State of Washington v. Adam Wesley Pevan

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedOctober 17, 2023
Docket57286-9
StatusUnpublished

This text of State of Washington v. Adam Wesley Pevan (State of Washington v. Adam Wesley Pevan) 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 v. Adam Wesley Pevan, (Wash. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

October 17, 2023

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 57286-9-II

Respondent,

v.

ADAM WESLEY PEVAN, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Appellant.

CRUSER, A.C.J. — Adam Wesley Pevan appeals his conviction for attempted second

degree burglary. Pevan argues that the prosecutor committed misconduct by (1) impermissibly

commenting on his silence, (2) shifting the burden to Pevan, (3) misstating the evidence in the

State’s favor, and (4) improperly bolstering State witnesses. He further argues that the cumulative

effect of repeated improper comments warrant reversal even if each instance does not alone merit

reversal. Pevan also claims ineffective assistance of counsel and asks that we remand for the court

to strike his $500 crime victim penalty assessment (VPA).

We affirm Pevan’s conviction because the claims of misconduct were waived. This is so

because Pevan failed to object below and the arguments Pevan identifies were not actually

improper, and even if they were improper Pevan cannot show that he was prejudiced by the

prosecutor’s comments. Furthermore, Pevan has not demonstrated cumulative misconduct

warranting reversal. However, we remand for the trial court to reconsider whether to waive Pevan’s

$500 VPA. No. 57286-9-II

FACTS

On December 5, 2021, Aaron Armga was awakened around 4:00 AM by an alert from his

business’ security camera. When he watched the recording, he saw someone at the back door of

his business wearing dark clothing and carrying a gray backpack. The person was wearing a mask

and hood, and their face was not visible. Armga then watched the camera’s live feed and saw the

individual trying to open the back door of the business, but this portion of the video was not

recorded or saved to Armga’s phone. Armga’s wife called the police while Armga drove to the

business to investigate.

Upon arriving at the business, Armga did not see anyone at the back door, but saw a woman

nearby. He confronted the woman and they spoke briefly. Then, he saw a man elsewhere in the

business park who was wearing dark clothes and a mask and carrying a gray backpack. Armga

thought the man looked like the person he saw on his security video, so Armga confronted the

man. Armga told the man that police were on the way, and the man fled. At this point, Armga had

not seen the back door, but he later returned and found that it was damaged.

Officer Nissen, the only on-duty officer of Yelm Police Department, soon arrived. The first

person he saw was Brianna Faulkner, a woman he recognized, and he began questioning Faulkner.

Then, Nissen saw a man dressed in dark clothing running toward the post office carrying a

backpack. He then saw Armga, who approached him, showed him the video recording, and

directed him to the area where Armga had last seen the man. Nissen then called for backup

including K9 assistance and perimeter units.

Thurston County Deputy Devin Bagby and tracking dog Jaxx responded to the scene. Jaxx

was introduced to the scent at the back door of Armga’s business and commanded to track the

2 No. 57286-9-II

person who last touched the door. Bagby chose the back door because it was “uncontaminated”

meaning no other odor had been introduced after the suspect tampered with the door. Verbatim

Report of Proceedings (VRP) at 416. Jaxx led the officers to the post office parking lot and toward

two people, who Nissen recognized from past contacts as Pevan and Faulkner. Pevan was wearing

black and Faulkner was carrying the gray backpack. Deputy Bagby shouted at them to stop, and

they complied. Faulkner discarded the backpack before she and Pevan walked toward the officers.

When Jaxx was about ten feet away from Faulkner and Pevan, he barked at them to signal

he had found the odor he was tracking. Bagby then led Jaxx to the backpack, and Jaxx indicated

that the person being tracked had handled the backpack. Officer Nissen searched the backpack and

found “[b]olt cutters, a hammer, two small pocket knives, a socket wrench, and a flashlight.” Id.

at 349. He also found Faulkner’s credit cards, cosmetics, blank checks, and a check made out to

Pevan. After searching the backpack, Nissen placed Pevan and Faulkner under arrest.

The State charged Pevan with attempted second degree burglary. Pevan declared that he

did not have money to hire a private attorney and was found indigent for purposes of appointing

counsel.

Pevan’s case proceeded to trial, where Pevan rested his case without presenting any

witnesses or introducing any evidence. In closing, Pevan focused on the possible contamination of

the back door and how that would impact Jaxx’s ability to track accurately. The State made the

following argument without objection from defense counsel:

[I]f at any time I misstate or reference something that’s not in agreement collectively with your memory or notes, it is not intentional. Please defer to your memory and notes.

Id. at 467.

3 No. 57286-9-II

Again, you are the sole judges of the credibility of those witnesses and what interest they may have. I would argue they came in and did the best they could.

Id. (emphasis added).

So I’d ask you to consider the evidence and only the evidence that was presented to you, not our argument, not maybes, not could haves, who knows. That’s not what you evaluate. You evaluate the evidence.

Id. at 491-92.

What we say is not evidence. How many maybes did [defense counsel] use? Maybe. That’s not what the evidence was. Could be. That’s not what the evidence was.

The evidence before you is that Mr. Armga saw an individual dressed exactly like the defendant was dressed wearing the backpack that he, when he confronted him, still had on his [security] video.

Id. at 488.

Officer Nissen comes and does the best job he can under the circumstances. He talked about it. Yelm police has low resources right now. There’s nobody else. He had to receive some assistance. A perimeter was set up.

Id. at 478-79 (emphasis added).

You can have multiple human odor sources on a particular item, and his dog, Jaxx, is trained to differentiate between them. That’s the evidence that you’ll find. You don’t have evidence of anything other than that.

Id. at 472 (emphasis added).

[Bagby] even testified there could be multiple odor sources. He testified to that. And the olfactory abilities of his dog allows his dog to differentiate. That’s the only evidence you have, nothing to the contrary. That is the only evidence you have in regards to K9 Jaxx.

Id. at 490 (emphasis added).

Deputy Bagby [(handler)] said uncontaminated. The last known uncontaminated area where the suspect was was at the back door. When did Mr. Armga say he went to the back door? We know he went when he came back, saw the damage. He testified to that. He testified that when he got there, he actually confronted the individual that he saw on the video still dressed in all black wearing the backpack.

4 No. 57286-9-II

You don’t have any other evidence than that, none. And he runs away exactly where Jaxx goes, not where Ms. Faulkner went. Where the individual dressed in black wearing the backpack went is where Jaxx went. You have no evidence of where Ms. Faulkner went. You have all the evidence of where the man dressed in black later identified as Mr. Pevan went. It’s exactly where Jaxx went.

Id. at 489 (emphasis added).

Mr.

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State of Washington v. Adam Wesley Pevan, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-washington-v-adam-wesley-pevan-washctapp-2023.