State Of Washington v. Megan Mollet ( 2014 )


Menu:
  •     IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION ONE
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,                               No. 71433-3-1
    —     -Her
    Respondent,                                                                    <—        o
    v.
    zsl   ^E^> —
    MEGAN MOLLET,                                      PUBLISHED OPINION
    —     O   —:
    Appellant.                           FILED: June 9, 2014
    Verellen, A.C.J. — Sufficient evidence exists to support a conviction for
    rendering criminal assistance by concealment under RCW 9A.76.050(1) and .070(1) if
    the defendant conceals another by making an affirmative misrepresentation to police
    officers that is not a mere false disavowal of knowledge. Taking the evidence in the
    light most favorable to the State, there was sufficient evidence that Megan Mollet
    intended to conceal Joshua Blake by affirmatively misstating that she had not seen him
    and providing police with a false alibi for herself. Additionally, the trial court did not
    abuse its discretion in admitting evidence that Mollet inscribed a memorial to Blake on
    her jail cell that included the words "White Power." Therefore, we affirm.
    FACTS
    Just after midnight on February 23, 2012, Washington State Patrol Trooper Tony
    Radulescu stopped Blake's truck on Highway 16 in Gorst and called in the license plate
    number. Blake was driving and Mollet, a longtime family friend of Blake, was sitting in
    the passenger seat. Trooper Radulescu approached the vehicle on the passenger side
    No. 71433-3-1/2
    and asked Blake for his license and registration. Blake shot Trooper Radulescu, who
    died as a result of the injury.
    Blake and Mollet then drove to a property on Sidney Road in Port Orchard. Their
    mutual friends lived in a small house on the property, and Mollet was staying in a larger
    "flophouse" on the property.1 When they arrived, Blake made Mollet get out of the truck.
    Mollet returned to the flophouse. Blake remained at the small house for about 15
    minutes before someone gave him a ride to another location.
    Shortly after the shooting occurred, police officers discovered Trooper
    Radulescu's body. Sometime between 2:00 and 3:00 a.m., police began searching for
    Blake's truck. Thirty to forty-five minutes later, they found it abandoned on the Sidney
    Road property, parked in a field where the brush was taller than the cab of the truck.
    Police officers cleared six people from the two houses on the Sidney Road property,
    including Mollet, and began to interview them. One ofthe officers explained to Mollet
    and some of the other residents that Blake's truck was found on the property, that Blake
    was suspected of killing the trooper, and that they needed help getting any information
    possible.
    Mollet spoke with two officers and told them that she did not know Blake and did
    not know anything about a trooper being shot. She also stated that she had not seen
    Blake on the property and that she had spent the evening helping a friend move in
    Belfair.
    1A "flophouse" is slang for a house where people stay temporarily and use
    drugs.
    No. 71433-3-1/3
    The State charged Mollet by amended information with rendering criminal
    assistance in the first degree and making a false or misleading statement to a public
    servant. Mollet testified that she lied to the police because Blake threatened to kill her if
    she said anything. The jury convicted Mollet on both counts.
    Mollet appeals.
    DISCUSSION
    Sufficiency of the Evidence
    Mollet argues that the State violated her Fourteenth Amendment right to due
    process because it presented insufficient evidence that she rendered criminal
    assistance by concealing Blake through false statements to the police. We disagree.
    In a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence, we view the evidence in the light
    most favorable to the State and analyze whether "'any rational fact finder could have
    found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt."'2 We review the
    criminal statute de novo to determine the elements of the crime.3 Our objective is to
    determine and give effect to the legislature's intent by ascertaining the plain meaning of
    the statute.4 In determining the plain meaning, we look to the text of the statutory
    provision in question, the context of the statute in which that provision is found, related
    provisions, and the statutory scheme as a whole.5
    2 State v. Budik. 
    173 Wash. 2d 727
    , 733, 
    272 P.3d 816
    (2012) (quoting State v.
    Enqel. 
    166 Wash. 2d 572
    , 576, 
    210 P.3d 1007
    (2009)).
    3ld,
    4idL
    5 kL (quoting State v. Ervin, 
    169 Wash. 2d 815
    , 820, 
    239 P.3d 354
    (2010)).
    No. 71433-3-1/4
    Mollet was charged with rendering criminal assistance in the first degree under
    RCW 9A.76.070(1), which provides: "A person is guilty of rendering criminal assistance
    in the first degree if he or she renders criminal assistance to a person who has
    committed or is being sought for murder in the first degree or any class A felony or
    equivalent juvenile offense." The term "renders criminal assistance" is defined by
    RCW 9A.76.050:
    As used in RCW 9A.76.070, 9A.76.080, and 9A.76.090, a person "renders
    criminal assistance" if, with intent to prevent, hinder, or delay the
    apprehension or prosecution of another person who he or she knows has
    committed a crime or juvenile offense or is being sought by law
    enforcement officials for the commission of a crime or juvenile offense or
    has escaped from a detention facility, he or she:
    (1) Harbors or conceals such person; or
    (2) Warns such person of impending discovery or apprehension; or
    (3) Provides such person with money, transportation, disguise, or other
    means of avoiding discovery or apprehension; or
    (4) Prevents or obstructs, by use of force, deception, or threat, anyone
    from performing an act that might aid in the discovery or apprehension of
    such person; or
    (5) Conceals, alters, or destroys any physical evidence that might aid in
    the discovery or apprehension of such person; or
    (6) Provides such person with a weapon.
    Therefore, a person renders criminal assistance if she knows that another person has
    committed a crime and she intends to prevent, hinder, or delay the apprehension or
    prosecution of that other person and undertakes one of the listed six actions.6 Here,
    Mollet was prosecuted for "concealing]" Blake.7
    6 
    Budik, 173 Wash. 2d at 734
    (quoting RCW 9A.76.050).
    7 Report of Proceedings (RP) (May 15, 2012) at 16.
    No. 71433-3-1/5
    In State v. Budik, the defendant was convicted of rendering criminal assistance
    under the fourth category, "deception."8 Budik was the victim of a shooting. He denied
    any knowledge of who shot him when questioned by police, even though forensic
    evidence suggested that Budik was close enough to the shooter to be able to identify
    him.9 Our Supreme Court concluded that a false disavowal of knowledge, without any
    additional affirmative action, was not sufficient to prove that a person rendered criminal
    assistance by use of deception.10
    Most important to our analysis, the Budik court considered the legislative intent
    behind the entire statute.11 It noted that within the same chapter, RCW 9A.76.175
    makes it a gross misdemeanor to make false or misleading statements to the police.12
    Therefore, the legislature already "expressed the manner in which it intended to deal
    with such statements and provided that they are punishable as gross misdemeanors,"
    whereas rendering criminal assistance is a class B felony.13 From this, the court
    inferred that the legislature must have intended to require an affirmative act or
    statement in order to classify a false statement as a felony rather than a
    8 
    173 Wash. 2d 727
    , 734, 
    272 P.3d 816
    (2012).
    9 \± at 730-31.
    10 Id, at 737.
    11 The Supreme Court also traced the history of the statute, jd. at 736. It
    explained that the crime of serving as an accessory after the fact was replaced by the
    crime of rendering criminal assistance in 1975 and that the new statute embodies many
    of the same principles underlying the accessory crime. 
    Id. It then
    examined cases from
    other jurisdictions involving the crime of accessory after the fact to determine whether a
    false disavowal of knowledge alone could result in conviction, jd. at 736-37.
    12 
    Id. at 735.
           13
    
    Id. No. 71433-3-1/6
    misdemeanor.14 Additionally, the court reasoned that all of the other means of
    rendering criminal assistance, including harboring or concealing the person sought, also
    required some affirmative act or statement, meaning that a deception under the fourth
    means must carry the same requirement.15 It concluded that "[wjhile the term
    'deception' may be literally broad enough to include false disavowals, such an
    interpretation would ignore the statutory scheme and past interpretations of the
    principles underlying the crime."16
    When a person conceals another by means of false statements, Budik provides
    guidance. Even though Budik was prosecuted under the deception prong, the court
    analyzed the statutory intent of the entire statute. Therefore, the court's statement that
    harboring or concealing a person requires some affirmative act or statement is not dicta.
    Consistent with Budik, if the State alleges a defendant committed criminal assistance by
    concealing another and relies upon the defendant's false statements, then the State
    must prove an affirmative act or statement to conceal, not merely a false disavowal of
    knowledge.
    The distinction between a mere false disavowal and an affirmative
    misrepresentation is critical to analyzing whether a person has rendered criminal
    assistance in this context. Falsely stating "I don't know" or "I didn't see anything" is a
    mere false disavowal of knowledge.17 These statements are not an affirmative act or
    statement because they do not raise a defense for the other person or, in and of
    14 \± at 736.
    15 id at 735-36.
    16 id, at 737.
    17 See 
    id. at 730-31.
    6
    No. 71433-3-1/7
    themselves, indicate an effort to shield or protect the other person.18 The Budik court
    relied on several opinions from other states to illustrate this distinction.19
    In Tipton v. State, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals held that a witness's false
    statement that she "didn't know anything about [a murder]" did not make her an
    accomplice to the murder.20 It held that "[t]his statement was not an affirmative
    statement of facts tending to raise any defense for appellant, or a statement within itself
    indicating an effort to shield or protect appellant."21
    In State v. Clifford, the Oregon Supreme Court reversed the defendant's
    conviction for accessory after the fact based on his false statement to police that he
    either "had not seen" or "had not seen ... for a long time" a murder and kidnapping
    suspect.22 It did so because there was no evidence "from which the jury could infer that
    the [defendant] told the lie with the intent to aid the offender and that the lie was, under
    the existing circumstances, likely to aid the offender to escape arrest or punishment."23
    In Stephens v. State, the Wyoming Supreme Court considered whether a
    defendant harbored or concealed a burglar when he falsely told police that he "did not
    know anything about [the burglary]."24 It held that the defendant "did nothing more than
    passively deny knowledge of [the burglar's] involvement in the burglary" and therefore,
    18 Id, at 737-38.
    19 id, at 736-37.
    20 
    126 Tex. Crim. 439
    , 443, 
    72 S.W.2d 290
    (1934).
    21 id, at 444.
    22 
    263 Or. 436
    , 438, 442, 
    502 P.2d 1371
    (1972).
    23 id,
    24 
    734 P.2d 555
    , 556 (Wyo. 1987).
    No. 71433-3-1/8
    his statements "did not rise to the level of helping [the burglar] avoid discovery and
    detection."25
    Finally, in People v. Plenqsanqtip, the California Court of Appeals considered
    whether there was probable cause to support a charge of accessory to murder based
    on false statements by the defendant.26 It held that "[i]n contrast to affirmative
    falsehoods, the mere passive failure to reveal a crime, the refusal to give information, or
    the denial of knowledge motivated by self-interest does not constitute the crime of
    accessory."27 In that case, there was evidence that the defendant was present and
    likely aware of a murder that was committed in an office during the time he was present
    in the office.28 But the defendant told police that "he never saw" the victim, he "did not
    see" the murder, and he did not "see or hear anything unusual in the office area."29 The
    court held that these statements were "affirmative representations of positive facts" that,
    if made with the requisite intent, "were an overt attempt to change the picture of what
    happened" and could support an accessory charge.30
    25 id, at 557.
    26 
    148 Cal. App. 4th 825
    , 836, 
    56 Cal. Rptr. 3d 165
    (2007).
    27 id,
    28 id, at 837-38.
    29 id, at 832.
    30 id, at 838-39. This is consistent with federal law. See 39 Am. Jur. 2d
    Harboring Criminals § 3 (2014) ("Under the federal statute prohibiting the harboring or
    concealment of a person for whom an arrest warrant or process has been issued under
    any law of the United States, there must be shown some affirmative physical act tending
    to conceal the offender. Indeed, any physical act of providing assistance to aid a
    person in avoiding detection and apprehension will make out a violation of harboring a
    fugitive from arrest. A mere false statement, absent further acts of concealment, is
    insufficient to render a person guilty under the federal statute, although the contrary has
    been held under other statutes. The mere failure to come forward with information, or to
    No. 71433-3-1/9
    Here, the State presented testimony from two officers about Mollet's statements
    during their search for Blake. Officer Cory Manchester testified that Mollet told him that
    she did not know Blake, that earlier in the night she was in Belfair helping a friend move,
    and that she returned to the Sidney Road house at 1:00 a.m. Officer Douglas Dillard
    testified that in her separate conversation with him, Mollet said she spent most of the
    day helping Andrew Bartlett move from Belfair and that she got back around 11:00 p.m.
    and went straight to bed. In response to Officer Dillard reading Mollet her Miranda31
    rights, she stated that she did not know "anything about anybody shooting a cop."32
    She denied knowing Blake and, when shown a photograph of Blake, stated that she did
    not know the person in the photo. When asked if she had seen Blake at the residence,
    she replied, "No."33
    Mollet's statements that she did not know Blake and that she did not know
    anything about the shooting were mere false disavowals of knowledge. They are
    equivalent to the statements in Budik that the defendant did not know the identity of the
    shooter.
    But Mollet's false statements that she was helping a friend move that night and
    that she did not see Blake at the residence were not mere false denials of knowledge.
    Rather, they were affirmative statements that she had not been present at the shooting
    and that she had the opportunity to observe but did not see anything at the Sidney Road
    furnish active aid to law enforcement authorities, is insufficient for conviction.")
    (footnotes omitted).
    31 Miranda v. Arizona. 
    384 U.S. 436
    , 
    86 S. Ct. 1602
    , 
    16 L. Ed. 2d 694
    (1966).
    32 RP (May 23, 2012) at 162.
    33 
    Id. at 163.
    No. 71433-3-1/10
    property. Her statements misrepresented to the police that she had no link to the truck
    hidden in tall brush on the property, or to Blake. Based upon these statements, the
    State met its burden of proving that Mollet concealed Blake by lying about her
    whereabouts the night of the shooting and lying about the fact that Blake was at the
    Sidney Road property that night.
    Mollet argues that these statements were personally exculpatory and did not
    have the effect of concealing Blake. But whether she made the statements in order to
    protect herself or to conceal Blake was a question for the jury. There was evidence that
    Mollet knew Blake most of her life and had a close relationship with him. Drawing all
    inferences in favor of the State, there was sufficient evidence to show that she gave
    police a false alibi and lied about seeing Blake that night in order to conceal him.
    Mollet points out that in Budik. the defendant made an additional affirmative false
    statement that he did not see the shooter because he was leaning over to pick up a
    beer when the shooting occurred.34 She argues that this statement is analogous to the
    false statements she made and that reversal is required because this additional
    statement in Budik was held not sufficient to prove rendering criminal assistance. But
    there, under the deception prong of the statute, the State was required to prove that
    Budik's false statements prevented or obstructed a police act. The court noted that
    there was no evidence to suggest that Budik's false statement that he was leaning down
    prevented or obstructed any act.35 The concealment prong does not include this
    additional requirement. Therefore, Budik does not support reversal on this basis.
    34 See 
    Budik. 173 Wash. 2d at 731
    .
    35 
    Id. at 740
    n.5.
    10
    No. 71433-3-1/11
    Decisions from other jurisdictions also do not support reversal. Mollet argues
    that her statement that she did not see Blake on the property was similar to the
    statement in Clifford that the defendant had not seen the suspect. But Clifford is
    distinguishable for two reasons. First, the Clifford court found that this statement did not
    constitute sufficient evidence of accessory after the fact because there was no evidence
    that the defendant intended to aid the offender or that the statement likely did aid the
    offender.36 Here, to the contrary, there was evidence that Mollet had a close
    relationship with Blake and could have intended to conceal him from police by her
    statement that she had not seen him on the property. Second, even if Mollet's
    statement that she had not seen Blake on the property was insufficient to support her
    conviction, her false alibi was an affirmative representation. Therefore, Clifford does not
    support reversal.
    Unlike Tipton and Stephens. Mollet's statements went beyond a mere false
    statement that she did not know anything. Similar to Plenqsanqtip. Mollet's false alibi
    and statements that she had not seen Blake at the Sidney Road residence were
    affirmative misrepresentations. Mollet argues that the statements in Plenqsanqtip were
    factually distinguishable because the defendant admitted to being at the crime scene at
    the time of the crime but denied seeing anything. But this factual distinction is not
    material. Mollet's false statements worked to conceal Blake by affirmatively
    misrepresenting her whereabouts during the murder and her connection to Blake and
    his truck, which was found in the brush on the property where she was staying and
    where she was questioned by police.
    36 
    Clifford. 263 Or. at 442
    .
    11
    No. 71433-3-1/12
    Mollet argues that the State did not show precisely how her concealment
    impaired the police investigation. But the concealment prong of RCW 9A.76.050 does
    not require such a showing.37 It is sufficient that the evidence, viewed in a light most
    favorable to the State, supports a reasonable inference that Mollet intended to conceal
    Blake's trail by lying about the true link between Blake, the Sidney Road property, and
    the truck found there.
    Admission of Evidence
    Mollet argues that the trial court abused its discretion in admitting evidence that
    she wrote "White Power" as part of a memorial to Blake on a desk in her jail cell
    because it was more prejudicial than probative. We disagree.
    The admissibility of evidence is within the discretion of the trial court, and a
    reviewing court will reverse only when the trial court abuses its discretion.38 An abuse
    of discretion occurs only when there is no tenable basis for the view adopted by the trial
    court.39
    Evidence is relevant if it has "any tendency to make the existence of any fact that
    is of consequence to the determination of the action more probable or less probable
    than it would be without the evidence."40 In addition, a fact bearing on the credibility or
    37 Cf. 
    Budik. 173 Wash. 2d at 738-40
    (to prove rendering criminal assistance by
    deception, the State had to show that the defendant's deception prevented or
    obstructed police from performing an act that might aid in the discovery or apprehension
    of the suspect).
    38 State v. Atsbeha. 
    142 Wash. 2d 904
    , 913-14, 
    16 P.3d 626
    (2001).
    39 id,
    40ER401.
    12
    No. 71433-3-1/13
    probative value of other evidence is relevant.41 Relevant evidence may be excluded "if
    its probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice."42
    Here, Mollet memorialized Blake by writing "White Power RIP Josh Blake 6-23-
    83 to 2-23-12" on a desk in her jail cell.43 The State offered a photograph of the writing
    into evidence, arguing that it proved the close nature of her relationship with Blake. The
    trial court admitted the writing. On cross-examination, Mollet testified that she wrote
    "White Power" because it was something that Blake used to say.
    The fact that Mollet memorialized Blake in this way supported an inference that
    she was very close to him and that she intended to prevent the police from
    apprehending him. It was relevant evidence. The admission of the phrase "White
    Power" as part of the memorial was prejudicial, but it was within the discretion of the
    trial court to determine the extent of the prejudice and to weigh the danger of unfair
    prejudice in comparison to the probative value. Given Mollet's explanation why she
    wrote "White Power," and especially because the photograph was consistent with a
    motive to conceal Blake, Mollet does not establish that the trial court abused its
    discretion.
    Mollet argues that the trial court did not perform a proper ER 403 balancing
    analysis because it did not identify the purpose for which the evidence was offered,
    consider its relevance, or weigh its probative value against its prejudicial effect. But the
    record reflects the trial court's careful consideration of these factors. The State offered
    a photograph of the memorial at issue here and a photograph of another jail cell writing
    41 State v. Rice. 
    48 Wash. App. 7
    , 12, 
    737 P.2d 726
    (1987).
    42 ER 403.
    43 Supp. Clerk's Papers at 33.
    13
    No. 71433-3-1/14
    by Mollet that simply read "White Power." In specifically considering the "White Power"
    exhibit, the trial court explained that it was not admissible under ER 403 because it did
    not refer to Blake or shed light on Mollet's relationship with him. In contrast, the trial
    court admitted the memorial because it showed that Mollet had "an affinity, a
    relationship, ... a closeness of mind" with Blake and was relevant to her relationship
    with him.44 Although the trial court did not use the word "prejudice" or "prejudicial" in its
    ruling, the court's analysis and its reference to ER 403 reveal that it did weigh the
    probative value against the prejudicial effect of all of the evidence offered. Mollet offers
    no authority requiring an express reference to "prejudice" or "prejudicial."
    Mollet argues that this evidence was also improperly admitted under ER 404(b),
    which regulates the admission of evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts to prove the
    character of a person. But because this evidence was admitted for the limited purpose
    of proving Mollet's relationship with Blake and not to prove her character, this rule is not
    applicable.
    We affirm the trial court.
    WE CONCUR:
    t/
    3\ - ^         ^±j
    h*?,Ikea*. j
    44 RP (May 24, 2012) at 241.
    14