Richard Lee, App. v. City Of Seattle, Seattle Police Department, Res.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMay 14, 2018
Docket75815-2
StatusUnpublished

This text of Richard Lee, App. v. City Of Seattle, Seattle Police Department, Res. (Richard Lee, App. v. City Of Seattle, Seattle Police Department, Res.) 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
Richard Lee, App. v. City Of Seattle, Seattle Police Department, Res., (Wash. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

RICHARD LEE, ) rs, C:t ) DIVISION ONE co JP" — Appellant, ) rn ) No. 75815-2-1 -xi v. ) ) aris =)›.— CITY OF SEATTLE, SEATTLE POLICE) =r- DEPARTMENT, COURTNEY LOVE ) dt. Mtf)

COBAIN, and FRANCES BEAN ) OM.

=

COBAIN, ) ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION Respondents, ) ) and ) ) COURTNEY LOVE COBAIN and ) FRANCES BEAN COBAIN, ) ) Cross-Claimants, ) ) v. ) ) CITY OF SEATTLE, SEATTLE POLICE) DEPARTMENT, ) ) Cross-Claim Defendants. ) FILED: May 14, 2018 )

DWYER, J. — Richard Lee appeals from the trial court's order granting

summary judgment in favor of the City of Seattle and the Seattle Police

Department(collectively the City). On appeal, Lee contends that the trial court

erred by concluding that the photographs and documents that he requested were

exempt from disclosure. Also at issue is the trial court's order granting summary No. 75815-2-1/2

judgment in favor of cross-claimants Courtney Love Cobain and Frances Bean

Cobain (the Cobains) and permanently enjoining the City from disclosing,

disseminating, releasing, or distributing any death-scene photographs not

previously disclosed. We affirm the trial court's orders.

Kurt Cobain, the lead singer of-the band "Nirvana," was discovered dead

on April 8, 1994., The City investigated Mr. Cobain's death, took numerous

photographs of his body, and concluded that the cause of death was a self-

inflicted gunshot wound.

Richard Lee is a local conspiracy theorist who believes that Mr. Cobain

was murdered. Lee visited Mr. Cobain's residence on the day that his body was

discovered and subsequently began creating news and documentary material for

his public access television program. Lee aired his first broadcast concerning

Mr. Cobain's death five days after the discovery of his body. Since then, Lee has

devoted hundreds of hours to covering what he believes to be the murder of Mr.

Cobain. Lee has made numerous requests to the City for documents related to

the death of Mr. Cobain.

In 2014, the City asked cold-case Detective Michael Ciesynski to review

the investigative file on Mr. Cobain's death. Ciesynski located four undeveloped

rolls of film in the police file and subsequently had them developed.1 Most of

these photographs contained death-scene images of Mr. Cobain's body.

I Ciesynski stated in his declaration that it is not unusual to find undeveloped film in old case files, particularly when the case did not lead to criminal charges.

- 2- No. 75815-2-1/3

Following his review, Ciesynski concluded that the determination of suicide was

correct.

On March 20, 2014, Lee submitted a Public Records Act2(PRA) request,

seeking the entirety of the Cobain investigative file. The City provided two

installments of records to Lee. It first furnished him with 37 photographs from the

investigative file and later provided him with the remaining documents in the file.

The City also sent Lee an exemption log that explained which documents or

portions of documents the City had withheld from production and the reasons for

exemption or redaction.

Lee sued the City on March 31, 2014. That lawsuit was dismissed on

procedural grounds on July 31, 2015. That same day, Lee filed a new PRA

request for "ANY AND ALL DOCUMENTS RELATED TO the March, 2014 effort

to 'reopen' or 'examine'[]the Kurt D. Cobain death case, including of course,

ALL OF THE PHOTOGRAPHIC EVIDENCE in this case." The City responded

by providing Lee with the same documents that it had provided pursuant to the

March 20, 2014 request, as well as a copy of the exemption log.3

On April 15, 2016, the Cobains were granted intervention in this suit. The

City and the Cobains moved for summary judgment on the question of whether

the death-scene photographs should be disclosed. The City sought a ruling that

the death-scene images were exempt from disclosure pursuant to the PRA, RCW

42.56.240(1).4 The Cobains sought to permanently enjoin the City from releasing

2 Ch. 42.56 RCW. 3 On March 16, 2016, the City released five additional photographs that were taken in June 2015 and placed in the investigative file in March 2016. 4 That statute exempts from public inspection:

- 3- No. 75815-2-1/4

the death-scene images pursuant to their privacy rights under Washington

common law and the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.

The trial court granted both motions. The trial court ruled that the

disclosure of the death-scene photographs would violate the Cobains'

substantive due process rights under the Fourteenth Amendment. The trial court

also ruled that the death-scene photographs were exempt under the PRA.5 The

trial court also granted the City's subsequent motion for summary judgment,

concluding that the other documents withheld or redacted by the City were

categorically exempt from disclosure. Lee appeals.

As a preliminary matter, it is prudent to discuss the import of the trial

court's due process holding.

A

Pursuant to the Rules of Appellate Procedure(RAP), an appellant must

designate in the notice of appeal the decision or part of decision that the party

wants reviewed. RAP 5.3(a)(3). A party's appellate briefing must include a

"separate concise statement of each error a party contends was made by the trial

court, together with the issues pertaining to the assignments of error," as well as

"argument in support of the issues presented for review, together with citations to

Specific intelligence information and specific investigative records complied by investigative, law enforcement, and penology agencies, and state agencies vested with the responsibility to discipline members of any profession, the nondisclosure of which is essential to effective law enforcement or for the protection of any person's right to privacy. 5 The trial court incorporated its oral ruling into its written orders.

-4- No. 75815-2-1/5

legal authority and references to relevant parts of the record." RAP 10.3(a)(4),

(6).

A party's failure to assign error to an issue, by itself, does not necessarily

result in our refusal to consider that issue. State v. Olson, 126 Wn.2d 315, 320,

893 P.2d 629(1995). Indeed,"RAP 1.2(a) makes clear that technical violation of

the rules will not ordinarily bar appellate review, where justice is to be served by

such review... where the nature of the challenge is perfectly clear, and the

challenged finding is set forth in the appellate brief." Daughtry v. Jet Aeration

Co., 91 Wn.2d 704, 710, 592 P.2d 631 (1979).

However,"a complete failure of the appellant to raise the issue in any way

at all—neither in the assignments of error, in the argument portion of the brief,

nor in the requested relief' may entirely preclude appellate court consideration of

the issue. Olson, 126 Wn.2d at 320-21. Our Supreme Court has noted that this

narrow rule

makes perfect sense because in the situation where the issue is not raised at all, the court is unable to properly consider the issue prior to the hearing and is given no information on which to decide the issue following the hearing.

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