State Of Washington, Resp V. Michael Gary Erickson, App

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 25, 2024
Docket83758-3
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington, Resp V. Michael Gary Erickson, App (State Of Washington, Resp V. Michael Gary Erickson, App) 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
State Of Washington, Resp V. Michael Gary Erickson, App, (Wash. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 83758-3-I Respondent, DIVISION ONE v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION MICHAEL GARY ERICKSON,

Appellant.

CHUNG, J. — In 2018, 19-year-old college sophomore G.C. reported to

police that her former stepfather, Michael Erickson, sexually abused her between

2004 and 2009 when she was six to eleven years old. Following a mistrial,

Erickson was retried, and a jury convicted him on three counts of rape of a child

in the first degree and one count of child molestation in the first degree. He

appeals.

As to Erickson’s claim that his right to a unanimous jury was violated, we

agree that the State did not make an effective election as to counts 1 or 2 for

rape of a child and there was neither a Petrich instruction or effective election as

to count 4 for child molestation. However, we conclude these errors were

harmless. Erickson also challenges the court’s denial of his motion to continue

the case due to the COVID-19 pandemic as a denial of his constitutional right to

a fair trial. He contends the court violated his right to a public trial in several

different ways, as well as his right to be present during critical stages. He also No. 83758-3-I/2

challenges evidentiary rulings preventing cross-examination of a witness and

allowing improper character evidence about the victim, claiming these rulings

violated his constitutional rights under the confrontation clause and his right to

present a defense. Alternatively, he contends that his counsel was ineffective for

failing to raise constitutional arguments. Finding no error on any of these bases,

we affirm.

FACTS

G.C. was born on August 23, 1998, to Jessica Erickson and Torivio

Castaneda. Jessica 1 left Castaneda in 2000 and met Michael Erickson online in

2001. Erickson had a son born in 2000. Jessica and Erickson married, and they

had a son of their own in 2003. Jessica and Erickson alternated between day and

night shifts, mostly in the grocery store industry, so that one of them could be

with their children. They separated and divorced in 2009.

After she finished high school, G.C. went to Western Washington

University. In 2017, the fall of her sophomore year at university, G.C. told her

basketball coach that she had been abused. Her coach put her in touch with an

acquaintance, Claudia Ackerman, who was an advocate at Domestic Violence

and Sexual Assault Services in Bellingham, Washington. In 2018, Ackerman

contacted Lieutenant Claudia Murphy of the Bellingham Police department.

Murphy took G.C.’s complaint, and she referred her report and a transcript of

their conversation to the Arlington, Washington, police department for

investigation.

1 We refer to Jessica Erickson by her first name only for clarity as she shares the appellant’s

last name. We intend no disrespect.

2 No. 83758-3-I/3

The State first filed charges against Erickson in August 2018, then filed a

second amended information in November 2019. The second amended

information’s first three counts are identical to one another. They each allege

rape of a child in the first degree committed on “a specific date between on or

about the 23rd day of August, 2004, and on or about the 22nd day of August,

2010, in an act separate and distinct from those alleged in the other counts.”

Each of the three counts of rape of a child alleges Erickson “did have sexual

intercourse with GC.” The fourth count alleges child molestation in the first

degree. It alleges that “in an act separate and distinct from those alleged in the

other counts,” Erickson had “sexual contact with GC.”

Erickson’s first trial, in November 2019, ended in a mistrial. Rescheduled

for 2020, Erickson’s second trial was continued, primarily due to COVID-19. In

2021, Erickson sought a continuance until masks would no longer be necessary.

The court denied the motion.

Erickson’s second trial was held in November 2021. G.C. testified for two

days. She testified that when she was six years old, she and her family moved to

a townhome in Granite Falls, Washington, near the school she attended for first

and second grade. 2 G.C. testified that “this is when [Erickson] first started to

touch me.” She testified that “multiple times,” always on her parents’ bed at the

house in Granite Falls, “there were times when he would undress me and times

when I would undress myself” and “then he would eventually start touching me

on my vagina and use his mouth to touch me too.” G.C. said,

2 G.C. presented her testimony chronologically by where she was living and what grade

she was in, and she later linked her grade level to her age in years and thus the calendar year.

3 No. 83758-3-I/4

He would use his tongue, he would use his fingers, and he would penetrate me with his fingers too. . . . I remember how much it hurt, because of his fingernails going inside of me. And he would use his tongue on me too . . . he would move his tongue around, and I remember feeling his teeth on me too.

The State asked, “was there more than one time that he put his fingers in

you and more than one time that he put his mouth on you?” and G.C. answered

“yes.” The State asked G.C. to clarify whether Erickson put his tongue outside or

inside her vagina, to which she answered, “Inside and outside.” G.C. testified that

there were instances when she put a pillow over her face as she lay on her back,

and there were instances when Erickson put a pillow on her face. At one point,

the State asked G.C. to clarify her memory of “the discomfort or the pain from his

fingernails and the scratching, in or on what part of your body?”, and she

answered, “Inside of my vagina.” At least one time, G.C. testified, Erickson put

“oily stuff” on her “vagina but also on the surrounding area of [her] body” that she

now recognized as “lube.”

When she was seven years old, in the middle of second grade, G.C. and

her family moved to a duplex in Arlington. G.C. testified that Erickson did a lot of

things to her at this house: “I mean, there’s a lot.” “[T]o try to keep this in smaller

chunks,” the State then asked her about different types of activity, such as

playing games. G.C. testified that Erickson played a card game with her where

“every time you lost, you had to take your clothes off,” and “then I remember that

leading into something more after that game.” Asked about the general category

of games or activities that weren’t “overtly sexual in nature,” G.C. described

4 No. 83758-3-I/5

during family movie nights, Erickson “would have [her] clip his toenails and his

cuticles,” shave his back hair, and pop his back pimples.

Asked about other instances of role-playing games, G.C. testified that he

tried to hypnotize her, and she went along with it and “was pretending to be

under hypnotic state.” Erickson told her to pretend she was trying on clothes in a

mall and that “[she] needed to take [her] clothes off in order to try [her] new

clothes on,” so she pretended she was in a changing room, “twirling around in

front of him,” while naked or mostly naked.

G.C. also testified that at the Arlington house, she remembered him

“doing doctor,” which entailed “[h]im checking me down in my private areas”

while she was “laying on the bed, and he would be checking me - - or saying he

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