State Of Washington, Respondent/cross-appellant v. Sassan Mehrabian, Appellant/cross

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 25, 2013
Docket68138-9
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington, Respondent/cross-appellant v. Sassan Mehrabian, Appellant/cross (State Of Washington, Respondent/cross-appellant v. Sassan Mehrabian, Appellant/cross) 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, Respondent/cross-appellant v. Sassan Mehrabian, Appellant/cross, (Wash. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, ) NO. 68138-9-1 ) Respondent, ) DIVISION ONE ) v. ) ) SASSAN MEHRABIAN, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) Appellant. ) FILED: March 25, 2013 _____________________________________________________________)

LAu, J.- A jury convicted Sassan Mehrabian of five counts of first degree theft,

one count of attempted first degree theft, and one count of witness tampering. He

appeals the judgment and sentence, claiming that (1) the trial court erred in finding that

he unequivocally waived his right to counsel, (2) count l's "to convict" instruction

improperly permitted the jury to convict him of acts committed beyond the statute of

limitations, (3) insufficient evidence supports his theft convictions, and (4) two first

degree theft convictions constitute the same criminal conduct. The State cross appeals

the trial court's failure to include Mehrabian's 1992 first degree theft conviction in his

offender score. Viewing the record as a whole, Mehrabian unequivocally waived his

right to counsel. His remaining arguments lack merit. We affirm the jury convictions,

but because the trial court improperly excluded Mehrabian's prior theft conviction from

his offender score, we remand for resentencing consistent with this opinion. 68138-9-1/2

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The City of Woodinville hired Sassan Mehrabian as its information technology

(IT) manager in 2000. Mehrabian's supervisors, Deborah Knight and Jim Katica, were

unaware that he ran a side business dealing in computer equipment. As IT manager,

Mehrabian was solely responsible to buy and inventory new computer equipment. The

City's extensive written purchasing policies required Mehrabian to provide three

competitive bids and obtain approval from his supervisors before purchasing computer

equipment. City policy prohibited employees from engaging in business with the City-

either themselves or through their companies-without first disclosing the arrangement.

Despite this prohibition, Mehrabian bought computer equipment on eBay, using

third party vendor GeekDeal to invoice himself at the City for similar equipment at a

substantial markup. The City paid GeekDeal, which would then pass the money on to

Mehrabian. On several occasions, Mehrabian either invented price quotes to support

his purchases or forged invoices from GeekDeal. He also delivered to the City

equipment inferior to what his supervisors approved, equipment not under warranty, or

no equipment at all. The City discovered Mehrabian's scheme after he left City

employment in 2008. The City contacted police when it inventoried its equipment and

discovered discrepancies between the equipment it thought it had and the equipment it

actually had.

The State charged Mehrabian by third amended information with five counts of

first degree theft (counts I, IV, V, VII, and VIII), one count of attempted first degree theft

-2- 68138-9-1/3

(count VI), and one count of witness tampering (count 111). 1 The jury convicted

Mehrabian as charged on all counts.

ANALYSIS

Waiver of Right to Counsel

Mehrabian contends he was denied his state and federal constitutional right to

counsel. The State responds that Mehrabian repeatedly demanded to represent himself

and the request was unequivocal in light of the entire record.

Relevant Facts

Mehrabian expressed his dissatisfaction with counsel on December 17, 2010,

during a hearing before Judge Palmer Robinson. At that time, Mehrabian was

represented by public defender Paul Vernon. Mehrabian told the court that he wanted a

new lawyer or to hire private counsel because he and counsel did not agree on trial

strategy and because counsel failed to obtain documents necessary to his defense. He

also objected to his counsel's repeated requests for continuances. He stated that he

lacked "confidence in ... the public defenders' office trying [to] represent [him]." Judge

Robinson denied Mehrabian's request to dismiss Vernon as counsel but made no ruling

on whether Mehrabian could hire private counsel.

On February 25, 2011, Mehrabian appeared before Judge Ronald Kessler with

retained counsel Jon Zulauf. Mehrabian requested that Zulauf be allowed to substitute

for appointed counsel Vernon. Vernon joined in Mehrabian's request, stating that his

relationship with Mehrabian was "problematic" and would only get worse at trial. Judge

Kessler granted the motion and continued the trial date to enable Zulauf to prepare but

1 Mehrabian does not challenge his witness tampering conviction on appeal.

-3- 68138-9-1/4

also warned Mehrabian that "[t]here will be no other[] [substitutions of counsel]." The

case proceeded to trial before Judge Richard Eadie in May 2011. Shortly after trial

began, the court granted the defense's motion for mistrial due to a death in Zulaufs

family. At another hearing before Judge Eadie on June 28, 2011, Zulauf indicated that

Mehrabian wished to discharge counsel and proceed pro se. Judge Eadie conducted

an extensive colloquy regarding Mehrabian's request. During the colloquy, Mehrabian

answered "yes" when the court asked if he wanted to represent himself at trial. Judge

Eadie warned Mehrabian that he had no constitutional right to standby counsel. When

asked why he wanted to proceed pro se, Mehrabian explained that he knew the case

better than anyone else did. He stated:

All the intricacies involved with this case is known to me and me only because I've studied those 900-something pages, page-by-page, and I know them by heart because I've had close to two years to study them. And as the Court is aware, I had every intention for Mr. Zulauf to represent me, but those few days I noticed that Mr. Zulauf is missing out on many of those little details that I wholeheartedly believe that are crucial during the question and answer procedures. And it was rather nerve-wracking for me to sit here and see Mr. Zulauf not asking those appropriate questions .... And honestly, with my financial resources completely depleted because of this case for three and a half years, you know, shattering my life, not being able to work a full-time job, you know, at any place ... so that's the only option that I'm left with.

Judge Eadie asked Mehrabian whether he knew he could have counsel

appointed at public expense. Mehrabian responded that had no faith in, and did not

want, a public defender. Specifically, he stated:

I started with that, unfortunately I didn't see the ... the ethical and dedication on my attorney's behalf for putting a battle for my side of the story. He was far more interested in entering into some sort of plea bargain than anything else. And, you know, through my investigation I found out that's what the Public Defender does. They just do, you know, primarily do plea bargains. So I lost my faith in Mr. Vernon.

-4- 68138-9-1/5

He continued, "The Public Defenders don't put up a fight, you know, that Defendants

expect from their attorneys."

Judge Eadie advised Mehrabian that he would be better off with a lawyer and

strongly urged him not to represent himself. Judge Eadie then asked, "Now in light of

the penalties that you might suffer if you were found guilty and in light of all of the

difficulties of representing yourself, is it still your desire to represent yourself and give up

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