State of Washington v. Richard Earl Kirkland ( 2017 )


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  •                                                                           FILED
    JUNE 15, 2017
    In the Office of the Clerk of Court
    WA State Court of Appeals, Division III
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION THREE
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,                         )
    )         No. 34964-1-111
    Respondent,              )
    )
    v.                                     )
    )
    RICHARD EARL KIRKLAND,                       )         UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    )
    Appellant.               )
    FEARING, C.J. -Richard Kirkland appeals his convictions for robbery and
    possession of stolen property. He contends his trial counsel was ineffective when failing
    to object to inadmissible hearsay and witness vouching. We disagree and affirm
    Kirkland's convictions.
    FACTS
    On the evening of October 13, 2015, 15-year-old Nicolas Beckstead-Braghetta
    dined at a Silverdale McDonald's restaurant near a strip mall that included a Catherine's
    clothing store. While inside the McDonald's, a person unknown to Beckstead-Braghetta
    approached him, identified himself as E.J., and began a conversation. E.J. wore a black
    jacket, black pants, and black shoes. E.J. showed Beckstead-Braghetta a handgun and
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    declared his intention to rob a store, maybe Macy's. Beckstead-Braghetta informed E.J.
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    of the stupidity of his plan. Beckstead-Braghetta considered the gun fake because, when
    I     E.J. tapped the gun on a table, the gun emanated no metal sound. E.J. then walked out of
    I     the McDonald's with Beckstead-Braghetta following. As the two walked in front of
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    Catherine's store, E.J. donned a ski mask, face scarf, and sunglasses, pulled out the gun,
    I     said wait a minute, and entered the store. Beckstead-Braghetta fled the area.
    Leslie Kitt and Tricia Nace worked as sales clerks at Catherine's, as E.J. entered
    the store at approximately 7 p.m. on October 13. Nace was in a back room, and Kitt
    spoke on a phone. A hooded E.J. walked toward Kitt, pulled a gun from his pocket,
    pointed the weapon at her, and ordered that she surrender money. Kitt relinquished the
    register's contents. As Nace returned from the back room, the robber grabbed the bag of
    money and fled the store. Nace saw him flee, but did not see his face. The two clerks.
    locked the door, called 911, and called the store manager. Within a few minutes, Kitsap
    County Sheriff's Deputy Dave Meyer arrived at Catherine's and took statements from
    Leslie Kitt and Tricia Nace.
    After the robbery, Nicolas Beckstead-Braghetta called his unclei Marty Major,
    who retrieved him and drove him to a nearby Wendy's restaurant. Nicholas Galloway
    accompanied the uncle and nephew to Wendy's. The trio saw E.J. at the restaurant.
    Nicholas Galloway separated from Nicolas Beckstead-Braghetta and Marty Major
    when leaving the Wendy's restaurant. Apparently Galloway gained knowledge of the
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    No. 34964-1-III
    State v. Kirkland
    robbery and phoned 911 to report the crime. Later that evening Sheriff Detectives Lisa
    Gundrum and Laurie Blankenship met with Nicholas Galloway, who provided names,
    descriptions, and an address for the suspect. Galloway claimed that Richard Kirkland,
    called E.J., robbed Catherine's and that Marty Major and Nicolas Beckstead-Braghetta
    accompanied Kirkland.
    Detectives Lisa Gundrum and Laurie Blankenship contacted Nicolas Beckstead-
    Braghetta. Although he initially denied knowledge of the robbery, Beckstead-Braghetta
    eventually told the detectives about his interactions with E.J. on the day of the robbery.
    The Kitsap County Sheriffs office determined that E.J. was Richard Kirkland. On
    October 13, Detectives Laurie Blankenship and Jennifer Rice spoke with Kirkland's
    girlfriend at the Wendy's restaurant. The girlfriend disclosed that she earlier saw
    Kirkland with an ersatz gun.
    Law enforcement officers executed a search warrant at a home where Richard
    Kirkland shared a bedroom with his girlfriend. Inside the bedroom, the officers found
    black gloves in a laundry hamper, a leather handgun holster, a safe with a stolen
    checkbook inside, and a pair of shoes containing stolen prescription drugs.
    PROCEDURE
    The State of Washington charged Richard Kirkland with first degree robbery,
    second degree possession of stolen property, and third degree possession of stolen
    property. At a jury trial, the State presented testimony from thirteen witnesses, including:
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    1    Leslie Kitt, Tricia Nace, Laurie Blankenship, Lisa Gundrum, Joseph Hedstrom, and
    !    Nicolas Beckstead-Braghetta. Kirkland's arguments on appeal center on testimony
    I    provided by three investigating officers: Detectives Laurie Blankenship and Lisa
    Gundrum and Deputy Joseph Hedstrom. The relevant portions of their testimony follow.
    During trial, Detective Laurie Blankenship testified:
    Q. Okay. Did you learn anything significant from those interviews,
    without reiterating what they told you, that directed your investigation?
    A. Nicolas [Beckstead-]Braghetta shared information with us that
    was consistent with what was reported by the victim at Catherine's store
    and provided the same clothing description as the victim at the Catherine's
    store provided to us as well.
    Q. Why was that significant?
    A. Because that just led to credibility that, you know, he saw this
    person in these clothes, and this matches the same description that
    Catherine's store had provided-victim had provided to us.
    Q. Was he able to identify who was wearing those clothes?
    A. Yes. He said EJ was wearing those clothes.
    Q. And did he provide any further information on the identity, or
    how did-how did you determine who EJ was?
    A. We found that little earlier on when Nicolas [Beckstead-]
    Braghetta got into the car with his Uncle Marty, and he told him about a
    conversation he had had with a subject named EJ and what the plans EJ had
    described to him, what he was going to do.
    Report of Proceedings (RP) at 77-78.
    Laurie Blankenship continued:
    Q. Okay. So what did you do next, if anything?
    A. We finished up the search warrant, and I think we secured for the
    night. No, I'm sorry. Let me think.
    No, we did not secure for the night. After that, Detective Jennifer
    Rice and I went to Wendy's restaurant to talk to Kirkland's girlfriend.
    Q. Okay. And without relaying what she said to you, did you learn
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    No. 34964-1-111
    State v. Kirkland
    anything from that interview that aided in your investigation?
    A. Yes, I did. I spoke to her outside of the restaurant and back by a
    dumpster, Detective Rice and I, and what she disclosed to us was she had
    seen Kirkland with a gun, she described it as not a real gun, and she said
    her brother had also seen this gun inside the bedroom as well.
    RP at 85.
    Detective Lisa Gundrum testified at trial concerning her interview of Nicholas
    Galloway:
    Q. Okay. And what information did you receive from that
    interview, if anything, that aided in your investigation?
    A. He indicated that he had been present during the conversation of
    several other people and talking about what led up to the robbery. And
    then subsequently they went to a Wendy's store in Silverdale, and they
    actually-when they arrived at that Wendy's, the suspect was standing at
    the Wendy's as well. So I don't know how much more detail you want me
    to go into at that point.
    Q. Did he lead you to-did he provide you any follow-up
    information, addresses, names, descriptions, anything that would-that you
    took into consideration in continuing your investigation after that?
    A. He had been-Nicolas had been hanging out with another male
    named Marty Major at that-at that time, as well as Marty's 15-year-old
    nephew, and that-the whole conversation about the robbery was between
    those three. Those three went to the Wendy's together.
    Nicolas felt very uncomfortable continuing on. Marty and the 15-
    year-old and the defendant got into Marty's vehicle, and they drove away.
    So Nicolas was able to provide us with the vehicle information, the
    description, the direction of travel, what the suspect was wearing-or the
    defendant was wearing, those types of things.
    Q. And at what point did he make the 911 call?
    A. What he explained to me was that he felt in fear of the defendant,
    didn't want to go with him, understood that there was a gun involved, a
    robbery. He didn't want to be involved in it. So when the three-when the
    other three drove away, he went into the Wendy's, feared that the defendant
    would come back, and he knew that he had a gun. So he ended up walking
    into a nearby field, and at that point, he made the 911 call.
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    RP at 95-97.
    Deputy Joseph Hedstrom testified regarding his conversation with Nicholas
    Galloway:
    Q. Okay. And without reiterating exactly what he said to you, did
    he provide any information that directed your investigation?
    A. Yes.
    Q. What information was that?
    A. He said he was in a vehicle in the TJ Maxx parking lot, learned
    of the robbery and that the suspect had ran up to Wendy's. They drove up
    there, and the suspect was standing outside.
    RP at 140. Deputy Hedstrom also testified regarding a conversation with Marty Major:
    Q. Okay. And did you receive any information that directed your
    investigation after that?
    A. Yes. Marlin [Major] had said he had dropped the suspect and
    Marty off at a house on Mc Williams.
    Q. Did you have a name for the other person?
    A. At that time, I want to say that he was identified as EJ.
    Q. Okay. And were you able-later able to determine who EJ was?
    A. Yes.
    Q. How did you determine that?
    A. Through interviews with Marty and I think Marty's nephew.
    RP at 144.
    Richard Kirkland also complains about the following testimony from Nicolas
    Beckstead-Braghetta solicited from the State:
    Q. Nick, is it easier for you to remember the truth or to remember a
    lie?
    A. It's easier to remember the truth.
    Q. Okay. So you don't remember everything that you told law
    enforcement that night; is that right?
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    A.    Uh-huh.
    Q.    And you testified that-that some of it was a lie?
    A.    Yeah.
    Q.    But you remember the facts that you testified to today?
    A.    Yeah.
    Q.    And is what you told us today the truth?
    A.    Yes.
    RP at 197.
    The jury found Richard Kirkland guilty on all counts, first degree robbery,
    second degree possession of stolen property, and third degree possession of stolen
    property. The trial court sentenced Kirkland to 56 months' confinement.
    LAW AND ANALYSIS
    Richard Kirkland contends that his trial counsel performed constitutionally
    ineffectively because his counsel failed to object to inadmissible and prejudicial hearsay
    and his counsel failed to object to credibility vouching by the State's witnesses. He seeks
    a new trial on all charges. The State responds that Kirkland's counsel did not provide
    ineffective assistance because the evidence was arguably admissible, tactical reasons
    justified not objecting, and any error in admitting the evidence was harmless. We hold
    that Kirkland's trial counsel was not ineffective.
    The Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution guarantees defendants the
    right to legal counsel in criminal trials. Like the federal constitution, Washington's
    Constitution also grants an accused, in a criminal prosecution, the right to appear by
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    No. 34964-1-III
    State v. Kirkland
    counsel. WASH. CONST. art. I, § 22. The right to counsel under the state and federal
    constitutions are coextensive. State v. Long, 
    104 Wash. 2d 285
    , 288, 
    705 P.2d 245
    (1985).
    Trial counsel must do more than sit at counsel table with the criminal defendant.
    To meaningfully protect an accused's right to counsel, an accused is entitled to effective
    assistance of counsel. Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 
    104 S. Ct. 2052
    , 
    80 L. Ed. 2d
    674 (1984). Courts apply a two pronged test to determine if counsel provided
    effective assistance: (1) whether counsel performed deficiently, and (2) whether the
    deficient performance prejudiced the defendant. Strickland v. 
    Washington, 466 U.S. at 687
    . If a defendant fails to establish one prong of the test, this court need not address the
    remaining prong. State v. Hendrickson, 
    129 Wash. 2d 61
    , 78, 
    917 P.2d 563
    (1996).
    Ineffective assistance of counsel presents a mixed question of law and fact that we review
    de novo. 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 698
    .
    To satisfy the first prong, the defendant must show that, after considering all the
    circumstances, counsel's performance fell below an objective standard of reasonableness.
    State v. McFarland, 
    127 Wash. 2d 322
    , 334-35, 
    899 P.2d 1251
    (1995). The burden is on the
    defendant to show deficient performance. State v. Grier, 
    171 Wash. 2d 17
    , 33, 
    246 P.3d 1260
    (2011). This court gives great deference to trial counsel's performance and begins
    the analysis with a strong presumption counsel performed effectively. State v. West, 185
    Wn. App. 625,638,344 P.3d 1233 (2015). Trial strategy and tactics cannot form the
    basis of a finding of deficient performance. State v. Johnston, 
    143 Wash. App. 1
    , 16, 177
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    No. 34964-1-111
    State v. Kirkland
    P.3d 1127 (2007). Richard Kirkland complains of his trial counsel's failure to object to
    testimony. The decision of when or whether to object is a classic example of trial tactics.
    State v. Madison, 
    53 Wash. App. 754
    , 763, 
    770 P.2d 662
    (1989).
    We agree with Richard Kirkland that the State introduced inadmissible hearsay.
    Detective Laurie Blankenship testified to information shared by Nicolas Beckstead-
    Braghetta about the identity of and clothes worn by Kirkland. Blankenship testified to
    comments uttered by Richard Kirkland's girlfriend concerning his possessing a fake gun.
    Detective Lisa Gundrum testified at trial concerning Nicholas Galloway's remarks
    concerning the robbery and Galloway's identification of Richard Kirkland. Deputy
    Joseph Hedstrom testified that Galloway told him that he saw Richard Kirkland at the
    Wendy's restaurant. Deputy Hedstrom also testified regarding Marty Major identifying
    E.J. as the robber.
    Hearsay is an out of court statement offered in evidence to prove the truth of the
    matter asserted. ER 801 (c). Although hearsay is generally inadmissible, a statement
    must be offered for its truth to constitute hearsay. State v. Edwards, 
    131 Wash. App. 611
    ,
    614, 
    128 P.3d 631
    (2006); State v. Post, 
    59 Wash. App. 389
    , 394-95, 
    797 P.2d 1160
    (1990),
    ajf'd, 
    118 Wash. 2d 596
    , 
    826 P.2d 172
    (1992). A statement does not qualify as hearsay if
    used for the purpose of showing why someone acted as they did. State v. Post, 59 Wn.
    App. at 394-95. Nevertheless, the purpose behind a person's actions must be relevant to
    the issues posed by the prosecution. Out-of-court declarations may be admitted to
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    No. 34964-1-111
    State v. Kirkland
    explain a witness's conduct only if the conduct is relevant to a material issue in the case;
    otherwise, such declarations remain hearsay. State v. Hudlow, 
    182 Wash. App. 266
    , 278,
    
    331 P.3d 90
    (2014); State v. Johnson, 
    61 Wash. App. 539
    , 545, 
    811 P.2d 687
    (1991).
    The State argues that it offered the sheriff officers' testimony about witness
    statements to explain the steps taken in the investigation and not to prove the truth of
    witnesses's statements. Nevertheless, the gist of the testimony was to show congruence
    between Nicolas Beckstead-Braghetta's story, Nicholas Galloway's story, Marty Major's
    story, and the girlfriend's story with the descriptions provided by store clerks Leslie Kitt
    and Tricia Nace. The validity or reasonableness of the investigation was not at issue in
    the case. The question for the jury was whether Richard Kirkland committed a robbery.
    Although the testimony appeared couched in the narrative of the detectives'
    investigations, the State used the testimony to tie Kirkland to the robbery.
    State v. Johnson, 
    61 Wash. App. 539
    (1991) rejects the State's arguments. In
    Johnson, the police lieutenant did not testify to the contents of the informant's statement,
    but the trial court allowed testimony, based on the informant's statement, that the officer
    had reason to suspect the appellant engaged in drug trafficking. This court noted that
    cases from other jurisdictions held that a law enforcement officer's testimony concerning
    an informant's or eyewitness's statement is inadmissible hearsay even when the officer
    does not repeat the contents of the statement, but only testifies that the statement led
    police to investigate or arrest the defendant. The Johnson court held that, when the
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    No. 34964-1-III
    State v. Kirkland
    inescapable inference from the testimony is that a nontestifying witness furnished the
    police with evidence relevant to the defendant's guilt, the testimony is hearsay,
    notwithstanding that the officer does not repeat the actual statements made by the
    nontestifying witness.
    The State's phrasing of a question to avoid direct quotations from the informant
    does not avoid the bar of hearsay evidence. Inadmissible evidence is not made
    admissible by allowing the substance of a testifying witness's evidence to incorporate
    out-of-court statements by a declarant who does not testify. State v. Hudlow, 182 Wn.
    App. at 281 (2014).
    Our conclusion that the State introduced inadmissible hearsay without objection
    from Richard Kirkland's trial counsel does not necessarily mean that trial counsel
    performed defectively. Trial counsel did not perform deficiently if failure to object to the
    inadmissible hearsay was a trial strategy or tactic. State v. 
    Johnston, 143 Wash. App. at 16
    .
    The decision of when or whether to object is a classic example of trial tactics. State v.
    
    Madison, 53 Wash. App. at 763
    (1989). Only in egregious circumstances, on testimony
    central to the State's case, will the failure to object constitute incompetence of counsel
    justifying reversal. State v. 
    Madison, 53 Wash. App. at 763
    .
    Trial counsel's failure to object to inadmissible hearsay testimony in this case was
    not egregious, and the inadmissible testimony was not central to the State's case.
    Kirkland's trial counsel may have withheld an objection to the hearsay statements
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    No. 34964-1-III
    State v. Kirkland
    because Nicolas Beckstead-Braghetta, scheduled to testify later, would deliver the same
    testimony. The only police hearsay testimony that did not involve Beckstead-Braghetta's
    observations was the disclosure from Kirkland's girlfriend. She did not testify at trial.
    Nevertheless, the information she provided was not central to the State's case. She
    informed law enforcement that Kirkland had a gun, but Beckstead-Braghetta provided
    percipient testimony as to a gun. Beckstead-Braghetta's testimony weighed heavier since
    it placed Kirkland in possession of a gun at the scene of the robbery, whereas the
    girlfriend's testimony simply established that Kirkland may have possessed a gun.
    Kikland's trial counsel provided effective assistance because the failure to object to
    inadmissible hearsay may have been a trial tactic or strategy not to bother with evidence
    that would be admitted from other testifying witnesses.
    We reject Richard Kirkland's argument that the te~timony of Nicolas Beckstead-
    Braghetta about testifying truthfully constitutes impermissible witness vouching. On
    redirect, Beckstead-Braghetta testified that he first lied to law enforcement officers, but
    he told the truth at trial. A witness may testify that he is telling the truth. Batsell v.
    United States, 403 F.2d 395,401 (8th Cir. 1968). In fact, ER 603 requires a witness to
    "declare that the witness will testify truthfully, by oath or affirmation." If Richard
    Kirkland's argument succeeded, trials would need to forego the swearing in of witnesses.
    Failure to object to this testimony was not deficient performance.
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    I                                         CONCLUSIONS
    I
    !           We hold that Richard Kirkland's trial counsel did not engage in constitutionally
    I    deficient performance. We thereby affirm Kirkland's convictions. At the concession of
    I    the State, we decline to award the State costs on appeal.
    I           A majority of the panel has determined this opinion will not be printed in the
    I!
    Washington Appellate Reports, but it will be filed for public record pursuant to RCW
    2.06.040.
    :1
    Fearing,~'
    .J
    WE CONCUR:
    Lawrence-Berrey, J.
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