State Of Washington v. Keith Thomas Blair ( 2016 )


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    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,
    No. 73299-4-1
    Respondent,
    DIVISION ONE
    UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    KEITH THOMAS BLAIR,
    Appellant.                         FILED: June 6, 2016
    Appelwick, J. — Blair was convicted of conspiracy to possess with intent to
    deliver marijuana. The trial court admitted a recording of a telephone call he made
    to his wife from the King County Jail. Blair argues that the recording violated the
    Washington privacy act, and therefore the trial court erred in admitting it. We
    affirm.
    FACTS
    In February 2011, Keith Blair was incarcerated in the King County Jail. On
    February 19, 2011, Blair called his wife, Rachel Dunham, using the jail telephone
    system. Both Blair and Dunham were informed that their conversation would be
    recorded. They each pressed a button on theirtelephones to accept this condition.
    King County Sheriff's Office Detective Cary Coblantz was listening to Blair
    and Dunham's phone call as it was occurring. He heard Blair tell Dunham to give
    No. 73299-4-1/2
    $40 worth of "green"1 to someone named Chris "here" at 5:30 p.m. Blair instructed
    Dunham to shred it up and put it in a "rubber."       Dunham responded that she
    understood, but she was afraid it was a set up. And, she told Blair that they should
    not be having this conversation over the telephone. Blair replied, "Yeah, I know."
    After hearing this conversation, Detective Coblantz conducted surveillance
    around the jail the next day. He observed a man, later identified as Christopher
    Yates, looking around outside the jail and entering the jail shortly before 6:00 p.m.
    After Yates entered the jail, Detective Coblantz saw Dunham arrive in a car.
    Detective Coblantz impounded Dunham's car and obtained a search warrant for
    the car.   When Detective Coblantz executed the search warrant, he found a
    package containing a condom filled with marijuana.
    The State charged Blair with conspiracy to possess with intent to deliver
    marijuana and attempted introduction of contraband in the second degree. The
    trial court admitted the recording of Blair and Dunham's phone call. The juryfound
    Blair guilty of conspiracy.
    Blair moved for a new trial or arrest of judgment. The trial court granted his
    motion and vacated the juryverdict on the conspiracy charge. The State appealed.
    This court reversed the arrest of judgment. State v. Blair, noted at 
    173 Wash. App. 1026
    , 
    2013 WL 791854
    , at *1. On remand, the trial court sentenced Blair to two
    months confinement, to run concurrently with the sentences in two other cases.
    Blair appeals.
    1 Detective Coblantz testified that he understood "green" to refer to
    marijuana.
    No. 73299-4-1/3
    DISCUSSION
    Blair asserts that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress the
    recording of the jail call between him and his wife. He contends that this telephone
    call was a private communication within the meaning of the Washington privacy
    act, chapter 9.73 RCW, because it was protected by the spousal communications
    privilege.
    Before trial, Blair moved to suppress the recorded telephone conversation
    between him and Dunham. The trial court ultimately decided to deny Blair's motion
    to exclude the telephone call on the grounds that the spousal privilege does not
    apply to statements made between spouses in furtherance of a conspiracy. On
    appeal, the parties focus their arguments on whether the conversation was private
    within the meaning of the privacy act. As such, we do not address the question of
    whether a crime-fraud exception to the spousal communications privilege exists.
    Under Washington's privacy act, it is "unlawful ... to intercept, or record
    any: . . . [pjrivate communication transmitted by telephone . .. between two or
    more individuals . . .without first obtaining the consent of all participants in the
    communication." RCW 9.73.030(1). Any information obtained in violation of this
    provision is inadmissible in a civil or criminal case. RCW 9.73.050.
    This court applies a four-pronged test to determine whether the privacy act
    has been violated.     State v. Christensen, 
    153 Wash. 2d 186
    , 192, 
    102 P.3d 789
    (2004).      For there to be a violation, "[tjhere must have been (1) a private
    communication transmitted by a device, which was (2) intercepted by use of (3) a
    No. 73299-4-1/4
    device designed to record and/or transmit, (4) without the consent of all parties to
    the private communication." 
    id. The issue
    in this case is whether the communication between Blair and
    Dunham was private within the meaning of the privacy act.                  Whether a
    conversation is private is a question of fact. State v. Clark, 
    129 Wash. 2d 211
    , 225,
    
    916 P.2d 384
    (1996). But, where the facts are undisputed, as they are here, it may
    be decided as a question of law. Id, Washington courts have given the term
    "private" itsordinary definition:" 'belonging to one's self. . .secret. .. intended only
    for the persons involved (a conversation). . . holding a confidential relationship to
    something ... a secret message: a private communication . . . secretly: not open
    or in public' " State v. Faford. 
    128 Wash. 2d 476
    , 484, 
    910 P.2d 447
    (1996)
    (alterations in original) (quoting Kadoranian v. Bellinaham Police Dep't, 
    119 Wash. 2d 178
    , 190, 
    829 P.2d 1061
    (1992)).
    To determine whether a particular conversation is private, this court looks
    at the subjective intent of the parties to the conversation and whether that intent
    reflects a reasonable expectation of privacy. Christensen, 153Wn.2d at 193. This
    court assesses several factors to determine the reasonableness of the privacy
    expectation.      \±   These include the duration and subject matter of the
    communication, the location of the communication and the potential presence of
    third parties, and the role of the nonconsenting party. \±
    Applying these factors, the Washington Supreme Court has held that, in the
    context of the privacy act, an inmate in a local jail does not have an objectively
    reasonable expectation of privacy in telephone callsto his grandmother made from
    No. 73299-4-1/5
    jail. State v. Modica, 
    164 Wash. 2d 83
    , 87-88, 
    186 P.3d 1062
    (2008). Modica was
    an inmate at the King County Jail. Jd at 86. The King County Jail's recording
    system automatically recorded every telephone call made, tracked the numbers
    dialed, and had signs near the telephones warning that inmates' calls were being
    recorded, 
    id. And, an
    automated message repeated that warning to both the
    inmate and the recipient of the call, id      Modica called his grandmother and
    attempted to procure her assistance in ensuring that his wife would not cooperate
    with the State or appear in court, id at 87. The State listened to some of their
    recorded telephone calls, and the calls were played to the jury during the trial, 
    id. The court
    assumed that Modica and his grandmother intended their
    conversations to be private, id at 88. But, the court held that this expectation of
    privacy was not reasonable for two reasons, id First, inmates have a reduced
    expectation of privacy, id Second, Modica and his grandmother knew that their
    calls were being recorded and that someone could listen to them, id
    We also assume that Blair and Dunham had the subjective intent that their
    conversation would remain private.2 Blair too was an inmate with a reduced
    expectation of privacy. And, both he and Dunham knew that their call was being
    recorded and potentially monitored—they each pressed a button to acknowledge
    this. Thus, Modica indicates that Blair did not have an objectively reasonable
    expectation of privacy in his conversation with Dunham. Therefore, following
    Modica, the conversation would not be protected by the privacy act.
    2 Blair and Dunham were both aware that their conversation would be
    recorded. But, they used codewords during the conversation, suggesting thatthey
    intended the meaning of the telephone call to remain secret.
    No. 73299-4-1/6
    However, Blair cites to language in Modica and argues that its holding is
    subject to some limitations—including the spousal communication privilege. He
    points to the Modica court's caution that it was not holding "that a conversation is
    not private simply because the participants know it will or might be recorded or
    
    intercepted." 164 Wash. 2d at 88
    . The court noted,
    Signs or automated recordings that calls may be recorded or
    monitored do not, in themselves, defeat a reasonable expectation of
    privacy. However, because Modica was in jail, because of the need
    for jail security, and because Modica's calls were not to his lawyeror
    otherwise privileged, we conclude he had no reasonable expectation
    of privacy.
    id at 89 (emphasis added).          Blair asserts that this language means that
    conversations between spouses, which are presumptively privileged, are protected
    as private under the privacy act.
    Blair's argument misinterprets the spousal communications privilege. This
    privilege is an evidentiary doctrine that provides that neither spouse can testify
    about communications made between them during marriage, without the other
    spouse's consent. RCW 5.60.060(1). The purpose ofthe privilege is to encourage
    the free exchange of confidences between spouses. State v. Thome, 
    43 Wash. 2d 47
    , 55, 
    260 P.2d 331
    (1953). But, only successful confidential communications
    are protected by this privilege. State v. Wilder. 
    12 Wash. App. 296
    , 299, 
    529 P.2d 1109
    (1974). If a third party overhears a conversation between spouses, the third
    party may testify to that conversation. 
    Thome, 43 Wash. 2d at 56
    .
    Washington courts have addressed the issue of whether spousal
    communications when one spouse is in jail are protected by the privilege. State v.
    No. 73299-4-1/7
    Grove, 
    65 Wash. 2d 525
    , 527, 
    398 P.2d 170
    (1965); State v. Smyth. 
    7 Wash. App. 50
    ,
    53,499 P.2d 63 (1972). In Grove, the court held that a letter written from an inmate
    in jail to his spouse was not protected by the spousal communications 
    privilege. 65 Wash. 2d at 527
    . There, the inmate delivered an unsealed letter to a jail guard,
    knowing that the jail rules required it to be censored. Jd. And, the letter was
    stamped with the letter C, indicating that it had been censored, id On these facts,
    the court held that the letter was neither intended to be confidential nor actually
    confidential, and therefore the spousal communications privilege did not protect it.
    id,
    Blair asserts that Grove is distinguishable, because it was not a privacy act
    case. Instead, he argues that Modica should control. But, Grove did involve the
    question whether the spousal privilege protected the communication from
    
    disclosure. 65 Wash. 2d at 527
    . That is the same argument Blair seeks to interject
    into the analysis of the privacy act. Modica by contrast involved a conversation
    between an inmate and his grandmother—there was no issue of spousal privilege
    in that case.
    Here, as with the letter in Grove, Blair knew that the content of the
    communication with Dunham was subject to monitoring. Warning was given of
    recording. Acceptance of that condition was sought and given by both parties to
    the conversation in advance.      The conversation was actually recorded, and
    Detective Coblantz listened to it.        It was not a     successful confidential
    communication.
    No. 73299-4-1/8
    Blair argues that this fact is not significant because all jail calls are recorded,
    and Modica says that warnings that all communications may be monitored do not
    automatically defeat the expectation of privacy.         We disagree.       First, not all
    potentially privileged conversations are recorded in the King County Jail—the
    system automatically screens out calls made by inmates to attorney identified
    telephone numbers. Thus, the attorney-client privilege would still apply to these
    conversations, because they remain confidential. See Morgan v. City of Federal
    Way, 
    166 Wash. 2d 747
    , 757, 
    213 P.3d 596
    (2009) (a communication must be made
    in confidence to qualify for the attorney-client privilege).       But, the jail does not
    screen out calls from inmates to their spouses, so the spousal communications
    privilege would not apply.    Second, Modica recognized that the jail setting was
    distinct from the general caution about warning 
    signs. 164 Wash. 2d at 89
    . Third, the
    spousal communications privilege explicitly applies only to successful confidential
    communications, even in the jail context. 
    Grove, 65 Wash. 2d at 527
    .
    The "or otherwise privileged" phrase in Modica has potentially implicated
    one or more recognized privileges in the analysis of what is a reasonable
    expectation of privacy under the privacy act.          But, it did not grant absolute
    protection for intercepted spousal communications. See 
    Modica, 164 Wash. 2d at 89
    .
    The reasonable expectation of privacy test remains applicable. Applying that test
    on these facts, we are compelled to conclude that Blair did not have a reasonable
    expectation of privacy in the content of the call from the jail.
    Without a reasonable expectation of privacy, the telephone call between
    Blair and Dunham cannot be considered private. Only private conversations are
    8
    No. 73299-4-1/9
    protected by the privacy act. RCW 9.73.030(1 )(a). Therefore, the telephone call
    was not recorded in violation of the act, and the trial court did not err by denying
    Blair's motion to exclude it at trial.
    We affirm.
    WE CONCUR: