Christopher Jack Reid v. Pullman Police Department

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJanuary 28, 2014
Docket31039-6
StatusUnpublished

This text of Christopher Jack Reid v. Pullman Police Department (Christopher Jack Reid v. Pullman Police Department) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Christopher Jack Reid v. Pullman Police Department, (Wash. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

FILED

JAN. 28, 2014

In the Office of the Clerk of Court

WA State Court of Appeals, Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DMSION THREE

CHRISTOPHER JACK REID, ) ) No. 31039-6-111 Appellant, ) ) v. ) ) PULLMAN POLICE DEPARTMENT, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) Respondent. )

FEARING, J. - Christopher Jack Reid seeks to compel, under the Public Records

Act (PRA), chapter 42.56 RCW, the Pullman Police Department (PPD) to produce,

among other records, records the police department might have maintained in its

investigatory file but claims it did not possess at the time of Reid's records request. The

trial court denied Reid relief, and we affIrm.

FACTS

A jury convicted Christopher Reid of second degree rape and burglary. After

losing an appeal, Reid requested all records related to his criminal case that the PPD, the

investigating agency, possessed. The PPD responded, providing Reid with what it claims

to be the entire copy of his criminal case fIle. The PPD produced over 1,000 pages and No. 31039-6-III Reid v. Pullman Police Dep 'f

the response included two four-inch, loose-leaf notebooks and one three-inch notebook.

After reviewing the voluminous records given to him by PPD, Christopher Reid

concluded that records were missing. For example, he demands that PPD produce a copy

ofthe audio recording of the rape victim's 911 call. An independent agency, Whitcom,

however, took and recorded the calL Whitcom is a consolidated 911 dispatch center for

Pullman, Asotin County, Washington State University, and Moscow, Idaho. The PPD

informed Reid that the city did not have the 911 recording and suggested to Reid that he

contact Whitcom.

In a narrative report by Pullman Police Officer William Orsborn, Orsborn wrote

that he gave photo lineup sheets to other officers who conducted interviews ofthose who

saw Reid and Reid's accomplice. The records produced by PPD included statements of

the witnesses who underwent the photo lineups. Christopher Reid supposes the PPD

failed to produce documents because the records he received do not identify the names of

the officers who performed the photo lineups.

Christopher Reid believes that the PPD failed to provide him with an audio

recording of an interview of the rape victim, K.N.E., conducted on September 13,2007

by Pullman Police Officer Scott Kirk. A narrative report of Officer Kirk contains, near

the end, the words "End of tape" and the initials "JSK/es." Clerk's Papers (CP) at 46.

Officer Kirk signed an affidavit declaring: "I never took an audio recorded statement of

the victim in this case. This record does not exist." CP at 127. He also stated that he

No. 31039-6-III Reid v. Pullman Police Dep't

dictated his narrative, and the narrative report was typed by a transcriptionist. The

transcriptionist, Elysia Spencer, averred that she transcribed the report Kirk dictated and

that she did not transcribe an audio recording of a statement from the victim. In other

words, reference to the "End oftape" in the report refers to the dictated tape from Kirk,

not a tape of a recording of the victim. CP at 46.

Separately from the request to Pullman, Christopher Reid requested records from

the Washington State Patrol Identification and Criminal History Section (WSP). Reid

compared the WSP records with the case file PPD produced. The WSP records showed

that, during Pullman's rape investigation, PPD Officers William Orsborn and Michael

Crow requested and received criminal histories of four other individuals. The results

from those requests were not in the file PPD produced. Christopher Reid believes these

missing records will substantiate his claim of innocence. He does not explain, but it is

not relevant to the appeal, why these purported eXCUlpatory records have not or cannot be

received from the WSP.

According to PPD's Property and Evidence Specialist, police officers in the field

obtain information from WSP databases by radioing requests to Whitcom, a regional

dispatch center, and then receiving results over the radio. In such circumstances, an

officer generally does not request printouts ofthe results for insertion in the case file.

Even if an officer requests printouts and those printouts enter the case file, the officer

may later remove them "in light of new information that tended to show the WSP record

No. 31039-6-III

Reid v. Pullman Police Dep Jt

was irrelevant." CP at 134.

One investigating officer, Michael Crow, submitted an affidavit stating he did not

print the histories he obtained from the WSP when investigating the rape. Pullman,

however, did not submit an affidavit from Officer William Orsborn, who also requested

the histories from the WSP. Orsborn is retired.

Reid filed a motion with the trial court to "order [PPD] to show cause on why it

has refused to allow copying" of the criminal histories, among the other records. CP at 9.

The City of Pullman responded that it did not possess or control the records. In support

of its position, Pullman submitted seven sworn statements from Pullman employees

I explaining why the records Christopher Reid requested did not exist. PPD's Records

Specialist averred that, upon receipt of Reid's records request, she provided him a copy

of the department's entire investigation file concerning the rape.

After Pullman responded to the show cause order, Christopher Reid filed a motion

for leave to insert an additional claim seeking declaratory relief for alleged violations of

the Preservation and Destruction of Public Records Act (PDPRA) chapter 40.14 RCW.

After reviewing the affidavits submitted by the parties, the trial court denied Reid any 1 I relief. The trial court found that Pullman's explanation for the absence of the criminal

histories was "credible and logical" and that Pullman produced every record in its

possession and control at the time the records request was made. CP at 126.

4 No. 31039-6-III

I Reid v. Pullman Police Dep't

ANALYSIS

PUBLIC RECORDS ACT

On appeal, Christopher Reid continues to argue that Pullman violated the PRA

because it has not produced records it possesses or possessed. The superior court reviews

an agency's response to a public records request de novo. RCW 42.56.550(3); Zink v.

City ofMesa, 140 Wn. App. 328, 335-37, 166 P.3d 738 (2007). In turn, we also

undertake de novo review, when the trial court rendered, as it did here, a decision based

upon pleadings rather than oral testimony. Gronquist v. Dep't ofCorrections, 159 Wn.

App. 576, 590, 247 P.3d 436 (2011). Under such circumstances, the appellate court

stands in the same position as the trial court and is not bound by the trial court's findings

on disputed factual issues. Id.

I We have reviewed the entire record and conclude, as did the trial court, that

Pullman's explanations with respect to the absence of records are credible. An officer 1 1 may contact WSP for information that the officer reviews on a computer and never prints.

The names of the officers performing lineups may often be important, but could have

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