In Re The Petition To Convene A Grand Jury, Barnes Michael Ware

420 P.3d 1083
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 26, 2018
Docket50285-2
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 420 P.3d 1083 (In Re The Petition To Convene A Grand Jury, Barnes Michael Ware) 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
In Re The Petition To Convene A Grand Jury, Barnes Michael Ware, 420 P.3d 1083 (Wash. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

June 26, 2018

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II In the Matter of the Petition of No. 50285-2-II BARNES MICHAEL WARE to Convene a (Consolidated with: Grand Jury. No. 50877-0-II)

In the Matter of the Application of PUBLISHED OPINION ERIKA JOHNSON for a Citizen’s Complaint.

LEE, J. — Following the Lewis County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office’s decision to not file

charges in an animal abuse case, two private citizens separately sought to independently initiate

criminal charges. In the first case, Erika Johnson filed a petition in district court, requesting

authorization to file a citizen’s complaint. After the district court denied Johnson’s petition,

Barnes Michael Ware filed a petition to summon a grand jury in superior court, based on the same

set of facts underlying Johnson’s petition. The superior court similarly denied Ware’s petition. In

these consolidated appeals, the appellants argue that the lower courts erred in finding that granting

their petitions would unconstitutionally violate the separation of powers. Johnson also argues that

the superior court, on review of the district court’s decision, erred in finding that the prosecutorial

standards did not warrant the filing of criminal charges through her petition.

We hold that the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying Johnson’s petition.

We also hold that the superior court did not abuse its discretion in denying Ware’s petition.

Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s dismissal of Johnson’s petition for issuance of a No. 50285-2-II/ No. 50877-0-II

citizen’s complaint, and we affirm the superior court’s dismissal of Ware’s petition to summon a

grand jury.

FACTS

A. THE INCIDENT

On April 28, 2016, the Centralia Police Department responded to a report of animal abuse

at a Centralia apartment complex. The reporting party, Samantha Riggen, told officers that her

neighbors had tortured and killed her mother’s cat by throwing a rock at the cat and stabbing the

cat with a knife.

Officer William D. Phipps of the Centralia Police Department arrived on scene and was

met by a large group of residents from the apartment complex. Officer Phipps interviewed four

witnesses to the incident—one adult and three children. The adult, Alicia Schroeder, told Officer

Phipps that her daughter had come to her and told her that two men “were going to stab the cat.”

Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 29. Schroeder then ran to the back of the apartment complex and saw a

man she identified as Kyle Burke stab the cat in the neck and attempt to push the cat under a chain

link fence.

The three juvenile witnesses who witnessed the incident told Officer Phipps that Emily

Miller, another juvenile who lived in the apartment complex, had squeezed the cat, refused to let

go, and twice threw the cat up toward her mother, who was standing on a second floor balcony.

The girls informed Officer Phipps that at some point Burke threw a rock at the cat. After the cat

fell to the ground, the girls reported seeing Burke and a man identified as Richard Allshouse

running toward the cat with a knife. According to the girls, the two men were arguing about who

2 No. 50285-2-II/ No. 50877-0-II

would get to kill the cat first. The girls told Officer Phipps that Burke stabbed the cat and then

shoved its body under a fence.

Based on this information, Officer Phipps determined that there was probable cause to

arrest Burke for first degree animal cruelty. Officer Phipps placed Burke under arrest and had him

transported to Lewis County Jail.

Officer Phipps then went to the back of the apartment building and discovered that the cat’s

body had been removed from the fence and placed in a plastic garbage bag. Officer Phipps

removed the cat’s body from the bag and photographed its remains. Officer Phipps reported that

“[t]he only injury to the cat appeared to be to its head due to bleeding from the mouth and ears,”

and “[b]ecause of the blood I could not tell if there was a stab wound in its ears or not.” CP at 30.

Officer Phipps filled out an incident report detailing the facts set out above. His report

requested that this case be forwarded to the Lewis County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office.

B. PROSECUTOR’S OFFICE DECLINES TO FILE CHARGES

On April 29, the Lewis County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office sent a letter to the Centralia

Police Department, informing them that the prosecutor’s office was declining to file charges in

this case. In the letter, the prosecutor’s office explained that Burke’s “actions related to the

animal’s death are unclear, at best, and he denied even causing the death.” CP at 62. The letter

further explained that, “One account is that Mr. Burke stabbed the cat in the neck; however, when

Officer Phipps examined the cat’s body, he was not able to locate any stab wounds.” CP at 62.

3 No. 50285-2-II/ No. 50877-0-II

The letter also stated that the prosecutor’s office found the accounts of the three juvenile

witnesses to be the most credible and unbiased. However, those witness accounts “related that

another juvenile female caused the cat a substantial amount of suffering prior to Mr. Burke ever

becoming involved.” CP at 62. Specifically, the three juvenile witnesses stated that before Burke

arrived on scene, “the cat had been brutally squeezed, had been thrown or dropped from a second

story balcony at least twice, and had a stone dropped upon or thrown against its head.” CP at 62.

The prosecutor’s office stated that given these facts, it did not believe it would be possible to prove

to a jury beyond a reasonable doubt that Burke committed first degree animal cruelty.

The prosecutor’s office also cited the evidentiary issues in the case; namely, that the cat’s

body was not collected at the scene. Without the body, the prosecutor’s office would be unable to

show how the cat died. The letter explained that any effort to recover the cat’s body at this point

in the investigation would be fruitless because the cat’s body could have been tampered with since

the incident occurred.

The letter concluded, “What happened to this animal was deplorable, inhumane, and

without justification. Nevertheless, I cannot charge Mr. Burke with causing these harms without

solid evidence that he is the individual who caused them.” CP at 63.

4 No. 50285-2-II/ No. 50877-0-II

C. SUBSEQUENT INVOLVEMENT OF PRIVATE PARTIES

1. Barnes Michael Ware

Barnes Michael Ware is a retired police officer. His wife, Mary Ware,1 followed the

incident involving the cat on Lewis County Sirens.2 When Mary discovered that the cat’s body

had not been taken into evidence, she offered to take the cat and have him cremated.

On April 29, Ware and Mary went to the apartment complex to retrieve the cat’s body.

There, the two discovered that the cat’s body had already been removed from the trash and placed

into a garbage bag inside a cardboard box.3 Neither opened the box, but Ware had Schroeder

initial and date the box to show when he took charge of the box. Ware and Mary returned to their

residence and placed the box inside a spare refrigerator in their garage.

The next day, Ware met with Erika Johnson of Thurston County Animal Services at an

animal hospital in Olympia.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In re Citizen Complaint by Stout v. Felix
493 P.3d 1170 (Washington Supreme Court, 2021)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
420 P.3d 1083, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-petition-to-convene-a-grand-jury-barnes-michael-ware-washctapp-2018.