State of Washington v. Tracey Kimberly Bailey ( 2019 )


Menu:
  •                                                             FILED
    SEPTEMBER 10, 2019
    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. 36648-1-III
    )
    Respondent,            )
    )
    v.                            )         UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    )
    TRACEY KIMBERLY BAILEY,                     )
    )
    Appellant.             )
    FEARING, J. — We review a common question of whether a law enforcement
    officer possessed reasonable articulable suspicion when conducting a Terry stop. We
    hold the officer had reasonable suspicion and affirm appellant Tracey Bailey’s
    conviction. We remand for correction of her offender score and the striking of some
    legal financial obligations.
    FACTS
    Since Tracey Bailey challenges her seizure by a law enforcement officer, we
    garner our facts from a motion to suppress hearing. On June 29, 2014, at 1:30 a.m.,
    David Brown called Thurston County’s 911 service to report an unwanted person at his
    No. 36648-1-III
    State v. Bailey
    home. Brown identified his address. Emergency dispatch immediately sent Thurston
    County Sheriff Deputy James Esslinger to Brown’s residence. Brown continued to speak
    to dispatch, and dispatch forwarded the information to Deputy Esslinger.
    David Brown reported to emergency dispatch that a black female named Tracey,
    approximately five foot ten inches and wearing a multi-colored sweater, arrived, with
    mattress in hand, at his residence via taxi. Brown added that he had earlier allowed
    Tracey to stay at his residence, but that she was no longer welcome. Brown then reported
    that Tracey had left the vicinity, but soon thereafter commented that “she’s back in the
    house.” Report of Proceedings (RP) (Aug. 14, 2017) at 9. Brown also claimed that
    Tracey had once crawled in a window to gain access to the residence. Brown never
    suggested that Tracey was violent.
    Deputy James Esslinger last heard that Tracey had left the property by foot. As he
    proceeded, he deemed himself investigating a trespass and perhaps a domestic violence
    incident or a burglary. He sometimes delivers trespass warnings to citizens.
    Two-tenths of a mile from David Brown’s residence, Deputy James Esslinger
    observed a person, matching the description Brown gave to dispatch, walking along the
    road. The road lacked sidewalks but maintained dirt shoulders. Deputy Esslinger
    stopped his vehicle. He does not remember if he stopped in front of the woman or behind
    her. The deputy’s front headlights shined. Deputy Esslinger stepped from his patrol car
    2
    No. 36648-1-III
    State v. Bailey
    and asked the woman: “Are you Tracey?” RP (Aug. 14, 2017) at 18. The woman replied
    affirmatively, so Esslinger asked her to come to him.
    When Tracey approached Deputy James Esslinger, he asked her for identification.
    Tracey indicated she lacked any identification. She volunteered her full name, Tracey
    Bailey, and date of birth. Deputy Esslinger returned to his patrol car, and he entered the
    information Bailey provided into his computer. Bailey remained illuminated by the car’s
    headlights, as she stood in front of the patrol vehicle, such that she kept within
    Esslinger’s line of sight. Deputy James Esslinger did not then place Bailey in handcuffs
    nor otherwise restrain her freedom of movement. Esslinger had not directed Bailey to
    remain in front of the car or told her she could not leave.
    Deputy James Esslinger’s computer search revealed two outstanding warrants for
    Tracey Bailey. Deputy Esslinger asked dispatch to confirm the warrants. He then exited
    his car and spoke again to Bailey.
    Thurston County Sheriff Deputy Micah Rose responded to the scene while Deputy
    James Esslinger waited for confirmation from dispatch of the arrest warrants. Dispatch
    confirmed one of the warrants, so Deputy Esslinger placed Tracey Bailey under arrest.
    Esslinger searched Bailey’s person incident to the arrest. In Bailey’s right rear pants
    pocket, Deputy Esslinger found wadded bills, inside which lay a small Ziploc “baggie”
    3
    No. 36648-1-III
    State v. Bailey
    containing a white powdery substance. A crime lab analyst later identified the substance
    as methamphetamine.
    Deputy James Esslinger asked Deputy Micah Rose to travel to the reported
    address, speak with David Brown, and ascertain whether a trespass occurred. The sheriff
    deputies later concluded that Tracey Bailey had not committed a crime against Brown.
    PROCEDURE
    The State of Washington charged Tracey Bailey with unlawful possession of a
    controlled substance, methamphetamine. The State brought no charges for trespass.
    Bailey moved the court to suppress the evidence recovered from her seizure by Deputy
    James Esslinger and to dismiss the charge of unlawful possession of a controlled
    substance.
    At the suppression motion hearing, the State asserted that Deputy James Esslinger
    conducted a Terry stop, rather than a community caretaking encounter. The parties
    disagreed on whether reasonable suspicion supported the Terry stop. The trial court
    concluded that Deputy Esslinger held reasonable suspicion to contact Tracey Bailey and
    denied the motions to suppress and dismiss.
    In response to the motion to suppress, the superior court entered findings of fact
    under CrR 3.6. One finding reads:
    4
    No. 36648-1-III
    State v. Bailey
    2.     On June 29, 2014, dispatch received a 911 call to report an unwanted
    person in the 5600 block of Old Highway 410. Dispatch reported
    the unwanted person an African-American female, 5 foot, 10 inches,
    named “Tracey,” and wearing a multi-colored sweater. The report
    was that she had arrived at the reporting party’s house via a taxi,
    carrying a mattress. The reporting party stated he had asked Tracy
    [sic] to leave, then after she had left, she returned. The reporting
    party also stated, she had entered his house via a window in the past.
    Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 105 (emphasis added).
    At trial, Tracey Bailey testified that she did not know she possessed the
    methamphetamine. The trial court instructed the jury on the defense of unwitting
    possession. The jury found Bailey guilty.
    Based on an offender score of eight, the trial court sentenced Tracey Bailey to a
    standard range sentence of sixteen months’ confinement. The sentencing court imposed
    legal financial obligations, including a $200 criminal filing fee and a $100 DNA
    collection fee. Earlier, in 2015, the court had ordered Bailey to pay a $100 warrant
    service fee. The trial court found Bailey indigent and allowed her to appeal at public
    expense.
    LAW AND ANALYSIS
    Tracey Bailey challenges her conviction and her sentence. We address her
    conviction first.
    5
    No. 36648-1-III
    State v. Bailey
    Validity of Stop
    In an effort to reverse her conviction for possession of a controlled substance,
    Tracey Bailey argues that Deputy James Esslinger unlawfully seized her. Therefore,
    according to Bailey, the discovery of the methamphetamine flowed from an unlawful
    seizure such that the superior court should have suppressed the evidence. Bailey does not
    deem her arrest after Deputy Esslinger learned of the arrest warrant to constitute the
    unlawful seizure. She instead identifies Esslinger’s approaching her and asking her
    questions as the unlawful seizure.
    We question whether Deputy James Esslinger ever seized Tracey Bailey within
    the meaning of the state and federal constitutions. Esslinger never told Bailey she could
    not leave his presence and never took from Bailey any identification card while
    researching her name in his patrol car’s computer. State v. Knox, 
    86 Wash. App. 831
    , 838,
    
    939 P.2d 710
    (1997), overruled on other grounds by State v. O’Neill, 
    148 Wash. 2d 564
    , 
    62 P.3d 489
    (2003); State v. Hansen, 
    99 Wash. App. 575
    , 577, 
    994 P.2d 855
    (2000). A law
    enforcement officer needs no cause to question a citizen unless the officer seizes the
    citizen. State v. Harrington, 
    167 Wash. 2d 656
    , 663, 
    222 P.3d 92
    (2009). Still, the State
    agrees that James Esslinger performed a Terry stop, considered to be a seizure. Thus, we
    ask whether Esslinger held cause to conduct the stop.
    6
    No. 36648-1-III
    State v. Bailey
    Tracey Bailey’s assignment of error raises two distinct questions. First, did the
    information provided by David Brown supply reasonable suspicion of a crime in order to
    support an investigative Terry stop? Second, did law enforcement possess reason to
    believe the caller, David Brown, to be a reliable source of information?
    Reasonable Suspicion of Crime
    In general, warrantless seizures are per se unconstitutional, and the burden falls on
    the State to demonstrate that a warrantless seizure falls into a narrow exception to the
    rule. State v. Doughty, 
    170 Wash. 2d 57
    , 61, 
    239 P.3d 573
    (2010). Courts purportedly
    jealously and carefully construe the exceptions. State v. 
    Doughty, 170 Wash. 2d at 61
    .
    A brief investigatory seizure, commonly referred to as a Terry stop, constitutes an
    exception to the warrant requirement. Terry v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
    , 
    88 S. Ct. 1868
    , 20 L.
    Ed. 2d 889 (1968). Under this exception, a police officer may, without a warrant, briefly
    detain an individual for questioning if the officer possesses reasonable and articulable
    suspicion that the person is engaging or is about to engage in criminal activity. State v.
    Fuentes, 
    183 Wash. 2d 149
    , 158, 
    352 P.3d 152
    (2015). A reasonable, articulable suspicion
    means a substantial possibility that criminal conduct has occurred or is about to occur.
    State v. Kennedy, 
    107 Wash. 2d 1
    , 6, 
    726 P.2d 445
    (1986).
    A valid Terry stop requires that the officer have a well-founded, reasonable
    suspicion that criminal activity is afoot based on specific and articulable facts. State v.
    7
    No. 36648-1-III
    State v. Bailey
    
    Fuentes, 183 Wash. 2d at 158
    . This court looks at the totality of the circumstances known
    to the officer at the time of the stop when evaluating the reasonableness of the officer’s
    suspicion. State v. Glover, 
    116 Wash. 2d 509
    , 514, 
    806 P.2d 760
    (1991). Subsequent
    evidence that the officer was in error regarding some of the facts will not render a Terry
    stop unreasonable. State v. Seagull, 
    95 Wash. 2d 898
    , 908, 
    632 P.2d 44
    (1981). A Terry
    stop also is not rendered unreasonable solely because the officer did not rule out all
    possibilities of innocent behavior before initiating the stop. State v. Anderson, 51 Wn.
    App. 775, 780, 
    755 P.2d 191
    (1988).
    Washington courts have repeatedly held that a person’s walking at night, even in a
    high crime area, does not, by itself, give rise to a reasonable suspicion to detain that
    person. State v. 
    Fuentes, 183 Wash. 2d at 161
    (2015); State v. 
    Doughty, 170 Wash. 2d at 62
    ;
    State v. Larson, 
    93 Wash. 2d 638
    , 645, 
    611 P.2d 771
    (1980). Instead, the circumstances
    must suggest a substantial possibility that the particular person has committed a specific
    crime or is about to do so. State v. Martinez, 
    135 Wash. App. 174
    , 180, 
    143 P.3d 855
    (2006). An inarticulate hunch does not warrant police intrusion into a person’s life. State
    v. 
    Doughty, 170 Wash. 2d at 63
    . Innocuous facts do not justify a stop either. State v.
    Armenta, 
    134 Wash. 2d 1
    , 13, 
    948 P.2d 1280
    (1997).
    When evaluating investigative stops, this court must determine whether the initial
    interference with the suspect’s freedom of movement was reasonably related in scope to
    8
    No. 36648-1-III
    State v. Bailey
    the circumstances that justified the interference. Terry v. 
    Ohio, 392 U.S. at 19-20
    (1968).
    In determining the proper scope of the intrusion, the court considers the purpose of the
    stop, the amount of physical intrusion, and the length of time the law enforcement officer
    detains the suspect. State v. Williams, 
    102 Wash. 2d 733
    , 740, 
    689 P.2d 1065
    (1984).
    When reviewing the merits of an investigatory stop, a court must evaluate the totality of
    circumstances presented to the investigating officer. State v. 
    Doughty, 170 Wash. 2d at 62
    .
    Courts recognize that crime prevention and crime detection are legitimate
    purposes for investigative stops. Terry v. 
    Ohio, 392 U.S. at 22-23
    . Here, the relevant
    concern was crime detection rather than crime prevention. A typical Terry stop entails a
    frisk for weapons and brief questioning. State v. Mitchell, 
    80 Wash. App. 143
    , 145, 
    906 P.2d 1013
    (1995).
    Tracey Bailey challenges finding of fact two that “[t]he reporting party stated, he
    had asked Trac[e]y to leave, then after she had left, she returned.” CP at 105. Bailey
    argues that substantial evidence does not support this finding because no testimony
    supports that David Brown asked Bailey to leave his premises. We agree. Brown
    informed the 911 dispatcher of an unwanted person at his residence, but no testimony
    established that Brown told Bailey to leave.
    Tracey Bailey subsequently argues that, without the erroneous portion of finding
    of fact two, the remaining findings do not support the conclusion that Deputy James
    9
    No. 36648-1-III
    State v. Bailey
    Esslinger held reasonable suspicion of criminal trespass. To support her argument,
    Tracey Bailey cites State v. Watson, 
    56 Wash. App. 665
    , 666, 
    784 P.2d 1294
    (1990),
    wherein the court wrote:
    When the State successfully resists a motion to suppress, it is
    obligated to procure findings of fact and conclusions of law that, standing
    on their own, will withstand appellate scrutiny.
    To support its proposition, the Watson court cited State v. Poirier, 
    34 Wash. App. 839
    , 841, 
    664 P.2d 7
    (1983). In State v. Poirier, the court cited to CrR 3.6 for the rule
    that findings of fact standing alone must withhold appellate scrutiny. Nevertheless,
    CrR 3.6, assuming it once did, no longer supports this principle. The 1983 version of the
    criminal rules might have contained the proposition. But, by 1984, CrR 3.6 did not
    support the statement, nor has any version of the rule since supported the principle.
    Even if the findings do not state that David Brown asked Tracey Bailey to leave
    his premises, we still conclude that Deputy James Esslinger held reasonable suspicion for
    a Terry stop. A person is guilty of criminal trespass in the first degree, if he or she
    knowingly enters or remains unlawfully in a building. RCW 9A.52.070(1). A person
    commits second degree trespass if he or she knowingly enters or remains unlawfully on
    premises of another. RCW 9A.52.080(1).
    Tracey Bailey cites no law stating that a police officer must gather incontrovertible
    evidence of a crime during the investigation stage. To the contrary, the purpose of an
    10
    No. 36648-1-III
    State v. Bailey
    investigation and an investigatory stop is to assess whether a suspect committed a crime.
    The standard for reasonable suspicion is whether an objective view of the facts led the
    officer to believe the substantial possibility of a crime being committed. Deputy James
    Esslinger knew that an “unwanted person” had returned to a residence. This person had
    previously entered the home through a window. The report could lead one to reasonably
    deduce a substantial possibility of a trespass to investigate.
    Deputy James Esslinger’s stop of Tracey Bailey was reasonable because it was
    limited in nature. The officer never handcuffed Tracey Bailey. Esslinger only asked for
    identification and then researched her name in his computer. Bailey could have ignored
    Esslinger. Instead, Bailey voluntarily provided her full name and birthdate.
    Reliability
    Tracey Bailey also argues that the trial court’s findings of fact do not show the
    reliability of the 911 caller’s tip. In response, the State contends this appeals court cannot
    review Bailey’s reliability argument because she did not raise the assertion before the
    superior court. The State avers that Bailey limited her legal position below to the
    information supplied failing to support reasonable articulable suspicion.
    We agree that legal argument at the suppression hearing centered on the
    sufficiency of the information. The State, however, addressed the 911 caller’s reliability
    in its briefing to the superior court by citing Navarette v. California, 
    572 U.S. 393
    , 134 S.
    11
    No. 36648-1-III
    State v. Bailey
    Ct. 1683, 
    188 L. Ed. 2d 680
    (2014). Both parties cited to State v. Kennedy, 
    107 Wash. 2d 1
    ,
    6, 
    726 P.2d 445
    (1986) for the proposition that a Terry stop is justified only with a
    substantial possibility that criminal activity occurred, and Bailey maintains that Kennedy
    also addressed the reliability of an informant as part of its analysis.
    When the issue raised for the first time on appeal arguably relates to issues raised
    in the trial court, this court may exercise its discretion to consider newly articulated
    theories for the first time on appeal. Wilcox v. Basehore, 
    189 Wash. App. 63
    , 90, 
    356 P.3d 736
    (2015), aff’d, 
    187 Wash. 2d 772
    , 
    389 P.3d 531
    (2017). The reliability of the 911 caller
    intrinsically intertwines with the circumstances a court considers when assessing the
    constitutionality of a stop based on an informant’s tip. Finally, this court may address,
    for the first time on appeal, a manifest constitutional error. RAP 2.5(a)(3). Therefore, we
    determine to address the informant reliability issue raised by Tracey Bailey.
    When an officer bases his or her suspicion on an informant’s tip, the State
    must show that the tip bears some indicia of reliability under the totality of the
    circumstances. State v. Z.U.E., 
    183 Wash. 2d 610
    , 618, 
    352 P.3d 796
    (2015). We require
    either (1) circumstances establishing the informant’s reliability, or (2) some corroborative
    observation, usually by the officers, that shows either (a) the presence of criminal activity
    or (b) that the informer’s information was obtained in a reliable fashion. State v. Sieler,
    
    95 Wash. 2d 43
    , 47, 
    621 P.2d 1272
    (1980). The corroborative observations do not need to
    12
    No. 36648-1-III
    State v. Bailey
    be of blatant criminal activity, but they must corroborate more than just innocuous facts,
    such as an individual’s appearance or clothing. State v. Wakeley, 
    29 Wash. App. 238
    , 241-
    43, 
    628 P.2d 835
    (1981).
    Known citizen informants are generally presumed to be reliable, but this
    presumption does not extend to anonymous informants. State v. Saggers, 
    182 Wash. App. 832
    , 840, 
    332 P.3d 1034
    (2014). The reliability of an anonymous telephone informant is
    similar to the reliability of a named but unknown telephone informant because such an
    informant could fabricate an alias and thereby remain, like an anonymous informant,
    unidentifiable. State v. 
    Sieler, 95 Wash. 2d at 48
    (1980). Officers may not presume an
    informant’s tip is an eyewitness account. State v. Vandover, 
    63 Wash. App. 754
    , 759, 
    822 P.2d 784
    (1992).
    Tracey Bailey relies on a series of Washington decisions that we now discuss:
    State v. Z.U.E., 
    183 Wash. 2d 610
    (2015), State v. Sieler, 
    95 Wash. 2d 43
    (1980), and State v.
    Lesnick, 
    84 Wash. 2d 940
    , 
    530 P.2d 243
    (1975).
    In State v. Lesnick, 
    84 Wash. 2d 940
    , the Supreme Court held that an anonymous tip
    alleging that the defendant was attempting to sell illegal gambling punchboards out of his
    van did not justify stopping the van because the tipster did not identify himself and did
    not provide any information as to the source of his knowledge.
    13
    No. 36648-1-III
    State v. Bailey
    In State v. Sieler, 
    95 Wash. 2d 43
    , an identified caller to emergency dispatch reported
    a drug sale in a school parking lot. The informant gave a description of the car involved
    in the sale, but did not provide any factual basis for his belief that a sale had occurred.
    Based on this tip alone, officers stopped a car located near the school that matched the
    given description. Even though the informant provided his name, the Supreme Court
    characterized the informant as essentially anonymous and concluded the informant’s
    report lacked sufficient indicia of reliability because neither its veracity nor its factual
    basis could be established.
    In State v. Z.U.E., 
    183 Wash. 2d 610
    , police officers stopped a car to investigate a
    minor in possession of a firearm. A person identifying herself as Dawn made a 911 call
    reporting the crime. The 911 call was made contemporaneous to the unfolding of the
    events. The caller’s allegation that the female was 17 years old and, therefore, a minor
    was the only fact that potentially made the girl’s possession of the gun unlawful.
    Nevertheless, the caller did not disclose the basis for her believing the girl to be underage
    or the basis for concluding the girl possessed a gun. The court followed Sieler and held
    the 911 caller’s assertion did not created a sustainable basis for a Terry stop.
    Based on these three decisions, Tracey Bailey argues that Sheriff Deputy James
    Esslinger lacked any information regarding the source of David Brown’s knowledge and
    the superior court’s findings did not establish that the caller eyewitnessed Bailey’s
    14
    No. 36648-1-III
    State v. Bailey
    behavior. Nevertheless, Deputy James Esslinger did not merely presume David Brown to
    be an eyewitness. Although not contained in the court’s findings, substantial evidence in
    the record supports the conclusion that the caller was an eyewitness. While on the phone
    with 911, David Brown stated that Bailey had left the premises. The dispatcher
    continued to gather information when the caller commented that Tracey was “back in the
    house.” RP (Aug. 14, 2017) at 9. The caller could not know whether Bailey had returned
    to the house unless he was an eyewitness who was present to see Bailey reappear. The
    information supplied by the caller showed an ongoing view of activity.
    We rely in part on Navarette v. California, 
    572 U.S. 393
    (2014). In Navarette, the
    caller’s report that the defendant’s pickup truck ran her off the road sufficed to support a
    stop of the suspected drunk driver. Several factors supported the caller’s reliability: the
    caller was an eyewitness, she made the report contemporaneously to the incident, and she
    called the emergency 911 line, making her accountable for the provided information
    since police can trace those calls.
    All of the Navarette v. California factors blanket David Brown’s call to
    emergency dispatch. David Brown called the emergency 911 line. Brown called
    contemporaneously to the incident. He provided an address and a description of the
    woman who was thereafter found .2 miles away from the address. Brown stated he had
    allowed Bailey to stay at the residence in the past. Thus, the information available to the
    15
    No. 36648-1-III
    State v. Bailey
    deputy supports the conclusion that the caller was the alleged victim of the unwanted
    person on his property.
    Tracey Bailey also emphasizes that no independent police corroboration supported
    reasonable suspicion. Nevertheless, police corroboration is not necessary. The
    Washington Supreme Court requires either circumstances establishing the informant’s
    reliability or some corroborative observation. State v. 
    Z.U.E., 183 Wash. 2d at 618
    (2015).
    Sufficient facts supported the informant’s reliability and the substantial possibility of
    criminal behavior.
    Sentence
    Offender Score
    Tracey Bailey contends the trial court erred when it included a prior conviction for
    attempted forgery in her offender score. The completed crime of forgery is a class C
    felony. RCW 9A.60.020(3). But, pursuant to RCW 9A.28.020(3)(d), an attempt to
    commit a crime is a gross misdemeanor when the crime attempted is a class C felony.
    Gross misdemeanors are not added to the offender score. Accordingly, Bailey’s offender
    score should have been seven, not eight.
    The State concedes that the trial court erred by including the gross misdemeanor
    offense in Bailey’s offender score. Yet, the State argues the error is harmless because it
    did not affect Bailey’s standard range. The State emphasizes that the crime of possession
    16
    No. 36648-1-III
    State v. Bailey
    of a controlled substance, methamphetamine, has a seriousness level of drug offense level
    one so that the standard range remains the same with an offender score between six and
    nine. RCW 9.94A.525(7); RCW 9.94A.517.
    Divisions One and Two of this court disagree as to whether an incorrect offender
    score can be harmless. In State v. Argo, 
    81 Wash. App. 552
    , 569, 
    915 P.2d 1103
    (1996),
    Division One held that an erroneous offender score that does not affect the standard range
    is harmless. In State v. McCorkle, 
    88 Wash. App. 485
    , 
    945 P.2d 736
    (1997), aff’d, 
    137 Wash. 2d 490
    , 
    973 P.2d 461
    (1999), Division Two held that the State’s failure to prove six
    prior out-of-state convictions were comparable to Washington felonies and resulted in the
    trial court’s miscalculation of the offender score. The State argued that establishing nine
    prior felonies rather than 13 was harmless error since the standard range for an offender
    score of nine is the same as the standard range for an offender score of 13. The court
    held the error was not harmless because “the record does not clearly indicate that the
    sentencing court would have imposed the same sentence without the prior unclassified
    prior convictions and the resultant change in offender score.” State v. McCorkle, 88 Wn.
    App. at 499-500.
    We choose to follow State v. McCorkle. We also deem the error harmful in that,
    in the event of another conviction, the State may argue that Bailey is bound by the court’s
    determination of our offender score in this prosecution.
    17
    No. 36648-1-III
    State v. Bailey
    Although Tracey Bailey originally requested a remand for resentencing, Bailey
    now notes her release from custody. Therefore, resentencing is no longer required. As
    will be explained below, the trial court must strike legal financial obligations from the
    judgment and sentence so the erroneous offender score could be corrected at the same
    time with minimal effort. The remedy for an incorrect offender score based on a
    scrivener’s error is correction of the score. State v. Calhoun, 
    163 Wash. App. 153
    , 169-70,
    
    257 P.3d 693
    (2011).
    Discretionary Costs
    At sentencing, the trial court imposed on Tracey Bailey a $200 criminal filing fee
    and a $100 DNA fee. At that time, the fees were mandatory. As explained in State v.
    Ramirez, 
    191 Wash. 2d 732
    , 
    426 P.3d 714
    (2018), due to legislative changes, the fees are no
    longer mandatory. In fact, the new legislation “categorically prohibit[s] the imposition of
    any discretionary costs on indigent defendants.” State v. 
    Ramirez, 191 Wash. 2d at 739
    .
    The trial court found Tracey Bailey indigent.
    The Supreme Court held that the new amendments apply prospectively to cases
    pending on direct appeal because the imposition of legal financial obligations is governed
    by the statutes in effect at the termination of the case, and those cases were not final at
    the time the statute was enacted. State v. 
    Ramirez, 191 Wash. 2d at 749-50
    . Defense
    counsel states Bailey’s DNA sample was previously collected based on other felony
    18
    No. 36648-1-III
    State v. Bailey
    convictions. Thus, Ramirez supports the conclusion that a remand to the trial court is
    necessary so it can strike the two fees. The State agrees to an order requiring the court to
    strike the fees.
    Tracey Bailey also argues a $100 warrant service fee should be struck. Bailey
    notes the discretionary nature of the fee: “Expenses incurred for serving of warrants for
    failure to appear . . . may be included in costs the court may require a defendant to pay.”
    RCW 10.01.160(2) (emphasis added); see State v. Malone, 
    193 Wash. App. 762
    , 764, 
    376 P.3d 443
    (2016). The State does not oppose striking the warrant service fee.
    Nevertheless, we do not accept the State’s concession on this obligation.
    The trial court imposed the warrant service fee in 2015. Imposition of the fee is
    not included nor mentioned on the judgment and sentence from which Bailey currently
    appeals. As a result, the imposition of the fee is final and is not at issue in this appeal.
    State v. Ramirez is inapplicable to this fee.
    CONCLUSION
    We affirm the superior court’s denial of Tracey Bailey’s motion to suppress
    evidence of the methamphetamine. We affirm her conviction. We remand to the trial
    court to correct Bailey’s offender score and to strike the imposition of the DNA
    collection fee and the criminal filing fee.
    19
    No. 36648-1-111
    State v. Bailey
    A majority of the panel has determined this opinion will not be printed in the
    Washington Appellate Reports, but it will be filed for public record pursuant to RCW
    2.06.040.
    Fearing, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    ----~~"-X"~......._--~.......
    --......1...---t---=~--1 •
    Lawrence-Berrey, C.J.
    Pennell, J.
    20