Personal Restraint Petition Of Thomas T. Nissen

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJanuary 21, 2026
Docket60089-7
StatusUnpublished

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Personal Restraint Petition Of Thomas T. Nissen, (Wash. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

January 21, 2026

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II In the Matter of the Personal Restraint of No. 60089-7-II

THOMAS TOREN NISSEN, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Appellant.

GLASGOW, J.—13-year-old HA accused Thomas Nissen, her aunt’s fiancé, of touching her

inappropriately on multiple occasions. HA’s mother reported Nissen to law enforcement. Law

enforcement officers interviewed HA twice. The officers then confronted Nissen with HA’s

accusations in an interview. Nissen admitted to two instances of touching but said that he did not

remember any others, and he told the officers he was an alcoholic. The last 10 minutes of his

interview, including Nissen’s admissions, were recorded. Nissen was arrested and charged with 1

count of first degree child molestation, 1 count of second degree child molestation, and 1 count of

second degree rape of a child.

In the month before trial was set to begin, while Nissen’s defense counsel was negotiating

a possible plea deal with the State, the parties became aware of three new allegations against

Nissen involving three new victims. Two weeks before trial, the State moved to amend the

information to add the new charges, defense counsel agreed, and defense counsel moved to

continue trial. Defense counsel told the court that she and her investigator were completely

unprepared for trial, and she hoped to reach a plea resolution with the State on all of the charges No. 60089-7-II

against Nissen. The trial court denied the motion to amend and the motion to continue. The State

instead filed a separate information with the new charges.

On the Friday evening before the week of trial on the charges in this case, defense counsel

presented Nissen with a plea offer that would have resolved all of his charges. Nissen rejected the

deal. The following Monday, he told defense counsel he had changed his mind and he wanted to

accept the offer. The next day, the morning of trial, defense counsel tried to enter the plea for

Nissen but the State rejected the attempt, saying its offer had expired. Trial proceeded as scheduled

for the charges involving HA.

At the State’s behest, the trial court instructed the jury that voluntary intoxication was not

a defense to the charges. Defense counsel did not object to the State’s requested instruction and

did not ask to add that voluntary intoxication could be considered when determining if Nissen had

the requisite mental state to commit child molestation. The jury found Nissen guilty on all three

counts, and the jury found a special “pattern of abuse” aggravator for the two molestation charges.

Defense counsel raised no mitigating information for Nissen at sentencing. Nissen was

sentenced concurrently to an indeterminate sentence on the three counts, with a minimum of 240

months—an exceptional sentence 110 months above the standard range for his first degree child

molestation charge.

Nissen appealed, arguing, among other things, that the trial court erred when it gave the

jury an incomplete instruction on voluntary intoxication and that his counsel was ineffective

because she failed to object to the incomplete instruction. This court affirmed.

Nissen now brings a timely personal restraint petition. He claims defense counsel provided

ineffective assistance of counsel at the investigation, plea bargaining, trial, and sentencing stages

2 No. 60089-7-II

of his case. His petition includes an expert opinion that the investigating officers failed to follow

best practices when interviewing HA and Nissen, potential flaws that defense counsel did not

pursue. Another expert opinion points out instances where defense counsel did not comply with

standards for representation of criminal defendants, including during sentencing. Nissen also

claims that the trial court erred when it denied motions to amend the information and to continue

trial, and he claims that his sentence is cruel because it is disproportionate.

We deny Nissen’s petition and decline to order a reference hearing because for each of

Nissen’s claims his arguments fail as a matter of law, he has failed to provide adequate evidence

to support his claim, or he has failed to establish the required prejudice.

FACTS

I. BACKGROUND

In April 2020, 13-year-old HA told a friend that her aunt’s fiancé, Thomas Nissen, had

touched her inappropriately. HA alleged that the touching had occurred regularly over the past

several years when she visited her aunt and Nissen’s house to spend time with her cousins. HA’s

friend’s family alerted HA’s mother, who reported the allegations to the Grays Harbor County

Sheriff’s Department.

Sheriff’s Deputy Dave Iverson spoke to HA and her mother at their home. Our record does

not contain the recording of the deputy’s conversation with HA, nor was it admitted at trial. But

Nissen’s personal restraint petition counsel apparently provided an audio recording of the

interview to Dr. Daniel Reisberg, an “expert on interview techniques and human memory.” Pers.

Restraint Pet. (PRP) at 44. According to Dr. Reisberg, Iverson’s interview failed to follow best

practices for interviewing children in several ways. Dr. Reisberg explains that Iverson interviewed

3 No. 60089-7-II

HA with her mother present. Dr. Reisberg states that Iverson did not begin by establishing “ground

rules” with HA that she should ask for clarification if any questions were unclear or correct him if

he mischaracterized her answers. App. to Pers. Restraint Pet. (App.) at 73.

Dr. Reisberg also states that Iverson asked many “yes/no” questions that contained

suggestions. App. at 73. Most notably, he says that Iverson introduced several major points

regarding the touching into the conversation for the first time. Dr. Reisberg reports that when HA

said that Nissen touched her “‘just down and up there,’” . . . [Iverson] offer[ed] his own

interpretation: “‘Your vaginal area[?]’” App. at 74. Dr. Reisberg reports that Iverson also asked,

“‘Did he stick his finger in you at all?’” to which HA gave “a clear ‘no.’” Id.

Based on what HA and her mother told the deputy, the sheriff’s department began an

investigation. Detectives Steve Beck and Paul Logan set up and recorded a call where HA’s mother

confronted Nissen with HA’s allegations. Although this recording is not in our record, the parties

agree that Nissen denied the allegations on the confrontation call.

Beck and Logan conducted a second interview with HA after the confrontation call. Dr.

Reisberg states that HA’s mother was also present during this interview. Our record does not

contain a recording of this conversation, but Nissen provided an audio recording to Dr. Reisberg.

Again, Dr. Reisberg notes that the officers did not set ground rules at the beginning of the

interview. Dr. Reisberg reports that the officers again asked HA suggestive yes/no questions:

“‘When you say touching you, you mean . . . your vagina?’”; and “‘skin on skin?’” App. at 75. Dr.

Reisberg states that this time, when the officers asked, “‘At any time, did his fingers penetrate your

vagina?’” HA answered affirmatively. Id.

4 No. 60089-7-II

After this conversation with HA, Beck and Logan approached Nissen at his workplace to

interview him. The detectives spoke with Nissen for about an hour and 20 minutes in a conference

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