State Of Washington v. Christopher B. Keffeler ( 2020 )


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  •         IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,
    No. 80631-9-I
    Respondent,
    v.                                       DIVISION ONE
    CHRISTOPHER KEFFELER,                            UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    Appellant.               FILED: January 13, 2020
    LEACH, J.   —   Christopher Keffeler challenges his conviction and sentence
    for felony harassment.       He asserts that he received ineffective assistance of
    counsel because his trial attorney did not object to testimony about prior bad
    acts.   And he claims that the trial court imposed an unconstitutionally vague
    community custody condition.
    He did not receive ineffective assistance of counsel because the trial court
    was not likely to sustain an objection to the bad acts testimony. But because the
    condition prohibiting Keffeler from associating with “known drug users or sellers”
    is unconstitutionally vague, we remand for the trial court to address the invalid
    condition consistent with this opinion.
    No. 80631-9-1/2
    BACKGROUND
    On August 5, 2017, Melinda Hulin called the police after her fiancé,
    Christopher Keffeler, threatened her that day and the day before. Several Mason
    County sheriff deputies responded to the call.         Keffeler allowed medics to
    transport him to the hospital for a mental health evaluation.                After he was
    medically cleared for booking, an officer arrested him and transported him to jail.
    The State charged him with one count of domestic violence felony harassment
    with a domestic violence component.
    At the trial, Hulin testified that on August 4, 2017, she, Keffeler, and a
    neighbor were having a conversation on their deck.         At some point, Keffeler
    stood in front of Hulin, made a fist, and yelled at her to stand up. The neighbor
    left. Hulin described the following:
    [Keffeler] ended up telling me to take off my clothes and lay naked
    face down with my arms stretched out in front of me and my face
    face-down on the deck. He was sitting in front of me. He had a
    knife that he made; he has a rope and a leash; and, you know,
    saying that he didn’t know which one he should use and that, you
    know, he could fillet me and the neighbors would come and feed on
    me, and said when you’re about to die what do you do? You pray
    to God. And then he made, you know, he told me to pray to him as
    God for forgiveness. And then after that, you know, I mean, I
    ended up peeing myself it scared me so bad. And then he told me
    to get up, as Christopher [Keffeler], tells me to get up, put my
    clothes back on and go into the house where                . it was
    .   .
    safe  .   and we could talk.
    .   .
    The defense called forensic psychologist Dr. Brett Trowbridge as its expert
    witness. Trowbridge testified that he evaluated Keffeler and reviewed his mental
    health history.         Based on this information, he concluded that Keffeler had
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    No. 80631-9-I / 3
    posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and schizoaffective disorder. Trowbridge
    testified that he believed that at the time of the events, this mental illness
    significantly diminished Keffeler’s capacity to form the mental state of knowledge
    necessary to commit felony assault.
    During cross-examination, Trowbridge said he did not think a person’s
    prior convictions of assault were relevant to a diminished capacity defense but
    that someone else might and it probably was a legal question. He testified that
    he reviewed records of prior convictions and that he believed Keffeler had been
    convicted previously of fourth degree assault.            The prosecutor also asked
    whether Trowbridge recalled anything from Keffeler’s clinical history about his
    “attitude toward and threats toward police officers.” He referred to “Dr. Kirkeby
    and Dr. Lokhmotov’s report” from a 2015 event and asked Trowbridge to read
    from a page in that report. Trowbridge read the following out loud:
    He’s been in police custody for three days. He has a new person in
    his body named Jeff that has been telling him to get the police
    agitated to the point the [sic] would attack him and try to kill him,
    then Jeff would come out, changing into the form of The Hulk, but in
    fire form, and he would kill all the police, very calm and matter of
    fact telling his story.
    (Alteration in original.)
    The prosecutor also asked whether Trowbridge recalled seeing anything
    in Keffeler’s clinical history “where he had thoughts about killing his stepmother.”
    Trowbridge answered that “[alt one point he was even hospitalized because he
    was feeling like killing her.” Trowbridge agreed that, in the past, Keffeler “actually
    talked about not just killing evil entities but killing real people.”
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    No. 80631-9-1/4
    On redirect, Trowbridge agreed with the defense attorney’s assertion that
    in the incident where Keffeler said he wanted to kill police, it was actually “Jeff,”
    who also might emerge as “The Hulk,” who was speaking. He also agreed with
    the defense attorney’s statement that Keffeler admitted himself to the hospital
    when he threatened his stepmother.              Defense counsel then elicited further
    testimony from Trowbridge about Keffeler’s mental health issues, including
    multiple hospitalizations starting when he was a teenager.
    In its rebuttal, the State called Dr. Roman Lokhmotov. He and another
    specialist had diagnosed Trowbridge with unspecified schizophrenia spectrum
    and did not evaluate him for PTSD. Lokhmotov did not agree with Trowbridge’s
    conclusion that Keffeler’s mental illness substantially diminished his ability to
    possess the mental state of knowledge at the time of the incident. He testified
    that despite his delusions, Keffeler “was able to know where he was, who he was
    speaking to and what the purpose of the evaluation was.” He also testified that
    Keffeler “had knowledge of his ability to elicit fear in other persons or entities.”
    In closing, Keffeler’s counsel summarized the defense that Keffeler’s
    mental illness resulted in a diminished capacity and so he could not “form the
    knowledge” necessary for felony harassment.             Defense counsel stated that
    Keffeler was “not knowingly making threats on [Hulin’s] life.         He was making
    threats on the entities that he perceived inside.” Defense counsel concluded,
    “Mr. Keffeler was not a reasonable person at the time, and using this standard
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    No. 80631-9-I / 5
    you’d have to find him not guilty, [bejcause that’s the standard for knowledge,
    which is the issue for you all to decide today.”
    The jury returned a guilty verdict. The court sentenced him, as a first time
    offender, to 90 days of confinement. A condition of community custody required
    that “[t]he defendant shall not associate with any known drug users or sellers,
    except in the context of a chemical dependency treatment program approved by
    the CCC [Community Custody Officer].”
    Keffeler appeals his judgment and sentence.
    ANALYSIS
    Keffeler claims that his attorney provided ineffective assistance because
    he did not object to trial testimony about Keffeler’s prior assault conviction and
    statements about killing others.
    We review claims of ineffective assistance of counsel de novo.1           To
    succeed on an ineffective assistance of counsel claim, the appellant must
    establish that the trial attorney performed below an objective standard of
    reasonableness and that this failure resulted in prejudice.2 This court strongly
    presumes that trial counsel provided effective representation.3      The appellant
    may rebut this presumption only with a clear showing of incompetence.4 “The
    decision of when or whether to object is a classic example of trial tactics. Only in
    1State v. Feely, 
    192 Wn. App. 751
    , 768, 
    368 P.3d 514
     (2016).
    2 Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 687, 
    104 S. Ct. 2052
    , 
    80 L. Ed. 2d 674
     (1984).
    ~ State v. McFarland, 
    127 Wn.2d 322
    , 335, 899 P.2d. 1251 (1995).
    ~ State v. Varga, 
    151 Wn.2d 179
    , 199, 
    86 P.3d 139
     (2004).
    -5-
    No. 80631-9-I / 6
    egregious circumstances, on testimony central to the State’s case, will the failure
    to object constitute incompetence of counsel justifying reversal.”5
    To convict Keffeler of harassment under RCW 9A.46.020, the State had to
    prove that he knowingly threatened to kill Hulin.6 Rather than contest the facts,
    Keffeler asserted that his mental illness diminished his capacity to knowingly
    commit this crime.      A diminished capacity defense challenges the culpability
    element of the crime.7 A defendant asserting this as a defense to a charge of
    felony harassment must show that his diminished capacity prevented him from
    having the knowledge element of the crime.8
    Keffeler asserts that his trial attorney’s failure to object to evidence of
    three prior bad acts could not be part of a reasonable trial strategy. And he
    claims that the bad acts were not admissible under ER 404(b) because they were
    overly prejudicial and not relevant.
    ER 404(a) states, “Evidence of a person’s character or a trait of character
    is not admissible for the purpose of proving action in conformity therewith on a
    particular occasion.”    But ER 404(b) allows admission of this evidence for
    another purpose, for example, to establish that a defendant had the requisite
    state of mind at the time.9 To be admissible to prove state-of-mind, it must be
    ~ State v. Madison, 
    53 Wn. App. 754
    , 763, 
    770 P.2d 662
     (1989).
    6  RCW 9A.46.020(1 )(a)(ii), (b), (2)(b)(ii).
    ~ State v. Gough, 
    53 Wn. App. 619
    , 622, 
    768 P.2d 1028
     (1989).
    8 Gouqh, 53 Wn. App. at 622; see also State v. Swaqerty, 
    60 Wn. App. 830
    , 833, 
    810 P.2d 1
    (1991).
    ~ State v. Fisher, 
    165 Wn.2d 727
    , 744, 
    202 P.3d 937
     (2009).
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    No. 80631-9-I / 7
    “relevant under ER 401, and its probative value must outweigh the danger of
    unfair prejudice [as required by] ER 403.”bo
    Trowbridge testified about the three bad acts at issue. Trowbridge read
    from a report describing an incident when Keffeler said he had “a new person in
    his body named Jeff” who wanted him to agitate the police so that they would
    attack him and then Jeff would change into the form of “The Hulk” and kill the
    officers. Trowbridge also described Keffeler’s admission to the hospital that he
    felt like killing his stepmother.    Finally, he testified about Keffeler’s prior
    conviction for assault.
    All three of these prior acts were relevant to the question of whether
    diminished capacity interfered with Keffeler’s ability to form the requisite intent.
    Both the incident involving Keffeler’s attitude toward the police and his admission
    to the hospital support defense’s assertion that he suffered from mental illness.
    Indeed, defense counsel’s questioning, on redirect, shows that defense counsel
    wanted the evidence admitted, albeit with a different narrative from what the
    State offered. He elicited testimony from Trowbridge that when Keffeler said he
    wanted to kill police, it was actually “Jeff” speaking, who also might emerge as
    “The Hulk,” not Christopher Keffeler. And he elicited Trowbridge’s agreement
    that Keffeler admitted himself to the hospital when he thought he might kill his
    stepmother.    Defense counsel elicited additional testimony from Trowbridge
    State v. Acosta, 
    123 Wn. App. 424
    , 434, 
    98 P.3d 503
     (2004); State v.
    ~°
    Lough, 
    125 Wn.2d 847
    , 853, 
    889 P.2d 487
     (1995).
    -7-
    No. 80631-9-I /8
    about Keffeler’s mental health issues, including multiple hospitalizations starting
    when he was a teenager.
    The testimony about a conviction for fourth degree assault was relevant to
    the issue of the capacity to form the requisite state of mind because an element
    of fourth degree assault in Washington is intent.11 And because the conviction
    occurred within five years of the crime charged, it was not so distant in time to
    make it irrelevant.12
    None of the evidence of the three bad acts was more unfairly prejudicial
    than probative. The evidence describing Keffeler’s statements about the police
    and the evidence that he was hospitalized when he wanted to kill his stepmother
    could be viewed as supporting his defense at trial.        Because it could go to
    supporting Keffeler’s defense argument, its probative value outweighed its
    prejudicial effect, which was minimal.
    The testimony about the assault conviction was more prejudicial.         But
    because it went to the central issue of Keffeler’s capacity to form the requisite
    state of mind, it was probative. The fact that it occurred almost five years before
    the incident at issue reduced its probative value. But its prejudicial effect was
    also diminished because Trowbridge said he believed that Keffeler had a
    conviction but the court did not admit any record of the conviction as evidence.
    ~ See, e.g., State v. Walden, 
    67 Wn. App. 891
    , 893-94, 
    841 P.2d 81
    (1992).
    C~ Acosta, 123 Wn. App. at 434-35 (pointing out that while some of the
    12
    convictions and arrests were over two years old, many were more than a decade
    old and so did not provide insight into the state of mind during the offense
    charged).
    -8-
    No. 80631-9-I /9
    Trowbridge said he did not think it was relevant to the issue of diminished
    capacity but that others might.
    So it is unlikely that the trial court would have sustained an objection to
    this evidence. But even if the court would have, Keffeler does not establish that it
    was “testimony central to the State’s case.” So he fails to show prejudice from
    counsel’s failure to object to this evidence.
    Keffeler compares this case to State v. Acosta,13 where, as in this case,
    the defendant asserted diminished capacity. The Acosta court concluded that
    evidence of 23 prior arrests and convictions, many dating back to more than a
    decade before the offense charged, was not relevant and was overly
    prejudicial.14 In contrast to the evidence challenged here, the evidence against
    Acosta included unproved charges and convictions for crimes under California
    law that were “not comparable” to crimes under Washington law.15 The evidence
    here was directly relevant to the question of Keffeler’s capacity to form the
    requisite state of mind. And much of it could have been received by the jury as
    supporting Keffeler’s defense by providing evidence of mental illness.            So
    defense counsel’s decision not to object can be viewed as a legitimate trial tactic.
    We conclude that Keffeler failed to establish that his trial attorney provided
    ineffective assistance.
    13 
    123 Wn. App. 424
    , 428-29, 434, 98 P.3d. 503 (2004).
    14 Acosta, 123 Wn. App. at 434-35.
    15 Acosta, 123 Wn. App. at 432.
    -9-
    No. 80631-9-I / 10
    Community Custody Condition
    Keffeler claims that the community custody condition restricting him from
    associating with known drug users or sellers is unconstitutionally vague.
    We review community custody conditions for abuse of discretion and will
    reverse a manifestly unreasonable condition.16             We do not presume that a
    community custody condition is constitutional.17 A trial court’s imposition of an
    unconstitutional condition is always manifestly unreasonable.18
    The due process protections in the federal constitution and the
    Washington State Constitution require fair warning of proscribed behavior.19 If a
    community custody does not provide this warning, it is unconstitutionally vague.20
    So a community custody condition must (1) ‘define the criminal offense with
    sufficient definiteness that ordinary people can understand what conduct is
    proscribed” and (2) “provide ascertainable standards of guilt to protect against
    arbitrary enforcement.”21        A community condition that implicates         First
    Amendment rights, like the right of assembly, must be particularly clear so as not
    to “cause a chilling effect” on the implicated rights.22
    16State v. Irwin, 
    191 Wn. App. 644
    , 652, 
    364 P.3d 830
     (2015).
    17State v. Sanchez Valencia, 
    169 Wn.2d 782
    , 793, 
    239 P.3d 1059
     (2010).
    18 Irwin, 191 Wn. App. at 652.
    19 U.S. CONST. amend. XIV, § 1; WASH. CONST. art. I, § 3; State v. BahI,
    
    164 Wn.2d 739
    , 752-53, 
    193 P.3d 678
     (2008).
    20 BahI, 164 Wn.2d at 752-53.
    21 BahI, 164 Wn.2d at 752-53 (quoting City of Spokane v. Douglass, 
    115 Wn.2d 171
    , 178, 
    795 P.2d 693
     (1990)).
    22 BahI, 164 Wn.2d at 753.
    -10-
    No. 80631-9-I Ill
    A community custody condition is valid if, given the context in which its
    terms are used, a person of ordinary intelligence can understand what behavior it
    forbids.23 The condition need not provide “complete certainty as to the exact
    point at which [the convicted person’s] actions would be classified as prohibited
    conduct.”24   And a sufficiently clear condition can withstand a challenge of
    vagueness “notwithstanding some possible areas of disagreement.”25
    Keffeler asserts that the word “known” is impermissibly vague in context.
    And he claims that the term “drugs” is vague because of the legalization of
    recreational marijuana in some states. We addressed these same claims in a
    case published last year, In re Personal Restraint of Brettell,26 where the
    appellant challenged a community custody condition stating, “Do not associate
    with known users or sellers of illegal drugs.” And we held in Brettell that a
    condition barring him from “associat[ing] with known users or sellers of illegal
    drugs” was not impermissibly vague.27 Keffeler does not provide an argument
    sufficient to convince us that Brettell was incorrectly decided.
    But the condition we reviewed in Brettell is not identical to the condition
    challenged here. Brettell complained about a condition that prohibited him from
    associating with “known users and sellers of illegal drugs.”28 Here, no adjective
    23 BahI, 164 Wn.2d at 754.
    24 State v. Hai Minh Nguyen, 
    191 Wn.2d 671
    , 681, 
    425 P.3d 847
     (2018).
    25 BahI, 164 Wn.2d at 754 (quoting Douglass, 
    115 Wn.2d at 179
    ).
    26 6 Wn. App. 2d 161, 169, 173, 
    430 P.3d 677
     (2018) (Keffeler does not
    mention Brettell, despite the fact that it is on point and is precedent in this court),
    review denied, No. 96677-0 (Wash. July 3, 2019).
    27 Brettell, 6 Wn. App. 2d at 169 (alteration in original).
    28 Brettell, 6 Wn. App. 2d at 172 (emphasis added).
    —11—
    No. 80631-9-I /12
    modifies the word “drugs.”       So the condition can be read as prohibiting
    association with people using and selling both legal and illegal drugs.           For
    example, a pharmacist, a cashier who regularly sells over the counter pain
    medicine, or a friend taking antibiotics are examples of legal drug users or
    sellers. Because this language is overbroad, the condition fails to provide notice
    to a person of ordinary intelligence of what it prohibits and risks arbitrary
    enforcement. We remand for the trial court so it can modify the condition to read
    “shall not associate with any known drug users or sellers of illegal drugs.”
    CONCLUSION
    Because the community custody condition is unconstitutionally vague, we
    vacate it and remand to the trial court to address it in a manner consistent with
    this decision. As Keffeler fails to establish his trial attorney provided ineffective
    assistance of counsel, we otherwise deny his request for relief.
    WE CONCUR:
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