State of Washington v. Glenn Eugene Sapp ( 2014 )


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  •                                                                               FILED
    AUG 12,2014
    In tbe Office of tbe Clerk of Court
    W A State Court of Appeals, Division III
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DMSION THREE
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,                          )         No. 31354-9-II1
    )
    Respondent,              )
    )
    v.                              )
    )
    GLENN E. SAPP,                                )         PUBLISHED OPINION
    )
    Appellant.               )
    KORSMO, 1. - Photographic evidence figured prominently in the prosecution of
    Glenn Sapp for various sexual offenses against a minor child. His primary argument on
    appeal is a contention that either he or the minor child featured in the photographic
    evidence needed to authenticate the exhibits. We disagree and affmn.
    FACTS
    Around the same time that the Spokane County Sheriff's Office received reports
    that Glenn Sapp had sexually abused a minor, that office was given a digital camera and
    memory card containing digital photographs and video recordings depicting Glenn Sapp
    repeatedly sexually abusing the child. Based on this evidence, the State charged Mr.
    Sapp with several sex offenses. The charges eventually included five counts of felony
    No. 31354-9-111
    State v. Sapp
    communication with a minor for immoral purposes, two counts of sexual exploitation of a
    minor, two counts of rape of a child in the first degree, and two counts of child
    molestation in the first degree.
    Mr. Sapp waived his right to a jury trial. Due to the tender age of the victim, she
    did not testify at the bench trial. As proof of the crimes, the State offered the
    photographs and video recordings that it pulled from the digital camera and memory card.
    The victim's grandmother authenticated the evidence. The grandmother had
    known both the victim and Mr. Sapp for a number of years. Based on her personal
    knowledge, the grandmother identified Mr. Sapp and her grandchild as the people in the
    exhibits, the victim's age at the time of the incidents, and the location where the exhibits.
    were recorded-Mr. Sapp's residence.
    Mr. Sapp contested the grandmother's ability to authenticate the exhibits. He
    argued that authentication required testimony from a witness with knowledge of the
    events depicted and not just the people, time, and places depicted. The court overruled
    the objection. The court also rejected Mr. Sapp's argument that the State had not proven
    that he committed a prior felony sex offense, one of the elements of the communication
    with a minor for immoral purposes charges.
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    No.3l354-9-1I1
    State v. Sapp
    The court thereafter found Mr. Sapp guilty on all counts, and entered detailed
    findings of fact and conclusions of law as to each count. The court sentenced Mr. Sapp
    to an aggravated exceptional indeterminate sentence of 30 years to life. Mr. Sapp timely
    appealed to this court.
    ANALYSIS
    Mr. Sapp presents three arguments on appeal. His first argument generally
    challenges the authentication by the grandmother and his second argument specifically
    challenges the sufficiency of the authentication of some of the exhibits used to convict
    him on the two counts of rape of a child in the first degree. Mr. Sapp also challenges the
    sufficiency of the evidence used to prove his prior sex offense conviction for the five
    counts of felony communication with a minor for immoral purposes. We address the two
    authentication challenges together before addressing the evidentiary sufficiency
    argument.
    Authentication
    We review a trial court's decision to admit or exclude evidence for abuse of
    discretion. Diaz v. State, 
    175 Wn.2d 457
    ,462, 
    285 P.3d 873
     (2012). Discretion is
    abused when it is exercised on untenable grounds or for untenable reasons. State ex reI.
    Carroll v. Junker, 
    79 Wn.2d 12
    ,26,
    482 P.2d 775
     (1971). Under ER 901, a party may
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    No. 31354-9-111
    State v. Sapp
    authenticate a recording through, "evidence sufficient to support a finding that the matter
    in question is what its proponent claims." ER 90l(a).
    Video recordings follow the same standards for authentication as photographs.
    State v. Newman, 
    4 Wn. App. 588
    , 593, 
    484 P.2d 473
     (1971). To authenticate such
    evidence, the proponent must put forward a witness "able to give some indication as to
    when, where, and under what circumstances the photograph was taken, and that the
    photograph accurately portrays the subject illustrated." 
    Id. at 593
    . The witness does not
    necessarily need to be the photographer. 
    Id.
    Although the witness does not have to be the photographer, Mr. Sapp argues that
    the authenticating witness must still be a witness with personal knowledge of the events
    depicted. He relies on Saldivar v. Momah, 
    145 Wn. App. 365
    , 
    186 P.3d 1117
     (2008).
    There the court upheld a lower court ruling excluding a video news report due to
    insufficient authentication. The report lacked sufficient authentication because the
    authenticating witnesses could only identify the person in the video, Charles Momah, but
    could not testify "as to when, where, and under what circumstances the recording was
    made." Id. at 399. Mr. Sapp thus argues that the testifying witness needed to have been
    present at the time of the events depicted.
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    State v. Sapp
    Saldivar, however, did not extend that far. An authenticating witness does not
    necessarily have to have been present at the recording of the exhibit in order to know
    "when, where, and under what circumstances the recording was made." A witness with
    prior knowledge of the people and places depicted in the exhibit could still establish
    when the exhibit was created based on the age of people in the exhibit or things depicted
    in the background.
    To read such a stringent holding into Saldivar would require Washington to adopt
    the "pictorial testimony theory of photographs." Under this theory, a photograph is a
    substitute for another person's testimony and is only admissible with contemporaneous
    testimony from a witness who testifies that the photograph is an accurate representation
    of his personal knowledge. 3 JOHN HENRY WIGMORE, EVIDENCE IN TRIALS AT COMMON
    LAW § 790, at 219 (James H. Chadbourn rev. ed. 1970).
    This theory long ago gave way to a second theory of admissibility-the "silent
    witness" theory of photograph admissibility. Id. at 219-20; 32A C.J.S. EVIDENCE § 1254
    (2014); Higgins v. Ariz. Sav. and Loan Ass'n, 
    90 Ariz. 55
    , 66, 
    365 P.2d 476
     (1961) ("Nor
    need the verifying witness have been present when the picture was taken.");
    Hannewacker v. City ofJacksonville Beach, 
    419 So.2d 308
    , 311 (Fla. 1982). Under this
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    No. 31354-9-III
    State v. Sapp
    theory, a photograph is admissible "even though no human is capable of swearing that he
    personally perceived what a photograph purports to portray." WIGMORE, supra, at 220.
    Notably, Wigmore's treatise highlights sex crime prosecutions as one of the key
    impetuses for adopting the silent witness theory. WIGMORE, supra, at 220. In such cases,
    there might not be any witnesses other than a photograph. As an example, Wigmore uses
    People v. Doggett, 
    83 Cal. App. 2d 405
    , 
    188 P.2d 792
     (1948). In Doggett, a husband and
    wife were convicted solely on the testimony of a photograph depicting them engaged in a
    criminal act of sexual perversion. In affirming the authentication of the photograph, the
    California Court of Appeals held that photographs are sufficiently authenticated by other
    evidence establishing the period of time during which the pictures were taken, the place
    where they were taken, and identifying the persons shown in the photographs. Doggett,
    83 CaL App. 2d at 408-lO.
    The Washington Supreme Court has in practice followed the silent witness theory.
    In one photograph authentication case, the court held that a photograph was sufficiently
    authenticated through a witness who accurately identified the location shown in the
    picture, and another witness who talked about the store's standard practice of
    photographing customers. State v. Tatum, 
    58 Wn.2d 73
    , 75, 
    360 P.2d 754
     (1961).
    Nowhere does Tatum indicate that there was testimony from a witness who identified the
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    I
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    State v. Sapp
    person in the picture as the defendant or any witness who testified that the scene depicted
    in the picture (the defendant passing a forged check) accurately portrayed the scene that
    had occurred, nor did the court indicate that such testimony was required. Rather, the
    court permitted the photograph to speak for itself on those issues.
    In the analogous field of audio recordings, this court has explicitly held that
    authentication of an audio recording does not require testimony from a party to the
    recording. "A sound recording, in particular, need not be authenticated by a witness with
    personal knowledge of the events recorded." State v. Williams, 
    136 Wn. App. 486
    , 500,
    
    150 P.3d 111
     (2007). "Rather, the trial court may consider any information sufficient to
    support the prima facie showing that the evidence is authentic." 
    Id.
    We believe it is clear that Washington does not require photographs and other
    recordings to be authenticated by a witness present for their creation. Accordingly, we
    hold that the victim's grandmother adequately authenticated the photographs and video
    recordings in this case when she identified the individuals in the exhibits, the victim's
    approximate age, and the location depicted in the exhibits.
    Mr. Sapp next argues that exhibits 21, 22, 28, 30, and 33 also lacked adequate
    authentication because the victim's grandmother did not identity the location depicted in
    those exhibits. While true, the victim's grandmother still provided the identity of the
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    No. 3 I 354-9-III
    State v. Sapp
    people in the exhibits and the victim's age, which established the timeframe for the acts
    depicted in the exhibits.) Although these authentications were not as complete as the
    other authentications in this case, it was still more information than what was provided in
    Saldivar. The trial court could reasonably conclude that the matter in question was what
    its proponent claimed, which is all that ER 901(a) requires.
    The trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting the photographic evidence.
    Sufficiency o/the Evidence
    Finally, Mr. Sapp argues that the State failed to produce sufficient evidence to
    prove that he committed the five charged counts of felony communication with a minor
    for immoral purposes. On a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence, this court views
    the evidence in a light most favorable to the State and asks whether any rational trier of
    fact could have found the essential elements of the charged crime beyond a reasonable
    doubt. State v. Rempel, 
    114 Wn.2d 77
    ,82,
    785 P.2d 1134
     (1990).
    In relevant part, this crime requires proof that "the person has previously been
    convicted under this section or of a felony sexual offense." RCW 9.68A.090(2).
    ) We note that the grandmother did not provide location information for these
    photographs because she was not asked to by either side. The record does not show that
    she lacked knowledge of the location depicted. In all likelihood, the location was the
    same as the rest of the exhibits-Mr. Sapp's residence.
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    State v. Sapp
    "[W]hen criminal liability depends on the accused's being the person to whom a
    document pertains ... the State must do more than authenticate and admit the document;
    it also must show beyond a reasonable doubt 'that the person named therein is the same
    person on trial.'" State v. Huber, 
    129 Wn. App. 499
    , 502, 
    119 P.3d 388
     (2005) (quoting
    State v. Kelly, 
    52 Wn.2d 676
    , 678, 
    328 P.2d 362
     (1958)). The State cannot meet its
    burden by showing identity of names alone. 
    Id.
     "Rather, it must show, by evidence
    independent of the record, that the person named therein is the defendant in the present
    action." 
    Id.
     (quotations omitted). "The State can meet this burden in a variety of specific
    ways." Id. at 503. "Depending on the circumstances, these may include otherwise-
    admissible booking photographs, booking fingerprints, eyewitness identification, or,
    arguably, distinctive personal information." Id.
    To prove the prior conviction element, the State submitted documents showing
    that Mr. Sapp had previously been convicted in Chelan County of possession of
    depictions of a minor engaged in sexually explicit conduct. These documents included
    certified copies of the Chelan County charging information, Mr. Sapp's statement of
    defendant on plea of guilty, and the judgment and sentence.
    Mr. Sapp argues that the evidence is mere reliance on the identity of names.
    However, the documents show that the Glenn Eugene Sapp who pleaded guilty in Chelan
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    State v. Sapp
    County to two counts of felony possession of depictions of a minor engaged in sexually
    explicit conduct had the same name, sex, race, and date of birth as the Glenn Eugene
    Sapp who was on trial in Spokane County. We conclude that the record contained
    sufficient evidence for a rational trier of fact to find that Mr. Sapp had a prior felony sex.
    offense conviction.
    Affirmed.
    WE CONCUR:
    Feag,5.
    J.
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