Family of Butts v. Constantine

CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 2021
Docket98985-1
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of Family of Butts v. Constantine (Family of Butts v. Constantine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Family of Butts v. Constantine, (Wash. 2021).

Opinion

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IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

THE FAMILY OF DAMARIUS BUTTS et al.,

Respondents/Cross-Appellants, NO. 98985-1

v.

DOW CONSTANTINE et al.,

Appellants/Cross-Respondents. Filed July 15, 2021

STEPHENS, J.— Damarius Butts, Isaiah Obet, Charleena Lyles, and seven

other people were shot and killed by law enforcement officers in King County in

2017. Fatal Force: Police Shootings Database, WASH. POST (last updated June 21,

2021), https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/investigations/police-shootings-

database/ [https://perma.cc/2KUT-4QH8]. In response to community demands for

greater police accountability, King County Executive (Executive) Dow Constantine

issued a series of executive orders to reform the procedures for conducting coroner’s For the current opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/wareports/. Family of Damarius Butts et al. v. King County Exec. Constantine et al., No. 98985-1

inquests—a type of death investigation the King County Charter requires whenever

a law enforcement officer causes or contributes to someone’s death. The King

County Superior Court struck down those executive orders on various grounds, and

nearly all parties appealed some aspect of that ruling. We accepted direct review.

Executive Constantine and the Inquest Administrator Michael Spearman

argue the executive orders were a valid exercise of the powers granted to the

Executive by the King County Charter and King County Code. Executive

Constantine asks us to vacate the superior court’s order and reinstate the executive

orders.

The families of Butts, Obet, and Lyles (individually and collectively Families)

argue state law requires more than Executive Constantine’s recent reforms allow.

Specifically, they argue the “Coroner’s Act,” ch. 36.24 RCW, requires that the

involved officers be examined by the inquest jury and that the inquest jury be

allowed to determine whether their relatives were killed by criminal means. The

Families seek writs of mandamus to compel Executive Constantine and

Administrator Spearman to comply with those requirements of state law.

Finally, four King County cities, the King County Sheriff’s Office, and

several individual law enforcement officers (the Law Enforcement Parties) argue the

Executive’s orders go too far. They claim that the Coroner’s Act creates a narrow,

2 For the current opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/wareports/. Family of Damarius Butts et al. v. King County Exec. Constantine et al., No. 98985-1

fact-bound inquiry and that Executive Constantine’s recent orders impermissibly

broaden the inquest’s scope and purpose. The Law Enforcement Parties seek to

prevent coroner’s inquests from proceeding under those orders and ask us to affirm

the superior court’s ruling.

Every party’s arguments have some merit and all prevail to some degree. We

hold that the Executive’s authority to conduct coroner’s inquests includes the power

to establish the procedures by which those inquests are conducted, as long as those

procedures are consistent with applicable state and county law. We therefore largely

uphold Executive Constantine’s recent reforms. But we strike the portions of the

executive orders that the Families and the Law Enforcement Parties show conflict

with state law, including those that would prevent inquest juries from fulfilling their

duties under the Coroner’s Act. The Families are correct that the law requires

inquest juries be able to examine the involved officers and to decide whether those

officers killed Butts, Obet, and Lyles by criminal means. Accordingly, we vacate

the superior court’s order and remand to grant in part the Families’ petitions for writs

of mandamus.

RELEVANT FACTS

Law enforcement officers in King County shot and killed Damarius Butts,

Isaiah Obet, and Charleena Lyles within a two-month period in 2017. Seattle Police

3 For the current opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/wareports/. Family of Damarius Butts et al. v. King County Exec. Constantine et al., No. 98985-1

killed Butts on April 20. Auburn Police killed Obet on June 10. Seattle Police killed

Lyles on June 18.

The King County Charter requires coroner’s inquests be held whenever “an

action, decision or possible failure to offer the appropriate care by a member of any

law enforcement agency might have contributed to an individual’s death.” KING

COUNTY CHARTER § 895. Per the inquest procedures in place at the time, Executive

Constantine sent letters to the Honorable Donna Tucker, presiding judge of the King

County District Court, requesting judges to preside over inquests into the deaths of

Butts, Obet, and Lyles.

In December 2017, in response to growing community concern, Executive

Constantine convened a six-member Inquest Review Committee (IRC) to propose

reforms to King County’s long-standing inquest procedures. The IRC found those

procedures were largely perceived by community members as “favor[ing] law

enforcement,” “‘lack[ing] compassion,’ and . . . condescending to families” of those

killed by police. Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 707-08. The IRC proposed several reforms

to improve King County’s inquest process, including clarifying the purpose and

scope of inquests, promulgating more robust procedural rules, allowing the inquest

jury to make more meaningful observations “as a voice of the community,” and

improving the transparency of and better educating the public about inquests. CP at

4 For the current opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/wareports/. Family of Damarius Butts et al. v. King County Exec. Constantine et al., No. 98985-1

704-05. The IRC proposed a draft executive order incorporating these and other

changes to King County’s inquest process.

Soon after, a coalition of law enforcement representatives and community

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Family of Butts v. Constantine, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/family-of-butts-v-constantine-wash-2021.