to the jury on several occasions that
    the court reporter could not hear him and the judge had to ask him to repeat himself.
    The prosecutor then made a joke out of this when Holmes's counsel protested by
    standing behind her and speaking very loudly, to the laughter of the jury.
    ANALYSIS
    "Allegations of prosecutorial misconduct are reviewed under an abuse of
    discretion standard." State v. Brett, 
    126 Wn.2d 136
    , 174-75, 
    892 P.2d 29
     (1995)
    (citing State v. Hughes, 
    106 Wn.2d 176
    , 195, 
    721 P.2d 902
     (1986)). The defendant
    bears the burden of showing that the comments were improper and prejudicial. State
    v. Warren, 
    165 Wn.2d 17
    , 26, 
    195 P.3d 940
     (2008). In the past, our court has also
    stated that if the defendant fails to object or request a curative instruction at trial, the
    issue of misconduct is waived unless the conduct was so flagrant and ill intentioned
    that an instruction could not have cured the resulting prejudice. State v. Stenson,
    6
    State v. Lindsay (James Leroy)/State v. Holmes (Jennifer), No.   88437~4
    
    132 Wn.2d 668
    , 719, 
    940 P.2d 1239
     (1997). 2 In this case, however, defense counsel
    made a motion for a mistrial due to prosecutorial misconduct directly following the
    prosecutor's rebuttal closing argument, citing many of the same examples that are
    raised on appeal. Thus, the issue was preserved for appellate review. See United
    States v. Prantil, 
    764 F.2d 548
    , 555 n.4 (9th Cir. 1985) (mistrial motion following
    the prosecutor's closing is "an acceptable mechanism by which to preserve
    challenges to prosecutorial conduct").          The judge ruled that the prosecutor's
    comments were not improper-thus, curative instructions were not discussed.
    The prosecutorial misconduct inquiry therefore consists of two prongs: (1)
    whether the prosecutor's comments were improper; and (2) if so, whether the
    improper comments caused prejudice. Warren, 
    165 Wn.2d at 26
    . We thus begin by
    analyzing the propriety of the prosecutor's comments.
    I.     IMPROPER COMMENTS
    The prosecutor made improper statements in this case. Both the Court of
    Appeals majority and dissent concluded that many of his comments were improper.
    Even the State, in its supplemental briefing to this court, admits that some of the
    comments were improper. The State's argument is, essentially, that many of the
    2
    When applying this standard, we have noted that courts should "focus less on
    whether the prosecutor's misconduct was flagrant or ill intentioned and more on whether
    the resulting prejudice could have been cured." State v. Emery, 
    174 Wn.2d 741
    , 762, 
    278 P.3d 653
     (2012).
    7
    State v. Lindsay (James Leroy)/State v. Holmes (Jennifer), No. 88437-4
    improper comments either were not objected to, or were made in response to goading
    by Holmes's counsel; and, since those comments were not so flagrant and ill
    intentioned that an instruction would not have cured any prejudicial effect, those
    errors are waived. As. for the remaining, specifically objected-to, comments where
    the objection was made in the middle of closing, the State argues that even if
    improper, they did not affect the outcome of the trial.
    a.     Impugning
    A prosecutor can certainly argue that the evidence does not support the
    defense theory. State v. Russell, 
    125 Wn.2d 24
    , 87, 
    882 P.2d 747
     (1994) (citing
    ..
    State v. Graham, 
    59 Wn. App. 418
    ,429, 
    79 P.2d 314
     (1990)). However, a prosecutor
    must not impugn the role or integrity of defense counsel. Warren, 
    165 Wn.2d at
    29-
    30; State v. Negrete, 
    72 Wn. App. 62
    , 67, 
    863 P.2d 137
     (1993). Prosecutorial
    statements that malign defense counsel can severely damage an accused's
    opportunity to present his or her case and are therefore impermissible. Bruno v.
    Rushen, 
    721 F.2d 1193
    , 1195 (9th Cir. 1983) (per curiam).
    The Court of Appeals found that the prosecutor impugned defense counsel
    with the following comments: "' [S]he doesn't care if the objection is sustained or
    not,"' '"We're going to have like a sixth grader [argument],"' and '"[W]e're into
    silly."' Lindsay & Holmes, 171 Wn. App. at 827 (alterations in original).        In
    addition, the Court of Appeals relied on the following interactions:
    8
    State v. Lindsay (James Leroy)/State v. Holmes (Jennifer), No. 88437-4
    Another time, Holmes's counsel was in the middle of an objection and
    the prosecutor interrupted her saying, "Yeah, we all know that." 87
    VRP at 8092. Yet another time, the prosecutor responded to Holmes's
    counsel's objection by stating, "Maybe if counsel and her client could
    just be quiet for a few minutes they might be able to hear something."
    95 VRP at 8887. At one point, the prosecutor became visibly upset and
    Holmes's counsel said the prosecutor is having "a tantrum." 52 VRP
    at 4554. The prosecutor replied, "And counsel walked right into this
    after freaking six weeks" and said directly to Holmes's counsel,
    "Tantrum, because you-." 52 VRP at 4554.
    Jd. at 827.
    This exchange (and the many more like it) is self-centered and rude. It is all
    about the lawyers' personalities, not the parties' cases. It is clearly the fault of both
    lawyers, and it is so obnoxious and so continuous that it permeates the record. In
    fact, it seems to this court that it would be incredibly difficult to focus on the issue
    of guilt or innocence with this grating noise in the background. Such incivility
    threatens the fairness of the trial, not to mention public respect for the courts. See
    Jones v. City of Seattle, 
    179 Wn.2d 322
    , 371, 
    314 P.3d 380
     (2013) (Gonzalez, J.,
    concurring).
    These comments quoted immediately above, alone, though, probably do not
    require reversal. In past ca~es finding that the prosecutor impugned defense counsel,
    the prosecutor made more egregious statements than the ones above. In Negrete, for
    example, the prosecutor said that defense counsel was '"being paid to twist the words
    of the witnesses."'    
    72 Wn. App. at 66
    .       In State v. Gonzales, the prosecutor
    9
    State v. Lindsay (James Leroy)/State v. Holmes (Jennifer), No. 88437-4
    impermissibly contrasted the roles of prosecutor and defense counsel, stating that
    while the defense attorney's duty was to his criminal client, the prosecutor's duty
    was "'to see that justice is served."' 
    111 Wn. App. 276
    , 283, 
    45 P.3d 205
     (2002).
    And in Bruno, "the obvious import of the prosecutor's comments was that all
    defense counsel in criminal cases are retained solely to lie and distort the facts and
    camouflage the truth." 
    721 F.2d at 1194
    . Thus, the unprofessional exchanges above,
    alone, probably did not fundamentally undermine defense counsel's role or integrity.
    They certainly undermined the authority of the court and the formality of the
    proceeding, though.
    Another statement by the prosecutor, however, did directly impugn defense
    counsel. The prosecutor stated in closing, in reference to Holmes's counsel's closing
    argument, "This is a crock. What you've been pitched for the last four hours is a
    crock." 95 VRP at 8877. In State v. Thorgerson, we held that "the prosecutor
    impugned defense counsel's integrity, particularly in referring to his presentation of
    his case as 'bogus' and involving 'sleight of hand."' 
    172 Wn.2d 438
    , 451-52, 
    258 P.3d 43
     (2011) (citing Warren, 
    165 Wn.2d at 29
    ). We continued, "In particular,
    'sleight of hand' implies wrongful deception or even dishonesty in the context of a
    court proceeding." Id. at 452 (defining "sleight ofhand") (quoting WEBSTER'S THIRD
    NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY       2141 (2003)).
    10
    State v. Lindsay (James Leroy)/State v. Holmes (Jennifer), No. 88437-4
    The term "crock" is at least as bad. It also implies deception and dishonesty. 3
    In addition, the term "a crock" is commonly understood to be a shortening of an
    explicitly vulgar phrase. Describing a defense counsel's argument with that full
    phrase would certainly impugn defense counsel's integrity.           Calling counsel's
    argument "a crock" is not much different. Given our discussion of the terms "bogus"
    and "sleight of hand" in Thorgerson, we hold that the prosecutor impugned defense
    counsel in this case by calling Holmes's counsel's closing arguments "a crock."
    b.     Burden of Proof
    Arguments by the prosecution that shift or misstate the State's burden to prove
    the defendant's guilt beyond a reasonable doubt constitute misconduct. State v.
    Gregory, 
    158 Wn.2d 759
    , 859-60, 
    147 P.3d 1201
     (2006). The Court of Appeals
    found that the prosecutor misstated the burden of proof by comparing the beyond a
    reasonable doubt standard to figuring out a jigsaw puzzle and crossing the street, and
    by telling the jury to speak the truth.
    i. Jigsaw Puzzles
    Regarding puzzles, the prosecutor stated:
    3
    See,   e.g., Crock, DICTIONARY.COM, http://dictionary.reference.com/
    browse/crock?s=t (last visited Mar. 28, 2014) (defining "crock" in part as "a lie;
    exaggeration; nonsense").
    11
    State v. Lindsay (James Leroy)/State v. Holmes (Jennifer), No. 88437-4
    [O]ne of the simplest [ways to explain reasonable doubt] is the
    idea of a jigsaw puzzle .... [T]he first thing you do is you get all the
    pieces that have edges on them, start to lock them together, you're trying
    to get the outline .... [Y]ou put a few more pieces in ... and you start
    to get a better idea of what that picture is .... And then you put in about
    10 more pieces and see this picture of the Space Needle. Now, you can
    be halfway done with that puzzle and you know beyond a reasonable
    doubt that it's Seattle. You could have 50 percent of those puzzle pieces
    missing and you know it's Seattle.
    95 VRP at 8726-27.
    Several cases from the Court of Appeals have examined whether puzzle
    analogies are improper.
    In State v. Johnson, a Division Two case, the prosecutor made an argument
    nearly identical to the one above, stating, '"You add a third piece of the puzzle, and
    at this point even being able to see only half, you can be assured beyond a reasonable
    doubt that this is going to be a picture of Tacoma."' 
    158 Wn. App. 677
    , 682, 
    243 P.3d 936
     (2010). The court held that "the prosecutor's arguments discussing the
    reasonable doubt standard in the context of making an affirmative decision based on
    a partially completed puzzle trivialized the State's burden, focused on the degree of
    certainty the jurors needed to act, and implied that the jury had a duty to convict
    without a reason not to do so." !d. at 685. The court reversed the conviction, stating
    that "a misstatement about the law and the presumption of innocence due a
    defendant, the 'bedrock upon which [our] criminal justice system stands,' constitutes
    great prejudice because it reduces the State's burden and undermines a defendant's
    12
    State v. Lindsay (James Leroy)/State v. Holmes (Jennifer), No. 88437-4
    due process rights." !d. at 685-86 (quoting State v. Bennett, 
    161 Wn.2d 303
    ,315,
    
    165 P.3d 1241
     (2007)).
    In State v. Curtiss, Division Two reached a different conclusion regarding a
    similar jigsaw puzzle argument. 
    161 Wn. App. 673
    , 
    250 P.3d 496
     (2011). There,
    the prosecutor stated, "'There will come a time when you're putting that puzzle
    together, and even with pieces missing, you'll be able to say, with some certainty,
    beyond a reasonable doubt what that puzzle is: The Tacoma Dome."' !d. at 700.
    The court did not mention Johnson but held that the State's comments about
    identifying a puzzle before it was complete were not improper. !d. at 700-01.
    In State v. Fuller, Division Two explained the difference between Johnson
    and Curtiss. 
    169 Wn. App. 797
    , 
    282 P.3d 126
     (2012), review denied, 
    176 Wn.2d 1006
    , 
    297 P.3d 68
     (2013). The Fuller court explained that the quantification by the
    prosecutor of the number of pieces and percentage of completion required for
    reasonable doubt in Johnson was entirely different from the prosecutor's general
    reference to being able to discern the subject of a puzzle with some pieces missing
    in Curtiss. !d. at 825-28. The former statement introduced elements of specific
    quantification into the reasonable doubt analysis, while the latter did not. !d.
    This case is plainly analogous to Johnson, not Curtiss. The prosecutor stated
    that "you put in about 10 more pieces and see this picture of the Space Needle. Now,
    you can be halfway done with that puzzle and you know beyond a reasonable doubt
    13
    State v. Lindsay (James Leroy)/State v. Holmes (Jennifer), No. 88437-4
    that it's Seattle. You could have 50 percent of those puzzle pieces missing and you
    know it's Seattle." 95 VRP at 8727. That is almost identical to the comments held
    prejudicial misconduct in Johnson. It is not analogous to the comments in Curtiss
    or Fuller, which made no reference to any number or percentage and merely
    suggested that one could be certain of the picture beyond a reasonable doubt even
    with some pieces missing. We agree that the quantifying of the standard of proof by
    means of this jigsaw puzzle analogy is improper.
    ii. Crosswalks
    In explaining reasonable doubt in his closing, the prosecutor told a narrative
    about approaching a crosswalk and seeing a car coming:
    He has the red light, you've got a walk sign, you look at him, he sees
    you, he's slowing down, he nods and you start walking. You're walking
    because beyond a reasonable doubt you're confident you can walk
    across that crosswalk without getting run over.
    Id. at 8728. As the Court of Appeals points out, "When a prosecutor compares the
    reasonable doubt standard to everyday decision making, it improperly minimizes
    and trivializes the gravity of the standard and the jury's role." Lindsay & Holmes,
    171 Wn. App. at 828 (citing State v. Anderson, 
    153 Wn. App. 417
    , 431, 220 P .3d
    1273 (2009)). We agree with the Court of Appeals that this kind of analogy to
    everyday experiences trivializes the State's burden of proof and is improper.
    iii. Speaking the Truth
    14
    State v. Lindsay (James Leroy)/State v. Holmes (Jennifer), No. 88437-4
    The Court of Appeals held that telling the jury to "find the truth" or "speak
    the truth" is improper. That court had previously held such statements trivialized
    the burden of proof in Anderson: "The prosecutor's repeated requests that the jury
    'declare the truth,' however, were improper. A jury's job is not to 'solve' a case ...
    . Rather, the jury's duty is to determine whether the State has proved its allegations
    against a defendant beyond a reasonable doubt." 153 Wn. App. at 429.
    There is some conflict in Division Two cases about whether an exhortation to
    the jury to "speak the truth" is improper. In Anderson, the court held that it was
    improper. In Curtiss, the court held that it was not. Later, in State v. Walker,
    Division Two implicitly rejected Curtiss on this point. 
    164 Wn. App. 724
    , 733, 
    265 P.3d 191
     (2011) ("We rely on Anderson [as opposed to Curtiss] in our determination
    the statements in the present case are improper conduct.").
    The Court of Appeals agreed that the statements in this case were misconduct
    under Walker. The statements in Walker are nearly identical to the statements at
    issue here. Walker, 
    164 Wn. App. at 732-33
     ("'The word "verdict" comes from a
    Latin word, "veredictum." V eredictum means to declare the truth. And so by your
    verdict in this case, you folks, the 12 of you who will deliberate, will decide the truth
    of what happened .... "').
    We agree. Telling the jury that its job is to "speak the truth," or some variation
    thereof, misstates the burden of proof and is improper.
    15
    State v. Lindsay (James Leroy)/State v. Holmes (Jennifer), No. 88437-4
    c.     Expression of Personal Opinion of Credibility/Guilt
    It is impermissible for a prosecutor to express a personal opinion as to the
    credibility of a witness or the guilt of a defendant. State v. Reed, 
    102 Wn.2d 140
    ,
    145, 
    684 P.2d 699
     (1984) (citing AM. BAR Ass'N, MODEL CODE OF PROFESSIONAL
    RESPONSIBILITY AND CODE OF JUDICIAL CONDUCT § DR 7-106(C)(4) (1980)). It
    constitutes misconduct, id., and violates the advocate-witness rule, which "prohibits
    an attorney from appearing as both a witness and an advocate in the same litigation."
    Prantil, 
    764 F.2d at 552-53
    .
    The prosecutor told the jury in his closing that the defendant Holmes's
    testimony was "funny" and "disgusting," 95 VRP at 8717, "comical," id. at 8722,
    and "the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard," id. at 8708. The Court of Appeals
    noted that words like "ridiculous" or "preposterous" in relation to testimony are not,
    alone, an improper expression of personal opinion as long as the prosecutor is
    arguably drawing an inference from the evidence. Anderson, 153 Wn. App. at 430.
    The Court of Appeals also noted, though, that the prosecutor told the jury that
    Holmes should not "get up here and sit here and lie." 95 VRP at 8882. And the
    Court of Appeals was particularly disturbed by the prosecutor's reference to
    Holmes's theory of the case as "a crock," which it held was plainly an expression of
    personal opinion as to credibility. Lindsay & Holmes, 171 Wn. App. at 833.
    16
    State v. Lindsay (James Leroy)/State v. Holmes (Jennifer), No. 88437-4
    The prosecutor's "crock" comment was a comment on both defense counsel's
    closing argument and the defendant Holmes's testimony, because the two are to
    some degree inseparable. The prosecutor's argument that Holmes lied on the stand
    and the statement that Holmes's testimony was "the most ridiculous thing I've ever
    heard" are even more direct statements of the prosecutor's personal opinion as to
    Holmes's veracity. 95 VRP at 8722. An isolated use of the term "ridiculous" to
    describe a witness's testimony is not improper in every circumstance. But labeling
    testimony "the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard" is an obvious expression of
    personal opinion as to credibility. There is no other reasonable interpretation of the
    phrase. Given that comment, in context with the "crock" accusation and the "sit here
    and lie" argument, we hold that the prosecutor in this case impermissibly expressed
    his personal opinion about the defendant's credibility to the jury.
    d.    Inaudible statements to jury
    The prosecutor during closing arguments spoke to the jury so softly that the
    court reporter, parties, and their attorneys could not hear him. The prosecutor's
    voice became inaudible three times. The first time, the record states, "Do they get .
    . . (sotto voce.)" 95 VRP at 8884 (alteration in original). After the court reporter
    and defendants' lawyers said they could not hear the prosecutor, the judge stated,
    "Keep your voice up, please, so everybody can hear." Id. at 8885. The second time,
    the record states, "I mean, the Jennifer Holmes story is arguably-- well, it's silly ..
    17
    State v. Lindsay (James Leroy)/State v. Holmes (Jennifer), No. 88437-4
    . (sotto voce.)" Id. at 8886 (alteration in original). Defense counsel complained, and
    the judge asked the reporter to "read that back." Id. The reporter said, "I did not
    hear it, Judge," and the judge replied, "Okay." !d. Another debate between counsel
    ensued, and the prosecutor eventually continued his closing without a further remark
    from the judge. The third time, the record states, "Ask yourself who wants to find
    the truth and ... (sotto voce.)" Id. at 8888. The reporter responded, "Ask yourself
    .. ?" Id. (alteration in original). The prosecutor answered, "Who wants to find the
    truth. Ask yourself what the truth is. Convict them." Id. No other comment was
    made on this third incident. During one of these incidents, the prosecutor, after being
    told no one could hear him, stood directly behind Holmes's counsel and shouted his
    next sentence very loudly, to the laughter of the jury. Finally, in a later motion for
    mistrial based in part on the prosecutor's whispering, the judge stated in denying the
    motion, "I did tell [the prosecutor] to speak up and he did speak up, and I thought he
    repeated everything that he said in a voice that everybody could hear, and I think
    that's what he said on the record." 97 VRP at 8993.
    The Court of Appeals did not expressly label this misconduct. It held that
    although "a prosecutor must never whisper to the jury off the record," the record in
    this case was "sufficiently complete" to permit review. Lindsay & Holmes, 171 Wn.
    App. at 836.
    18
    State v. Lindsay (James Leroy)/State v. Holmes (Jennifer), No. 88437-4
    The dissent disagreed.     It asserted this whispering amounted to a private
    communication with the jury, which is presumed prejudicial, thus shifting the burden
    to the State to prove the communication was harmless. Id. at 851-52 (Armstrong, J.
    Pro Tern., dissenting) (citing Remmer v. United States, 
    347 U.S. 227
    , 229, 
    74 S. Ct. 450
    , 
    98 L. Ed. 654
     (1954); State v. Kell, 
    101 Wn. App. 619
    , 621, 
    5 P.3d 47
     (2000);
    State v. Murphy, 
    44 Wn. App. 290
    , 296, 
    721 P.2d 30
     (1986)). Without lmowing
    what the prosecutor said to the jury, the dissent argued, prejudice must be presumed
    and the State has not rebutted that presumption.
    In this case, however, the judge stated, in denying a defense motion for
    mistrial based on the whispering, "I did tell [the prosecutor] to speak up and he did
    speak up, and I thought he repeated everything that he said in a voice that everybody
    could hear, and I think that's what he said on the record." 97 VRP at 8993. Under
    the circumstances, we find the prosecutor's whispering, although improper, was not
    presumptively prejudicial. We emphasize, however, that the prosecutor's behavior
    in both whispering and shouting, as revealed through transcripts and affidavits, was
    highly unprofessional and potentially damaging to the fairness of the proceedings.
    II.    PREJUDICE
    a.    The Standard for Determining Prejudice
    A claim of prosecutorial misconduct requires the defendant to show both that
    the prosecutor made improper statements and that those statements caused prejudice.
    19
    State v. Lindsay (James Leroy)/State v. Holmes (Jennifer), No. 88437-4
    To show prejudice, the petitioners must show a substantial likelihood that the
    prosecutor's statements affected the jury's verdict. State v. Emery, 
    174 Wn.2d 741
    ,
    760,
    278 P.3d 653
     (2012) (citing Anderson, 153 Wn. App. at 427).
    The State argues that if the petitioners failed to object to a particular statement
    by the prosecutor, they must also show that a jury instruction would not have cured
    the potential prejudice.    Id. at 761. 4    The State points out that the following
    statements did not draw immediate objections: calling Holmes's testimony "funny,"
    disgusting," and "comical"; the use of the jigsaw puzzle analogy and crosswalk
    analogy to explain reasonable doubt and the exhortation to the jury to "speak the
    truth"; and the "crock" and "sit here and lie" comments. However, directly after the
    prosecutor's closing argument, Holmes's counsel made a motion for mistrial. In that
    motion she identified a number of the prosecutor's statements as improper for the
    reasons noted above, stating specifically that "he made his personal opinions about
    the evidence [known] on numerous occasions," 95 VRP at 8890, and that "he is
    disparaging counsel, just, you know, egregiously," id. at 8891. The Ninth Circuit
    has recognized that a defense counsel entering "objections to the language and tenor
    4
    We have often stated this standard as incorporating not only that objective inquiry
    but also an arguably subjective inquiry; that is, whether "the prosecutor's misconduct was
    so flagrant and ill intentioned that an instruction could not have cured the resulting
    prejudice." Emery, 
    174 Wn.2d at
    760-61 (citing Stenson, 
    132 Wn.2d at 727
    ). We clarified,
    though, that "[r]eviewing courts should focus less on whether the prosecutor's misconduct
    was flagrant or ill intentioned and more on whether the resulting prejudice could have been
    cured." 
    Id. at 762
    .
    20
    State v. Lindsay (James Leroy)/State v. Holmes (.Jennifer), No. 88437-4
    of the prosecutor's closing remarks by way of a mistrial motion after the government
    finished its summation" is "an acceptable mechanism by which to preserve
    challenges to prosecutorial conduct in a closing argument in lieu of repeated
    interruptions to the closing arguments," and therefore that the ordinary standard for
    examining prejudice applies. Prantil, 
    764 F.2d at
    555 n.4 (citing United States v.
    Lyman, 
    592 F.2d 496
    , 499 (9th Cir. 1979)). The rule in Prantil advances the policy
    reasons for the contemporaneous objection rule, such as giving the trial court a
    chance to correct the problem with a curative instruction, and we therefore adopt it.
    Under this rule, the defense certainly preserved the issue for review.
    b.     Application of the Standard
    The State argues that Holmes's counsel baited the prosecutor into misconduct,
    and so his improper statements cannot be grounds for reversal. It is true that
    improper comments by the prosecutor might not be grounds for reversal if they were
    specifically provoked by defense counsel. State v. Weber, 
    159 Wn.2d 252
    , 276-77,
    
    149 P.3d 646
     (2006).
    That is not what happened in this case, though.           Most of the improper
    arguments in this case occurred during the prosecutor's closing.          They are not
    directly preceded by any statements from defense counsel to which the prosecutor
    was responding.      Moreover, in this context, the prosecutor is held to a higher
    standard than defense counsel. E.g., State v. Monday, 
    171 Wn.2d 667
    , 676,
    257 P.3d 21
    State v. Lindsay (James Leroy)/State v. Holmes (Jennifer), No. 88437-4
    5 51 (20 11) ("The prosecutor owes a duty to defendants to see that their rights to a
    constitutionally fair trial are not violated." (citing State v. Case, 
    49 Wn.2d 66
    , 71,
    
    298 P.2d 500
     (1956))). We reject the State's argument that the prosecutor's behavior
    in this case is excused because Holmes's counsel also acted unprofessionally.
    The State also argues that defense counsel failed to object to many of the
    statements in the prosecutor's closing argument, so the defendants have waived any
    claim of prejudice relating to those statements. But, as explained above, Holmes's
    defense counsel made a motion for mistrial directly following the prosecutor's
    closing argument objecting to "the language and tenor of the prosecutor's closing
    remarks." Prantil, 
    764 F.2d at
    555 n.4. Thus, her motion was sufficient to preserve
    review under the ordinary prejudice standard.
    The State's argument also disregards the context of the trial.      The many
    examples of misconduct in this case "demonstrate more than the prosecutor's and
    Holmes's counsel's treatment of each other; they show an unthinkable disrespect for
    the trial court and the whole trial process." Lindsay & Holmes, 171 Wn. App. at 851
    (Armstrong, J. Pro Tern., dissenting). Such disrespect for the process infects the
    entire trial. See Jones, 
    179 Wn.2d at 371
     (Gonzalez, J., concurring). Under the
    circumstances, there is a substantial likelihood that the prosecutor's calling the
    defense's closing arguments "a crock," telling the jury that defendant Holmes should
    22
    State v. Lindsay (James Leroy)/State v. Holmes (Jennifer), No. 88437-4
    not "lie," and labeling her testimony "the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard"
    influenced the jury's verdict.
    Even under the more stringent standard for determining prejudice, the results
    would be the same. In In re Personal Restraint ofGlasmann, despite the defendant's
    failure to object, "the misconduct ... was so pervasive that it could not have been
    cured by an instruction." 
    175 Wn.2d 696
    , 707, 
    286 P.3d 673
     (2012). Here, as in
    Glasmann, '" [T]he cumulative effect of repetitive prejudicial prosecutorial
    misconduct may be so flagrant that no instruction or series of instructions can erase
    their combined prejudicial effect."' !d. (alteration in original) (quoting State v.
    Walker, 
    164 Wn. App. 724
    , 737, 
    265 P.3d 191
     (2011)). Moreover, federal courts
    have held that comments at the end of a prosecutor's rebuttal closing are more likely
    to cause prejudice. E.g., United States v. Sanchez, 
    659 F.3d 1252
    , 1259 (9th Cir.
    2011) (significant that prosecutor made improper statement "at the end ofhis closing
    rebuttal argument, after which the jury commenced its deliberations"); United States
    v. Carter, 
    236 F.3d 777
    , 788 (6th Cir. 2001) (significant that "prosecutor's improper
    comments occurred during his rebuttal argument and therefore were the last words
    from an attorney that were heard by the jury before deliberations"). Here, the
    prosecutor made several of his improper comments, including the "crock" and "sit
    here and lie" statements, during his rebuttal closing, increasing their prejudicial
    effect.
    23
    State v. Lindsay (James Leroy)/State v. Holmes (Jennifer), No. 88437-4
    We recognize that the jury in this case took care to parse the competing
    narratives presented by the parties and to render considered verdicts on each of the
    many counts. It convicted on only some of the charges and returned several lesser
    included offense convictions. We also recognize that the judge attempted to curb
    the two lawyers' incivility, even, at one point, threatening sanctions.           We
    nevertheless find the fairness of the trial, which turned largely on credibility, was
    tainted by (1) the pervasive misconduct of the prosecutor and (2) the
    unprofessionalism displayed by both the prosecutor and Holmes's attorney
    throughout the proceedings. We reverse the Court of Appeals because of both
    problems, reverse the defendants' convictions, and remand this case for a new trial.
    CONCLUSION
    The prosecutor and defense counsel for one of the defendants in this case
    behaved unprofessionally and disrespectfully towards each other, towards the
    defendants, and towards the court throughout the trial. That disrespect permeated
    the trial process. Against that background, the prosecutor, in his closing arguments,
    denigrated defense counsel, misstated the burden of proof, expressed his personal
    belief as to one defendant's veracity, and whispered to the jury so that no one else
    in the courtroom could hear him. There is a substantial likelihood that those actions,
    in context, affected the jury's verdict.          Given the defendant's immediate
    postargument motion for mistrial, there is no need to decide whether a curative
    24
    State v. Lindsay (James Leroy)/State v. Holmes (Jennifer), No. 88437-4
    instruction could have cured the prejudice. But even under that more stringent
    standard, the defendants have demonstrated a likelihood of prejudice in this case.
    We reverse the Court of Appeals and remand the case for a new trial.
    25
    State v. Lindsay (James Leroy)/State v. Holmes (Jennifer), No. 88437-4
    WE CONCUR:
    5~;;2
    w~1,@,
    26