State Of Washington v. Sylvia Christine Knopp ( 2014 )


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  •       IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,                                                                  r»o          o
    C3     wo
    )      No. 68937-1-1                               He
    Respondent,                                                      -n
    m     m
    CO
    )      DIVISION ONE
    v.                                                                            CO
    2»
    zr.
    SYLVIA C. KNOPP,                          )      UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    CD
    Respondent.          )      FILED: February 18. 2014         —
    CD —
    Spearman, A.C.J. — Sylvia Knopp was convicted of theft in the first
    degree for making repeated withdrawals of cash from the bank account of her
    mother, Maria Volz, while she had durable power of attorney for Volz. On appeal,
    she claims (1) the evidence was insufficient to support her conviction, (2) the
    prosecutor committed misconduct during closing argument through a number of
    remarks, and (3) defense counsel was ineffective in failing to object to the
    prosecutor's remarks. We conclude the circumstantial evidence was sufficient to
    support Knopp's conviction where it showed that she spent the money she                     WASHIN\P EAL
    withdrew on gambling. We also conclude that, while the prosecutor misstated the
    ILEO
    law regarding Knopp's good-faith claim of title defense, Knopp does not show
    that the statements were so ill intentioned and flagrant that an instruction could
    not have cured any prejudice. Thus, her prosecutorial misconduct claim is
    waived. Finally, Knopp does not establish either deficient performance or
    prejudice for her ineffective assistance claim. We affirm.
    No. 68937-1-1/2
    FACTS
    In 2008 and 2009, Sylvia Knopp worked full-time at a casino, where she
    earned $10.71 an hour plus tips. As of October 2009, she had grossed
    $21,462.95 in wages and tips for 2009. She frequently had a low or negative
    balance in her bank accounts, and from January 2009 to August 2009 was
    charged overdraft fees over thirty times. Nonetheless, she visited casinos several
    times a month, wagering a handle of hundreds, sometimes thousands, of dollars
    during many of her visits.1 At the Point Casino, for example, Knopp lost over
    $4,000 from December 2008 through October 2009, wagering more than
    $40,000 during that time.
    Since December 2006, Knopp had durable power of attorney with respect
    to the health care decisions and finances of her elderly mother, Maria Volz. The
    durable power of attorney authorized Knopp to:
    advance all reasonable and desirable expenses in the exercise of
    the responsibilities within this power of attorney and, further, to
    reimburse the attorney-in-fact for reasonable and desirable
    expenses advanced by such attorney-in-fact. The attorney-in-fact is
    further authorized and encouraged, when said attorney-in-fact
    deems it desirable or necessary, to employ others to aid in the
    management of the principal's assets and person including, but not
    be limited to, lawyers, accountants, physicians, nurses, and other
    medical paramedical personnel.
    Exhibit (Ex.) 1. The durable power of attorney required Knopp "to account to any
    subsequently appointed guardian or personal representative" for Volz. jd.
    1The "handle" is the total amount wagered over the course of the day, including wagering
    money previously won. Accordingly, a player's handle can be in excess of the amount of money
    the player brought to the casino.
    No. 68937-1-1/3
    Volz suffered an injury in December 2008 and was admitted to Providence
    Mt. St. Vincent for rehabilitation on December 26. Her health insurance ended its
    coverage for her sub-acute care effective January 11, 2009. Her needs, however,
    required that she remain in twenty-four hour residential care. When Knopp
    advised the staff at Providence that she wanted to move Volz to a different
    facility, the staff worked with her to apply for Medicaid benefits on Volz's behalf to
    enable her transfer. Knopp initiated a Medicaid application but did not complete
    it. Knopp admitted she was aware that if the Medicaid application was accepted,
    most of Volz's income would be required to pay for her medical needs. In May
    2009, Knopp moved Volz to an assisted living facility, Park Vista. The move was
    against medical advice because the services offered by Park Vista were
    inadequate to meet Volz's needs.
    During her hospitalization, Volz was not in full possession of her mental
    faculties. Henry Judson, a guardian ad litem, visited Volz at Providence in April
    2009 and noted that she did not understand why she was there and was unable
    to provide her address or any information about her finances. An evaluator who
    met with Volz in August 2009 concluded that she suffered from dementia and
    lacked the capacity to manage her financial affairs.
    Between December 2008 and October 2009, Knopp withdrew $16,550 in
    cash from Volz's checking account. She withdrew another $6,500 via debit card
    for, among other things, expenditures at stores, restaurants, and gas stations.
    She also obtained $1,900 as cash back when she made deposits of checks into
    Volz's accounts. The total amount of Knopp's withdrawals was nearly identical to
    No. 68937-1-1/4
    the amount of the deposits that Volz received from her pension and social
    security.
    During this time, Knopp did not pay the majority of Volz's medical bills,
    housing bills, or the property taxes or insurance on Volz's home.2 Instead, her
    cash withdrawals closely tracked her gambling activities. For example, on
    January 25, 2009, Knopp gambled at the Point Casino, losing only $2.63, but
    with a total handle of $1,606.35. That day, she made four cash withdrawals
    totaling $300 from Volz's checking account at a Point Casino ATM. She also
    withdrew $100 from the Point Casino ATM the day before and the day after that
    visit. Similarly, on February 1, 2009, Knopp gambled at the Point Casino, losing
    $159.96 with a handle of $548.75. That day, she withdrew $100 from Volz's
    account at a Point Casino ATM. Also that day, she withdrew $180 from Volz's
    account at a non-casino ATM, and another $900 the next day from a non-casino
    ATM. Of the $16,550 in cash Knopp withdrew from Volz's accounts, $6,095 was
    withdrawn at casinos, and another $3,564 was withdrawn at non-casino ATMs
    within one day of her gambling at a casino.3
    By March 2009, Knopp's use of Volz's money was being investigated by
    Adult Protective Services and the Seattle Police Department. In May 2009, a
    guardianship petition was filed and Judson was appointed Volz's guardian ad
    litem. Judson met with Knopp and requested an accounting, but she did not
    2 Knopp paid approximately $4,000 of Volz's Park Vista bills, but as of October 2009,
    Park Vista was still owed over $18,000.
    3 These amounts include ATM fees.
    No. 68937-1-1/5
    provide one. She also did not provide an accounting to Adult Protective Services,
    the police, or the court after it ordered her to do so.
    In June 2009, Hudson obtained a court order prohibiting Knopp from
    accessing Volz's accounts. The bank failed to process the order correctly and
    Knopp was able to continue withdrawing money. Knopp withdrew several
    thousand dollars in cash from Volz's accounts from June 19 through August 3.
    On August 4, 2009, a court order was entered permitting Knopp to pay an
    insurance premium for Volz, but the order required such payment to be made by
    check and forbade Knopp from making cash withdrawals. Nonetheless, Knopp
    withdrew over $2,400 from Volz's account from the time the order was entered
    until her power of attorney was terminated in October 2009. Moreover, Knopp
    directed that Volz's pension and social security checks, which had been
    deposited into Volz's accounts via direct deposit, be mailed to Knopp's post office
    box instead. This allowed her to access these funds without utilizing Volz's
    blocked bank accounts.
    On June 23, 2011, the State charged Knopp with one count of theft in the
    first degree, alleging two aggravating factors: (1) the victim was particularly
    vulnerable and (2) Knopp used a position of trust to facilitate commission of the
    offense.4 At trial, Knopp testified that she used the cash she withdrew from Volz's
    accounts to, among other things, pay Volz's bills, give Volz spending money, and
    pay herself for services rendered for Volz. She claimed she withdrew cash to
    obtain money orders to pay Volz's bills because it was easier that way. Knopp
    4 The State later amended the information to clarify that the theft was based on a series
    of transactions.
    5
    No. 68937-1-1/6
    argued the State failed to prove she did not spend the money on Volz. She
    requested, and the court gave, jury instructions on the defense of good-faith
    claim of title.
    The jury found Knopp guilty and also found that both aggravating factors
    were present. The sentencing court imposed a standard-range sentence. Knopp
    appeals.
    DISCUSSION
    Sufficiency of the Evidence
    Evidence is sufficient to support a conviction if, viewing the evidence in the
    light most favorable to the State, any rational trier of fact could have found the
    essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. State v. Hosier, 
    157 Wn.2d 1
    ,8, 
    133 P.3d 936
     (2006). A claim of insufficiency of the evidence admits
    the truth of the State's evidence and all inferences that can reasonably be drawn
    from the evidence. State v. Salinas. 
    119 Wn.2d 192
    , 201, 
    829 P.2d 1068
     (1992).
    Circumstantial evidence is no less reliable than direct evidence. State v.
    Delmarter, 
    94 Wn.2d 634
    , 638, 
    618 P.2d 99
     (1980) (citing State v. Gosbv, 
    85 Wn.2d 758
    , 
    539 P.2d 680
     (1975)).
    To convict Knopp of theft in the first degree as charged in this case, the
    jury instructions required the State to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that she
    exerted unauthorized control over more than $5,000 of Volz's money with the
    intent to deprive Volz of it.5 To "exert unauthorized control" means to take the
    property of another or, when one already has control over the property through
    5Thejury instructions were consistent with RCW 9A.56.020(1 )(a) and RCW
    9A.56.030(1)(a).
    6
    No. 68937-1-1/7
    power of attorney, to secrete, withhold, or appropriate the property to one's own
    use or to the use ofany person other than the true owner.6 Clerk's Papers (CP)
    at 53.
    Knopp first contends the evidence failed to show she appropriated the
    money she withdrew from Volz's accounts to her own use rather than using it for
    Volz's benefit because there is no evidence of where the money went. We
    disagree. There was no direct evidence to show how Knopp spent the cash.
    However, substantial circumstantial evidence supports the State's theory that she
    spent the cash on gambling, rather than for Volz's care. The evidence showed
    that Knopp withdrew over $16,000 in cash from Volz's accounts at a time when
    Volz was incapable of overseeing her finances. The evidence showed that,
    during that period, Knopp was struggling financially but was gambling frequently
    at the same casinos where she withdrew much of the cash. The evidence
    showed that Knopp, as Volz's attorney-in-fact, did not pay the majority of Volz's
    medical bills, housing bills, or her property taxes and insurance. Moreover,
    Knopp's testimony did not explain why she made multiple withdrawals from
    casino ATMs on the same day, even though an ATM fee was charged with each
    withdrawal, which is consistent with the State's theory that she withdrew the cash
    to compulsively gamble. Ex. 7, 32, 35. In sum, the evidence permitted a rational
    trier of fact to infer that Knopp exerted unauthorized control over at least $5,000
    of Volz's money.
    6The definition of "unauthorized control" in the jury instructions was consistent with RCW
    9A.56.010(22).
    No. 68937-1-1/8
    Knopp cites State v. Thompson, 
    153 Wn. App. 325
    , 
    223 P.3d 1165
     (2009)
    and State v. Crowder, 
    103 Wn. App. 20
    , 
    11 P.3d 828
     (2000), suggesting that the
    State must show precisely how she spent the cash. But these cases do not
    support this proposition. Rather, as the State contends, they simply illustrate
    circumstances in which there is sufficient evidence of theft.7 In neither case did
    this court hold that it was necessary for the State to show how exactly a
    defendant spent money appropriated from the victim to prove that the money was
    appropriated to the defendant's own use.
    Knopp next contends that even if her use of the money was not actually
    authorized, the State failed to disprove her good-faith claim of title defense. It is a
    defense to a charge of theft that the property was taken "openly and avowedly
    under a claim of title made in good faith, even though the claim be untenable."
    RCW 9A.56.020(2)(a). The defense negates the essential element of intent to
    deprive, so the State bears the burden of proving the absence of the defense
    beyond a reasonable doubt. State v. Aqer. 
    128 Wn.2d 85
    , 92, 
    904 P.2d 715
    (1995); State v. Hicks, 
    102 Wn.2d 182
    , 187, 
    683 P.2d 186
     (1984).
    Knopp contends the State provided no evidence the money was spent on
    anything other than expenses she believed to be reasonable and desirable to
    effectuate Volz's care under the durable power of attorney. We conclude the
    7See Thompson, 153 Wn. App. at 329-36 (evidence sufficient to support theft conviction
    where defendant knew victim suffered from dementia and lacked capacity to sign power of
    attorney permitting gifts of money from victim to defendant; defendant nonetheless obtained
    victim's signature; and defendant gifted himself money from victim's bank account and from sale
    of victim's home, using part of moneyto pay offloans and buy a boat); Crowder, 103 Wn. App. at
    23-29 (evidence sufficient to support theft conviction where defendant with power of attorney
    transferred money from victim's account to her own but was not authorized to make gifts of
    victim's property; and where defendant, after power of attorney was revoked, persuaded victim to
    quitclaim property to her in violation of court order).
    8
    No. 68937-1-1/9
    State disproved the defense beyond a reasonable doubt. The power of attorney
    authorized Knopp to reimburse herself for "reasonable and desirable expenses"
    advanced by Knopp. But, as we have explained, the State presented
    circumstantial evidence that Knopp spent the cash she withdrew on gambling
    rather than on Volz's care. The State's evidence showed, furthermore, that
    Knopp's testimony regarding why she paid herself the cash was not credible and
    that her claim of title to the money was not made in good faith. Knopp testified,
    for example, that she paid herself for work done for Volz, such as shampooing
    rugs, pressure washing the roof, doing yard work, and performing maintenance
    at Volz's home. But the accounting she provided at trial did not reflect such work,
    and the guardian ad litem reported that in September 2009, Volz's home was
    dilapidated and disheveled, the carpet reeked of pet urine and feces, and the
    yard was in disrepair. Moreover, of the dozen or so receipts that Knopp provided
    to show how she spent cash for Volz, some were incomplete, illegible, or not
    clearly related to expenses for Volz. But even assuming all of the receipts were
    for expenses for Volz, they totaled approximately $3,200, leaving approximately
    $12,000 of unexplained cash withdrawals. Also, Knopp's assertion that she used
    money to buy money orders to pay Volz's bills because doing so was easier
    lacked credibility, where there was evidence that she could have used Volz's
    debit card or checkbook and evidence that Knopp herself used debit cards and
    checks to make payments from her own account. Knopp testified regarding how
    she used the money and why she felt she was entitled to the money, and the jury
    was entitled to disbelieve her testimony. We do not review credibility
    No. 68937-1-1/10
    determinations on appeal. State v. Camarillo. 
    115 Wn.2d 60
    , 71, 
    794 P.2d 850
    (1990). Moreover, Knopp's withdrawals from Volz's account in contravention of a
    court order belied her claim that she was acting in good faith.
    Prosecutorial Misconduct
    In a prosecutorial misconduct claim, the defendant bears the burden of
    proving that the prosecutor's conduct was both improper and prejudicial. State v.
    Emery, 
    174 Wn.2d 741
    , 756, 
    278 P.3d 653
     (2012) (citing State v. Thoraerson.
    
    172 Wn.2d 438
    , 442, 
    258 P.3d 43
     (2011)). Once a defendant establishes that a
    prosecutor's statements are improper, this court determines whether the
    defendant was prejudiced under one of two standards of review. fcL at 760. If the
    defendant objected at trial, he must show that the misconduct resulted in
    prejudice that had a substantial likelihood of affecting the jury's verdict. \±
    (citation omitted). If the defendant did not object, he is deemed to have waived
    any error, unless the prosecutor's misconduct was so flagrant and ill intentioned
    that an instruction could not have cured the resulting prejudice. \± at 760-
    61 (citing State v. Stenson, 
    132 Wn.2d 668
    , 727, 
    940 P.2d 1239
     (1997)). In that
    case, the defendant must show that (1) no curative instruction would have
    obviated any prejudicial effect on the jury and (2) the misconduct resulted in
    prejudice that had a substantial likelihood of affecting the verdict. Id, (citing
    Thorqerson, 
    172 Wn.2d at 445
    )).
    A prosecutor's argument to the jury must be confined to the law stated in
    the jury instructions. State v. Walker, 
    164 Wn. App. 724
    , 736, 
    265 P.3d 191
    (2011) rev. denied, 
    177 Wn.2d 1026
    , 
    309 P.3d 504
     (2013)). A prosecutor's
    10
    No. 68937-1-1/11
    misstatement of the law can constitute improper argument. See Emery, 
    174 Wn.2d at 759-60
     (arguments shifting burden of proof to defendant are
    misconduct). Arguments alleged to be improper should be reviewed in context of
    the total argument, the issues in the case, the evidence addressed in the
    argument, and the court's jury instructions. State v. Russell, 
    125 Wn.2d 24
    , 85-
    86, 
    882 P.2d 747
     (1994).
    Knopp claims the prosecutor committed prosecutorial misconduct during
    closing argument by misstating the law pertaining to her good-faith claim of title
    defense. First, she points to the emphasized statements within the following
    argument:
    And the defendant, Sylvia Knopp, agreed to [handle Volz's health
    care and financial decisions] as she got older and incapacitated.
    She agreed to assume that weighty responsibility of making the
    decisions for another person's life.
    It's not an insignificant thing to agree to do something like
    that, to take care of another person who's unable to care for
    themselves is an onerous responsibility. And it's one the defendant
    didn't have to do. But she decided to do that and she agreed to do
    that.
    And because caring for another person is such a serious
    matter, we as a society decided to make it a crime not to fulfill that
    duty when we have accepted that duty. So if we have a child, and
    we neglect that child, it's criminal. If we adopt a child and we
    decide we really don't want the child after all, and we abandon that
    child, it's criminal.
    And if we assume a fiduciary duty to take care of someone
    who's vulnerable and can't make decisions for themselves and
    abandon that duty, we as a society have decided that's criminal.
    And what we know in this case is that the defendant stole money
    from her mother, Maria Volz.
    We know that beginning in December of 2008 and
    continuing on throughout October of 2009, she was the power of
    attorney for her mother. And she used that power of attorney again
    and again and again to take cash out and to make purchases that
    were for herself and not for her mother's benefit.
    11
    No. 68937-1-1/12
    She chose again and again not to take care of her mother,
    but to fulfill her greed.
    (Emphasis added.) RP at 1014-16. Knopp also points to the prosecutor's later
    statement, "With each cash withdrawal that she made, each ATM visit that she
    made, the defendant chose to fulfill her greed, rather than to fulfill her fiduciary
    duty towards her mother. And that is not just immoral. It's criminal." RP at 1047.
    We conclude that, in the context of the prosecutor's larger argument, the
    statements did not misstate the law. The State correctly concedes that the failure
    to fulfill a fiduciary does not necessarily rise to the level of a crime.8 And the
    statements emphasized by Knopp, in isolation, were incorrect to the extent they
    suggested the jury could convict if itfound that Knopp merely breached a
    fiduciary duty to Volz. But in the context of the surrounding statements, the
    statements were not improper. The prosecutor described the burden imposed by
    a fiduciary responsibility, noted that Knopp had accepted that burden, and
    accused her of stealing money from Volz. The argument as a whole emphasized
    that it was Knopp's actions of stealing money and using it for herself, not merely
    a failure to fulfill a fiduciary duty that made her guilty of theft.
    Knopp next points to the emphasized statements in the following
    argument by the prosecutor:
    So starting on December 30th, the withdrawals for cash at the
    casinos begins.
    8 Conviction for theft requires proof of intent to deprive. RCW 9A.56.020. But a person
    can violate a fiduciary duty without criminal intent. See 29 David K. DeWolf, WASHINGTON
    PRACTICE: ELEMENTS OF AN ACTION§ 12:1, at 349-50 (2013) (essential elements to breach
    of fiduciary duty cause of action are (1) the existence of a fiduciary relationship giving rise to a
    duty ofcare on the part of the defendant to the plaintiff; (2) an act or omission by the fiduciary in
    breach of the standard of care; (3) the plaintiff sustained damages; and (4) the damages were
    proximately caused bythe fiduciary's breach of the standard of care).
    12
    No. 68937-1-1/13
    And Ijust want to stop for a minute and talk about this casino
    thing. You have heard exhaustively about casino withdrawals, ]t
    doesn't matter where the defendant was spending this money. It
    doesn't matter if she was gambling her mother's money away, or
    spending it on her hobbies, whatever they might have been. What
    matters is she was withdrawing cash from her mother's account
    without authority. And the fact that we can show these withdrawals
    were made at casinos is circumstantial evidence that she's not
    spending that money on her mother's behalf. But it really isn't the
    point here. The point is, the defendant was withdrawing cash
    repeatedly and using it not for her mother's benefit, but for herself.
    (Emphasis added.) RP at 1018.
    The prosecutor's remarks as a whole did not misstate the law. While
    Knopp is correctthat she did not commit theft if she used the money for Volz's
    benefit, in context, the statements were part of the State's proper argument that it
    did not need to prove how Knopp spent Volz's money (for example, on gambling
    or on her other hobbies), as long as it proved she withdrew the money without
    authority and did not spend it on Volz's behalf.
    Knopp also contends the prosecutor committed misconduct through the
    emphasized statements in the argument below:
    And here's the evidence that we have that the defendant
    secreted this money and appropriated itfor her own use. First of all,
    again, we know she withdrew over $15,000 in cash from Maria's
    accounts.
    She has claimed to you on the stand that this money was
    owed to her. She told you she's paid herself for visiting her mother.
    She told you she paid herself for being interviewed by Adult
    Protective Services and the police regarding her exploitation of her
    mother. She told you that she paid herself to fight the guardianship
    that was filed because she had financially exploited her mother.
    She told you she paid herself for parking, gas, time in court, all for
    fighting this guardianship.
    And that, she told you, is where some of the cash from those
    withdrawals went to. So it's up to vou. ladies and gentlemen, to
    decide whether that's a legitimate explanation for this money. Is the
    13
    No. 68937-1-1/14
    defendant entitled to pay herself before she pays her money, Tsicl
    or before she pays for her mother's care?
    And maybe, mavbe if there's any money left over after you
    paid all of her necessary expenses, vou could pay yourself for
    items or things that vou could hire out for. That's what the
    defendant testified she had authority to do. That's what she said the
    attorney Karl Flaccus said she could do. is pay herself for things
    she could hire out for.
    So if vou had money left over, and vou needed - your
    mother's lawn needed to be mowed, and vou wanted to mow it
    yourself, arguably vou could pay yourself to mow your mother's
    lawn if vou were inclined to do that. But certainly, you could not pay
    yourself for the things that the defendant paid herself for. No
    reasonable person would pay themselves to visit their mother. No
    reasonable person would pay themselves to be interviewed by APS
    and Seattle Police about their own exploitation of their mother. No
    reasonable person would pay themselves to fight the guardianship
    that was filed as a result of their exploitation of their mother. It
    simply is not reasonable. And it simply isn't acceptable.
    (Emphasis added.) RP at 1029-30; 1044-45.
    Knopp argues that, even if her priority of Volz's expenses was not
    "reasonable or desirable" under the power of attorney, she did not necessarily
    commit theft. She notes that Judson, an elder law attorney, testified that power of
    attorney laws do not provide a clear rule for prioritizing some of the principal's
    expenses over others.
    We again conclude that, in the context of the prosecutor's larger
    argument, the statements were not improper. The statements were part ofthe
    prosecutor's argument discussing the element of theft that Knopp appropriated
    Volz's funds for her own use, i.e., whether the State met its burden of proof to
    show that Knopp exerted unauthorized control over Volz's money. The
    prosecutor's argument was that some of Knopp's assertions regarding how she
    spent the money—to pay herself for visiting her mother, for time and expenses in
    14
    No. 68937-1-1/15
    fighting the guardianship, etc.—were not reasonable or credible, that those
    activities were not authorized under the durable power of attorney, and thus that
    she exercised unauthorized control over Volz's money. As a whole, the argument
    did not misstate the law.
    Finally, Knopp contends the prosecutor misstated the law regarding the
    good-faith claim of title defense when she argued as follows:
    This [good-faith claim of title defense] is often used when
    people take a car, because they believe it belongs to them. When
    they think property is actually theirs, and when they in good faith
    take that property thinking that it's theirs.
    In this case, the defendant is going to argue to you that this
    is basically a good faith claim of entitlement. Not that it's a good
    faith claim of title. In other words, the truth is that the defendant did
    not ever believe that this was her money. She may have believed
    she was entitled to it because of the work she allegedly did for her
    mom, but she never believed this money was actually hers to start
    with.
    She testified she knew it was her mother's income. She
    knew it was her mom's Social Security and her pension. So I would
    argue to you that this instruction should not apply here. In other
    words, the defendant had no good faith basis to believe this money
    was actually hers.
    And I would urge you not to confuse good faith claim of title
    with good faith claim of entitlement. In other words, it's not okay to
    do something for someone and decide that you're owed money and
    then steal that money from them, because you think they are
    supposed to pay you for something. That's not how we work in this
    society. If you have a claim, and you are believed you are owed
    money, and that person is not going to pay you, then you need to
    deal with that in some other way than stealing it from that person or
    taking it from that person. So I would argue to you that this is not a
    case of good faith claim of title.
    The defendant never really believed this money was hers to
    start with. She does believe it's hers, that she's entitled to it
    apparently. But that's very different. She knows full well this is her
    mother's money. And the dispute in her mind is whether or not she
    is entitled to [Volz's money] before the nursing homes or her
    mother's other bills, her other financial interests are entitled to that
    money.
    15
    No. 68937-1-1/16
    The defendant knew the money was [Volz's], as I said. She
    knew her mother was getting these checks into her mother's bank
    account. And she also knew it was her duty to pay her mother's
    nursing home bills first and foremost as power of attorney. She
    testified to that. She told you she knew what a fiduciary duty was.
    And she knew she had a duty to pay her mother's nursing home
    bills. And she knew her mother would be evicted for nonpayment of
    those bills. And you heard Henry Judson testify about the duty of a
    power of attorney. And it's obvious to all of us, it's your duty as a
    power of attorney to take care of this person who can no longer
    take care of themselves. And of course, the most fundamental thing
    you need to take care of is their health care and their physical care
    if they are unable to care for themselves.
    So it goes without saying the defendant knew it was in her
    duty. It was her duty to act in her mother's best interest and to pay
    her nursing home bills before she paid herself. So even if she
    believed this money was actually hers, and not her mother's, she
    still did not do the right thing with that money. So it's not a
    legitimate defense.
    RP at 1036-38.
    We agree with Knopp that this argument misstated the law regarding the
    defense as it applied to this case. It is a defense to a charge of theft that property
    was taken "openly and avowedly under a claim of title made in good faith, even
    though the claim be untenable." RCW 9A.56.020(2)(a). The defense "negates the
    element of intent to steal by providing that a defendant cannot be guilty of theft if
    the defendant takes property from another 'under the good faith belief that he is
    the owner, or entitled to possession, of the property.'" Ager, 
    128 Wn.2d at 92
    (quoting Hicks. 
    102 Wn.2d at 184
    ). Here, Knopp asserted title to the money
    under the durable power of attorney, which authorized her to "advance all
    reasonable and desirable expenses in the exercise of the responsibilities within
    this power of attorney and, further, to reimburse the attorney-in-fact for
    reasonable and desirable expenses advanced by such attorney-in-fact." Ex. 1.
    16
    No. 68937-1-1/17
    On appeal, the State concedes that Knopp was entitled to present the
    good-faith claim of title defense based on the durable power of attorney but
    argues, inconsistently, that the defense is available only when a defendant is
    attempting to recover specific, tangible property and is not available unless a
    defendant believes property is his or hers to begin with. We disagree. RCW
    9A.56.020(2)(a) does not contain either requirement. Nor do the cases cited by
    the State support the proposition that the defense was not available in this case.9
    Knopp was not using the type of self-help used in those cases. Rather, her
    defense was that she was entitled under the power of attorney to pay herself,
    and the power of attorney did permit her to reimburse herself for reasonable and
    desirable expenses. The prosecutor's remarks incorrectly told the jury that Knopp
    could not use the defense unless she believed the money was hers to begin with.
    Nonetheless, we conclude that Knopp waived any claim of prosecutorial
    misconduct by failing to object. The prosecutor's statements were not flagrant
    and ill intentioned. As the State points out, the law regarding the applicability of
    the good-faith claim of title defense to the circumstances in this case is not
    9See State v. Self. 
    42 Wn. App. 654
    , 
    713 P.2d 142
     (1986) (no entitlementto jury
    instruction on good-faith claim of title defense where defendant, on behalfof victim's employee,
    robbed victim of cash, wallet, car keys, and credit cards, claiming employee was owed payment
    by victim; defense notavailable in cases where force is used to collect debt and where defendant
    has no claim of ownership in specific property acquired); State v. Brown, 
    36 Wn. App. 549
    , 
    676 P.2d 525
     (1984) (no entitlement to instruction on good-faith claim of title defense in case of first-
    degree burglary where defendants invaded victim's home and took stereo to secure return of
    purse and gun allegedly taken by victim from one defendantearlierthat day; defendants did not
    claim, and there was no evidence to show stereo belonged to defendants); State v. Larsen, 
    23 Wn. App. 218
    , 
    596 P.2d 1089
     (1979) (in case where defendant whose wife had performed sex
    acts for moneythreatened client with firearm and forced clientto write new check after he
    stopped payment on original check, trial courtdid not err in instructing jury that a creditor's intent
    to collecta debt from his debtor by use or threatened use of immediateforce, violenceor fear of
    injury is not a defense to robbery; good-faith claim of title defense is not allowed where a
    defendant uses force to collect a debt with no claim of ownership in the specific property
    acquired).
    17
    No. 68937-1-1/18
    entirely clear; there is little to no case law regarding the defense as it applies to
    power of attorney cases. We also conclude that any prejudice could have been
    cured by an instruction. Additional instructions from the trial court could have
    informed the jury that the good-faith claim of title defense did not require that
    Knopp believed the money was hers to begin with.
    Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
    We review claims of ineffective assistance of counsel de novo. State v.
    Sutherbv, 
    165 Wn.2d 870
    , 883, 
    204 P.3d 916
     (2009). A defendant claiming
    ineffective assistance bears the burden of demonstrating that (1) counsel's
    performance was so deficient that he was not functioning as the "counsel"
    guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment and (2) the defendant was prejudiced by
    counsel's deficient performance, such that the defendant was deprived of a fair
    trial. State v. Cienfuegos, 
    144 Wn.2d 222
    , 226-27, 
    25 P.3d 1011
     (2001) (citing
    Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 687, 
    104 S.Ct. 2052
    , 
    80 L.Ed.2d 674
    (1984)). Counsel is deficient if his "representation fell below an objective
    standard of reasonableness based on consideration of all of the circumstances."
    State v. Thomas. 
    109 Wn.2d 222
    , 226, 
    743 P.2d 816
     (1987). Scrutiny of
    counsel's performance is highly deferential, and courts presume that counsel's
    representation was effective. jcL Prejudice results when it is reasonably probable
    that, "butfor counsel's unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would
    have been different." Id (quoting Strickland. 
    466 U.S. at 694
    ).
    Knopp contends that, even if her prosecutorial misconduct claim was not
    preserved for appeal, she was denied her constitutional right to effective
    18
    No. 68937-1-1/19
    assistance of counsel because her attorney failed to object to the prosecutor's
    various remarks. We conclude that Knopp does not demonstrate deficient
    performance or prejudice. First, as we have explained, the law regarding the
    applicability of the good-faith claim of title defense to these circumstances is not
    entirely clear. Thus, Knopp cannot show that defense counsel should have
    known that the prosecutor incorrectly stated the law. Second, Knopp fails to show
    prejudice. Where the circumstantial evidence was overwhelming that Knopp
    spent at least $5,000 of the cash she withdrew for gambling, she does not show
    with reasonable probability that the result of the trial would have been different
    had defense counsel objected to the prosecutor's remarks.
    Affirmed.
    \j)*?/us* —-^ frX A^
    WE CONCUR:
    QJV^   o>
    19