State Of Washington, Resp. v. Kevin D. Diltz, App. ( 2015 )


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  •                                                                       2015 JUL 2 / A:i IO: 3i
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION ONE
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,                              No. 72205-1-1
    Respondent,
    v.                                 UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    KEVIN DAVID DILTZ,
    Appellant.               FILED: July 27, 2015
    Schindler, J. — Kevin David Diltz seeks reversal of the jury conviction for assault
    in the first degree of a law enforcement officer while armed with a firearm. Diltz contends
    the court erred in denying his motion for a mistrial based on two prejudicial statements
    during rebuttal argument. Because the statements were based on reasonable inferences
    from the evidence and were related to the State's burden to prove intent, we affirm the
    decision to deny the motion for a mistrial.
    FACTS
    At around 11:30 a.m. on April 29, 2013, Marysville Police Department Officer
    Jeffrey Norris pulled over a black pickup truck on the onramp to southbound Interstate 5
    (I-5). As Officer Norris approached the truck, the driver, later identified as Kevin David
    Diltz, drove southbound on I-5. Officer Norris ran back to his patrol car and followed the
    No. 72205-1-1/2
    truck. As Diltz drove southbound on State Route 529, he passed a number of cars on the
    right-hand shoulder, often reaching speeds of 95 m.p.h.
    Diltz slowed down when he reached Everett but drove through a number of red
    traffic lights and stop signs. After the truck's driveline fell off, Diltz jumped out of the
    truck. The truck crashed into a parked vehicle, and Diltz started running through a
    residential neighborhood. Officer Norris got out of his patrol car and yelled, "Stop.
    Police," but Diltz kept running. Officer Norris ran after him.
    While Diltz was running downhill along a sidewalk, he turned to look back at
    Officer Norris and fired at least four shots. Diltz then ran behind a house and jumped
    over a fence into a neighboring backyard. Officer Norris called dispatch to report shots
    had been fired and request backup.
    Marysville Police Department Officer Daniel Vinson stationed himself at a nearby
    intersection while other officers set up a perimeter. Officer Vinson saw Diltz running
    down an alley and pointed a rifle at him. Diltz raised his hands but then turned and ran.
    Everett Police Department Officer Alex Soderstrom saw Diltz run out of the alley and
    across a street. Officer Soderstrom pointed a rifle at Diltz and told him to stop but Diltz
    kept running.
    Everett Police Department Officer Shane Nelson spotted Diltz running between
    two houses. Officer Nelson pointed his rifle at Diltz and threatened to shoot him if he did
    not get on the ground. Diltz walked directly toward Officer Nelson with his fists balled.
    Diltz had a large knife on his hip but did not appear to have a gun. The police arrested
    Diltz.
    After his arrest, the police found a brown jacket containing a cell phone in the alley
    and a pair of gloves in one of the backyards but did not find the firearm Diltz used to
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    No. 72205-1-1/3
    shoot at Officer Norris. A police officer identified three bullet strikes on the concrete
    sidewalk where Diltz fired at Officer Norris. The officer also found three 9 mm hollow-
    point bullet shell casings. A few days later, a homeowner found a fourth 9 mm shell
    casing in a nearby front yard.
    Detective Steve Brenneman obtained a warrant to search the black pickup truck.
    Inside, he found an empty gun case, a small canvas bag containing a pipe, and a pair of
    vice grips and a screwdriver. A Washington State Patrol Crime Laboratory (WSPCL)
    forensic scientist extracted DNA1 from the pipe found in the truck and the pair of gloves.
    The DNA from the pipe and the gloves matched the DNA from Diltz with a "1 in 3.4
    quintillion" probability of a random match.
    Detective Brenneman also obtained a warrant to search the cell phone found in
    the jacket. The search history showed two searches on the evening of April 28 for a
    Ruger P89 handgun.
    On May 17, the State charged Diltz with assault in the first degree and the
    aggravating factor of committing the assault against a law enforcement officer while
    armed with a firearm. The State also charged Diltz with attempting to elude a pursuing
    police vehicle and the aggravating factor of threatening persons other than the defendant
    or the pursuing officer with physical injury or harm.
    On May 28, Detective Brenneman listened to recorded phone calls Diltz made
    from jail. During a conversation on May 15, Diltz told a friend, "I just want somebody to
    go get that fuckin' thing so I don't have to worry about it." On May 22, Diltz told his friend,
    "[A]t least you tried right?" The friend answered, "I did Ieven went back and tried again."
    In response, Diltz said, "I mean it's over with .... I should have just went out fuckin'
    1 Deoxyribonucleic acid.
    No. 72205-1-1/4
    blasting at 'em like Iwanted to . .. then I wouldn't be here."2 Later in the conversation,
    Diltz said, "I'm pretty pissed off, but then again I only got me to be mad at, maybe I
    shoulda hid it better."
    The next day, Detective Brenneman went back to the Everett neighborhood with a
    metal detector and "almost immediately" found the gun in the backyard where the pair of
    gloves with Diltz's DNA had been found. The Ruger model P89 9 mm semiautomatic
    pistol was buried under several inches of mulch. The hammer of the gun was cocked
    back with one live round in the chamber, but the gun was jammed. A WSPCL forensic
    scientist determined that all four of the 9 mm hollow-point bullet shell casings had been
    fired from the Ruger P89 pistol.
    On July 26, the State charged Diltz by amended information with additional counts
    of possession of a stolen firearm, possession of a stolen vehicle, and unlawful
    possession of a firearm in the second degree.
    A number of witnesses testified during the four day trial, including the owner of the
    stolen black pickup truck, the owner of the stolen Ruger P89 pistol, Everett Police
    Department Detective Joseph Klingman, Detective Brenneman, Officer Norris, and
    WSPCL forensic scientists. The court admitted into evidence over 200 exhibits, including
    the gun, the four shell casings, the gloves found in the backyard, and a number of maps
    and photographs. Without objection, the court admitted into evidence excerpts of the
    recorded jail phone conversations.
    Detective Brenneman testified he and Officer Norris returned about a week later to
    determine the location of Officer Norris and Diltz when Diltz fired the gun. Detective
    Klingman testified that the location of the four 9 mm shell casings was consistent with
    2 Some alterations in original.
    No. 72205-1-1/5
    where Officer Norris said Diltz was standing when Diltz pulled the trigger. Detective
    Brenneman and Detective Klingman used digital crime scene reconstruction software to
    determine how close the bullets were to Officer Norris when they struck the sidewalk.
    The Detectives testified that one of the bullets struck the concrete sidewalk approximately
    19 feet from Officer Norris. The other two bullet strikes were approximately 72 and 73
    feet from Officer Norris.
    Detective Klingman testified that Officer Norris was uphill from Diltz at the time of
    the shooting and the difference in elevation between Diltz and Officer Norris was
    approximately three feet. Detective Brenneman testified that because Diltz was three
    feet lower than Officer Norris when he pulled the trigger, "the height difference would
    account for why those rounds may not have hit Officer Norris."
    Forensic consultant Matthew Noedel testified on behalf of the defense. Noedel
    testified that in his opinion, Diltz must have fired the gun toward the ground rather than
    straight at Officer Norris. Noedel said that where 90 degrees represents pointing straight
    down and 0 degrees represents pointing directly horizontal, he believed that Diltz held the
    gun between 10 and 60 degrees while shooting. However, on cross-examination, Noedel
    admitted he did not take into account the slope of the sidewalk or the difference in
    elevation in reaching his conclusion. Noedel also admitted a 9 mm hollow-point bullet
    could kill a person and if a 9 mm hollow-point bullet hit "a vital area" of a person's body, "I
    would expect it to be fatal or cause great harm."
    The court instructed the jury on assault in the first degree and, at the request of
    defense, the lesser-included crime of assault in the second degree.
    In closing argument, the defense attorney conceded the State met its burden of
    No. 72205-1-1/6
    proving possession of a stolen vehicle, attempting to elude, and unlawful possession of a
    firearm. However, the defense argued the State did not prove Diltz knew the gun was
    stolen.
    In addressing the charge of assault in the first degree, the defense attorney
    admitted Diltz shot the gun but argued he fired only "toward the ground" and not directly
    at Officer Norris. The attorney argued Diltz was just trying to escape and "did not try or
    intend to hit Officer Norris with a bullet." The defense attorney argued that because the
    State did not prove Diltz intended to inflict great bodily injury, the jury should convict him
    of the lesser-included crime of assault in the second degree.
    In rebuttal, the State argued the evidence showed Diltz acted with intent to cause
    Officer Norris great bodily injury. First, the prosecutor pointed to the evidence that Diltz
    grabbed the gun and a 15-round magazine before jumping out the moving pickup truck.
    The State argued, in pertinent part:
    When [Diltz] bails out of the car, what does he have? A gun. He arms
    himself. He is getting ready. There's a gun case that he left in the car. He
    didn't leave the gun in the gun case. . ..
    He didn't grab the 10-round clip. He grabbed the 15-round clip.
    More ammo, more hollow-point bullets. Shows you what he was intending
    to do.
    Second, the State argued that the recorded phone calls from jail demonstrated
    Diltz's intent. The State argued, in pertinent part:
    I think the most critical piece of information comes from the defendant
    himself. You heard those recorded phone calls. You heard him say, and I
    quote, "I should have just went out fucking blasting at them like Iwanted to."
    That shows you his intent, what he wanted to do. He wanted to kill
    as many cops, specifically Officer Norris, on that day as he could. That's
    what he wanted.
    No. 72205-1-1/7
    The State also argued the evidence did not support the defense theory that Diltz
    fired only "warning shots." The State asserted that if Diltz "wanted to just send a
    warning," he "could have shot in the air" or "into the grass to the side of him." The State
    argued, in pertinent part:
    You don't fire warning shots. You don't. You shoot to kill. Do you
    fire warning shots into the air? Into the ground? You don't fire them at all.
    But if you do, that's what you do. And you fire one. You don't fire at least
    four. There is no reasonable explanation why you would fire multiple shots
    at or [in] the direction of an officer unless you intended to hit them.
    The State pointed out that the central issue for the jury to decide was Diltz's intent
    when he pulled the trigger, not his motivation.
    That's the one issue you have to decide in this case. The time [Diltz]
    took that gun, the time he fired it at Officer Norris, and what was his intent.
    Not what was his motivation behind it, was he trying to flee, was he trying to
    become a notorious cop killer. What was his intent when he shot at Officer
    Norris?
    The defense did not object to the prosecutor's rebuttal argument.
    The jury found Diltz not guilty of possessing a stolen firearm. The jury found Diltz
    guilty of assault in the first degree, attempting to elude a pursuing police vehicle,
    possession of a stolen vehicle, and unlawful possession of a firearm in the second
    degree. The jury returned special verdicts finding Diltz committed the crime of assault in
    the first degree against a law enforcement officer while armed with a firearm, and
    individuals other than Diltz and Officer Norris were threatened with physical injury or
    harm by Diltz's actions in attempting to elude.
    The defense filed a motion for a mistrial, arguing the prosecutor's statements that
    Diltz intended "to kill as many cops ... as he could" and that his motive was "to become
    a notorious cop killer" were improper and prejudicial.
    The court denied the motion. The court ruled the prosecutor's statements were
    No. 72205-1-1/8
    based on reasonable inferences from the evidence. The court found the statement that
    Diltz intended to kill as many cops as he could was "a reasonable inference from the
    evidence presented at trial and was directly relevant to the defendant's intent when firing
    the gun in [Opcer Norris' direction." The court also found the argument that the jury
    must decide intent and "the [S]tate did NOT have to prove the defendant's motivation"
    was to become a notorious cop killer was "also relevant to the State's burden to prove
    intent and the difference between intent and the motive behind the intent."
    Based on an offender score of 13 and the aggravating factors, the court imposed
    an exceptional sentence for the conviction of assault in the first degree and a high-end
    standard-range sentence for attempting to elude to run consecutively.
    ANALYSIS
    Diltz contends the court erred in denying his motion for a mistrial based on the two
    prejudicial statements the prosecutor made during rebuttal argument. Diltz asserts the
    statements that Diltz wanted to kill as many police officers as he could and that the State
    did not have to prove his motive were an improper appeal to the passion and prejudice of
    the jurors that require reversal of his conviction for assault in the first degree.
    Where, as in this case, alleged prosecutorial misconduct has been the subject of a
    mistrial motion, we review the trial court's decision to deny the motion for abuse of
    discretion. State v. Lindsay, 
    180 Wn.2d 423
    , 430, 
    326 P.3d 125
     (2014); State v.
    Rodriguez, 
    146 Wn.2d 260
    , 269, 
    45 P.3d 541
     (2002). The court abuses its discretion
    only" 'when no reasonable judge would have reached the same conclusion.'" State v.
    Emery, 
    174 Wn.2d 741
    , 765, 
    278 P.3d 653
     (2012) (quoting State v. Hopson, 113Wn.2d
    273, 284, 
    778 P.2d 1014
     (1989)). We give deference to the trial court's ruling because it
    is in the best position to evaluate whether the prosecutor's comments prejudiced the
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    No. 72205-1-1/9
    defendant. State v. Gregory, 
    158 Wn.2d 759
    , 841, 
    147 P.3d 1201
     (2006). "The trial
    court should grant a mistrial only when the defendant has been so prejudiced that nothing
    short of a new trial can ensure that the defendant will be fairly tried." Emery, 
    174 Wn.2d at 765
    .
    To establish prosecutorial misconduct, Diltz must show the statements made by
    the prosecutor during rebuttal were both improper and prejudicial. Lindsay, 180 Wn.2d at
    440. We consider an allegedly improper statement in the context of the argument as a
    whole, the issues in the case, the evidence, and the jury instructions. State v. Russell,
    
    125 Wn.2d 24
    , 85-86, 
    882 P.2d 747
     (1994).
    The State has wide latitude to make arguments based on reasonable inferences
    from the evidence. State v. Thorgerson, 
    172 Wn.2d 438
    , 448, 
    258 P.3d 43
     (2011). But a
    prosecutor commits misconduct by asking the jury to convict based on their emotions
    rather than the evidence. In re Pers. Restraint of Glasmann, 
    175 Wn.2d 696
    , 704, 
    286 P.3d 673
     (2012) (citing Am. Bar Ass'n, Standards for Criminal Justice std. 3-5.8(c) (2d
    ed. 1980)); State v. Fisher, 
    165 Wn.2d 727
    , 747, 
    202 P.3d 937
     (2009) ("References to
    evidence outside of the record and bald appeals to passion and prejudice constitute
    misconduct."). During rebuttal, a prosecutor "is entitled to make a fair response to the
    arguments of defense counsel." State v. Brown. 
    132 Wn.2d 529
    , 566, 
    940 P.2d 546
    (1997).
    Here, the defense conceded Diltz fired the gun. The parties disputed his intent
    when he fired at least four shots from a semiautomatic weapon. The State argued he
    was guilty of assault in the first degree. The defense argued Diltz was guilty of the
    lesser-included crime of assault in the second degree.
    During closing argument, the defense argued the State did not prove Diltz
    9
    No. 72205-1-1/10
    intended to inflict great bodily harm. The defense claimed that because Diltz's motive
    was to flee, he only intended to fire warning shots.
    Diltz contends the prosecutor committed reversible misconduct by arguing that
    Diltz intended "to kill as many cops ... as he could" and that the State did not have to
    prove his motive was "to become a notorious cop killer."
    The court denied the motion for a mistrial, finding the statements were based on
    reasonable inferences from the evidence, relevant to the State's burden to prove intent,
    and not flagrant or ill intentioned. The court's findings state, in pertinent part:
    1. As part of the First Degree Assault charge in this case, the State was
    required to prove that the defendant intended to cause Officer Norris
    great bodily harm, a term that includes bodily injury that creates a
    probability of death.
    2. Evidence and arguments derived from that evidence, related to what
    the defendant was thinking at the time he fired a gun at Officer Norris
    were relevant and admissible to prove the defendant's intent.
    3. During trial, the jury heard a recorded phone call made by the
    defendant in which he said, "I should have just went out fucking blasting
    at 'em like I wanted to" when discussing the incident involving Officer
    Norris.
    4.   There was also evidence presented at trial that the defendant fired in
    the direction of Officer Norris at least 3-4 times and, when told he
    needed to stop or would be shot, the defendant laid down on the
    ground.
    5.   The State's argument that the defendant "wanted to kill as many cops,
    specifically Officer Norris, on that day as he could" was a reasonable
    inference from the evidence presented at trial and was directly relevant
    to the defendant's intent when firing the gun in [Opcer Norris' direction.
    6.   The State's argument that the [S]tate did NOT have to prove the
    defendant's motivation behind his intent "Not what was his motivation
    behind it, was he trying to flee, was he trying to become a notorious cop
    killer? What was his intent when he shot at Officer Norris" was also
    relevant to the State's burden to prove intent and the difference
    between intent and the motive behind the intent.
    7.   Neither of the above statements were any more inflammatory than the
    evidence that was presented at trial and neither were flagrant or ill
    intentioned.
    The record supports the court's finding that the prosecutor's argument that Diltz
    10
    No. 72205-1-1/11
    "wanted to kill as many cops, specifically Officer Norris, on that day as he could" was
    based on reasonable inferences from the evidence at trial. The evidence showed that in
    order to have more ammunition, Diltz chose to take the 15-round magazine instead of the
    10-round magazine when he grabbed the gun and jumped out of the moving truck. The
    testimony and forensic evidence showed Diltz fired the gun at least four times in the
    direction of Officer Norris. And, without objection, the State presented the recording of
    the phone call from jail where Diltz said he wanted to "just [go] out fuckin' blasting at 'em."
    The record supports the court's finding that the prosecutor's argument that the
    State "did NOT have to prove" Diltz's motive, including whether he was "trying to flee" or
    "trying to become a notorious cop killer," was not improper or inflammatory. The
    distinction between intent and motive was particularly important because the defense
    argued the State did not prove Diltz intended to inflict great bodily harm because his
    motive was simply to get away.3 And as the court points out, the statement was "relevant
    to the State's burden to prove intent and the difference between intent and the motive
    behind the intent." See State v. Boot. 
    89 Wn. App. 780
    , 789, 
    950 P.2d 964
     (1998) (the
    State is not required to prove motive as an essential element of the crime).
    The cases Diltz relies on are inapposite. See Russell. 
    125 Wn.2d at 87-89
     (prosecutor's argument that the defendant would go to another state and kill
    again if acquitted was speculative and not based on the evidence); State v. Pierce.
    
    169 Wn. App. 533
    , 537, 
    280 P.3d 1158
     (2012) (prosecutor committed
    reversible misconduct by "fabricating an emotionally charged story of how the
    victims might have struggled" and speculating on the defendant's "thought
    3In addition, the jury instructions specifically state that the jury is to "act impartially," to "not letyour
    emotions overcome your rational thought process," and to "disregard any remark, statement, or argument
    that is not supported by the evidence or the law in [the court's] instructions."
    11
    No. 72205-1-1/12
    process leading up to the crime" because the statements were based on evidence
    outside of the record); Campbell v. State. 
    679 So.2d 720
    , 724, 21 Fla. L. Weekly S287
    (1996) (prosecutor's reference to "cop-killers" was improper where neither victim was a
    police officer and no officers were present at the time of the charged crimes); Williams v.
    State. 
    324 S.E.2d 544
    , 544, 
    172 Ga. App. 682
     (1984) (prosecutor's reference to "two
    specific instances" of police officers being killed was improper because it was unrelated
    to the defendant and based on evidence outside the record); People v. Brooks, 
    573 N.E.2d 1306
    , 1313-14, 214 lll.App.3d 531 (1991) (prosecutor's statement that "an officer
    was just killed two weeks ago" was "clearly improper" because it was unrelated to the
    defendant and based on evidence outside of the record).
    We affirm denial of the motion for a mistrial.
    S^ffli^A
    WE CONCUR:
    ^
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