Personal Restraint Petition Of Michael Lynn Sublett

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMay 10, 2016
Docket45972-8
StatusUnpublished

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Personal Restraint Petition Of Michael Lynn Sublett, (Wash. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

May 10, 2016

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II IN RE THE PERSONAL RESTAINT No. 45972-8-II PETITION OF:

MICHAEL LYNN SUBLETT, UNPUBLISHED OPINION Petitioner.

SUTTON, J. — Michael Lynn Sublett petitions for relief from personal restraint imposed

following his conviction for first degree murder. Sublett asserts in his personal restraint petition

(PRP) that we should reverse his conviction and remand for a new trial because (1) the State

committed prosecutorial misconduct by including a PowerPoint slide in its closing argument with

the word “guilty” in red capital letters over his booking photograph, (2) the State deprived him of

due process and violated his right to participate in his defense by forcing him to wear a stun device

without a hearing regarding its necessity, (3) he was denied his right to testify because his attorney

failed to move to reopen testimony after closing arguments when Sublett informed his attorney

that he wanted to testify, (4) he is factually innocent of the two prior California convictions and

the actual innocence doctrine should apply, and (5) he was denied effective assistance of counsel

on three different occasions.

We hold that (1) Sublett was not prejudiced by any prosecutorial misconduct, (2) he was

not denied his right to due process or right to participate in his trial by being forced to wear a stun

device without an evidentiary hearing, (3) he fails to present competent evidence that he was

1 No. 45972-8-II

denied the right to testify, (4) he does not meet his burden of showing by clear and convincing

evidence that he is factually innocent of the prior California convictions or that the actual

innocence doctrine applies, and (5) he was not denied effective assistance of trial counsel.

Therefore, we deny Sublett’s personal restraint petition.

FACTS

The State charged Sublett with first degree murder or, in the alternative, first degree felony

murder.1 During closing argument at his trial, the State presented a PowerPoint slide that included

Sublett’s and Christopher Olsen’s, Sublett’s codefendant, booking photographs with the word

“guilty” typed across the pictures in red capital letters. Surrounding the photographs were arrows

pointing to the photographs with descriptive summary words of the evidence presented, like

“FLIGHT,” “MOTIVE,” and “PLANNING,” at the end of each arrow. Olsen objected to the slide

because the booking photographs had not been admitted into evidence.2 The State removed it from

the screen at the trial court’s request.

The jury found Sublett guilty of first degree murder. At sentencing, the trial court found

Sublett to be a persistent offender under the Persistent Offender Accountability Act3 (POAA)

1 The substantive facts of Sublett’s charge and conviction are not at issue in this restraint petition, but those facts may be found in our Supreme Court’s opinion affirming Sublett’s conviction after his direct appeal. State v. Sublett, 176 Wn.2d 58, 292 P.3d 715 (2012). 2 Olsen also objected to his unaltered booking photo, which the prosecutor presented at the beginning of his presentation in a different slide. Sublett does not assign error to the slide with the unaltered booking photograph. 3 RCW 9.94A.570.

2 No. 45972-8-II

because he had previously been convicted of robbery in California on at least two other occasions,

which is a “most serious offense” felony. Resp. to PRP, App. A at 5.

Sublett appealed his conviction and, in a consolidated case with Olsen’s appeal, Division

One of this court affirmed. State v. Sublett, 156 Wn. App. 160, 231 P.3d 231 (2010), aff’d 176

Wn.2d 58 (2012). Our Supreme Court affirmed his conviction and mandated his case on February

12, 2013. State v. Sublett, 176 Wn.2d 58, 292 P.3d 715 (2012). Sublett timely filed this personal

restraint petition (PRP).

Sublett submitted a personal declaration with his PRP. First, Sublett asserts that he was

forced to wear a shock device during trial without a hearing on whether the device was necessary.

He states that he told his trial attorney he did not want to wear the device and that wearing it made

him unable to concentrate or adequately communicate with his attorney because he was afraid of

being shocked. Second, Sublett asserts that he is actually innocent of the trial court’s POAA

finding because he did not commit the two crimes of robbery in California because he did not

threaten to harm the person from whom he stole money. Finally, Sublett declares that his attorney

did not tell him that two previous California robbery convictions would qualify as “strikes” if he

did not take the State’s offered plea deal, in which the State agreed it would not attempt to treat

those convictions as strikes during sentencing. Decl. of Sublett at ¶ 3. Sublett asserts that he

would have taken the plea deal if he had known this information.

In considering his PRP, we ordered that Sublett’s petition be transferred to Thurston

County Superior Court for a reference hearing on several of Sublett’s claims of error because he

raises factual issues that could not be determined on the limited record before us. We asked the

superior court to address the following questions:

3 No. 45972-8-II

(1) Did the State offer Sublett a plea bargain in which the State agreed that it would not ask the trial court during sentencing to count Sublett’s 1984 and 1985 California robbery convictions as “strikes” for the purpose of a persistent offender finding under the persistent offender statute, RCW 9.94A.570? (2) If so, did Sublett’s counsel advise Sublett of the State’s offer and the potential consequences of Washington’s persistent offender statute as it applies to Sublett’s 1984 and 1985 California robbery convictions? (3) Was Sublett wearing a stun belt during trial? (4) If so, did Sublett raise the stun belt issue with the court and was it visible to the jury? (5) Did the stun belt interfere with Sublett’s ability to consult with, or to assist his counsel at trial, or have any other effect on Sublett or his exercise of any other rights? If so, what was the effect? (6) Did Sublett tell his counsel about the stun belt and ask whether the stun belt could be removed? If so, did Sublett’s counsel object or otherwise bring the stun belt issue to the trial court’s attention? (7) If defense counsel did not object to the stun belt, did counsel make a tactical decision to not do so? If so, why?

Order Transferring Petition For Reference Hearing Opinion at 3 (July 2, 2015).

The superior court held the reference hearing on September 23, 2015, and the following

witnesses testified: Michael Sublett; David Soukup, a former Thurston County Deputy Prosecutor;

David Bruneau, a former Thurston County Deputy Prosecutor and lead attorney in the case;

Charles Lane, Sublett’s attorney during the entire case below; Scott Jackson, a Thurston County

Prosecuting Attorney who second-chaired the trial; retired Thurston County Trial Court Judge

Christine Pomeroy, who presided over the trial; and Sgt. Timothy Mills, Thurston County Sheriff’s

Office. Verbatim Report of Proceedings (VRP) (September 23, 2015). After the hearing, the

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