State Of Washington, V Albert William Mcgregor

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 4, 2019
Docket51229-7
StatusUnpublished

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Bluebook
State Of Washington, V Albert William Mcgregor, (Wash. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

June 4, 2019 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 51229-7-II

Respondent,

v.

ALBERT WILLIAM MCGREGOR, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Appellant.

WORSWICK, P.J. — Albert William McGregor appeals from his second degree arson

conviction and sentence, contending that (1) his defense counsel was ineffective for failing to

object to testimony regarding other suspicious fires in the area, (2) the State violated his due

process right by eliciting testimony commenting on his right to silence and right to counsel, (3)

the trial court erred by imposing discretionary legal financial obligations (LFOs) absent an

inquiry of his ability to pay the discretionary LFOs, and (4) cumulative error denied his right to a

fair trial. We affirm McGregor’s conviction but remand for the trial court to reconsider the

imposition of discretionary LFOs.

FACTS

On October 30, 2016, Hoquiam police and firefighters responded to a house fire at 502

Karr Street. While firefighters were extinguishing the fire, a police officer saw a second house

fire down the block at 459 Emerson Avenue. The fire in the house at 459 Emerson Avenue was

located in an alcove near the kitchen; firefighters entered the property and extinguished the fire. No. 51229-7-II

While investigating the fire at 459 Emerson Avenue, Hoquiam Police Detective Donald

Grossi saw a can of WD-40 in the backyard near the back door of the garage. The WD-40 can

had a straw attached and was pointed toward some burn marks on the door of the garage.

Hoquiam Police Officer Philip High saw a dry cigarette butt on wet grass in the yard. Police

collected the WD-40 can and the cigarette butt and sent the items to the Washington State Patrol

Crime Lab for testing. The crime lab found McGregor’s DNA on the cigarette butt and

McGregor’s palm print on the WD-40 can.

Hoquiam police officers arrested McGregor at his residence and transported him to the

police station. McGregor agreed to speak with Sergeant Shane Krohn after being advised of his

Miranda1 rights. Sergeant Krohn asked McGregor if he knew about four or five suspicious fires

in the area that had occurred over a six month period. McGregor said that he became aware the

fires at 502 Karr and 459 Emerson after hearing sirens and coming out of his home at 520 Karr

Street to see what was going on.

McGregor initially denied being on the property at 459 Emerson. But after Krohn told

McGregor that police had found the cigarette butt containing his DNA, McGregor stated that he

and his wife had looked at the property because it was for sale. McGregor told Krohn that he

and his wife had walked to the backyard of the property through a gate.

When Sergeant Krohn asked McGregor why his palm prints were found at the property,

McGregor stated that he recently had some tools stolen from his porch. Krohn asked if any

aerosol flammable liquid containers had been stolen, and McGregor said, “[N]o.” Verbatim

Report of Proceedings (Nov. 7, 2017) at 38.

1 Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436, 86 S. Ct. 1602, 16 L. Ed. 2d 694 (1966).

2 No. 51229-7-II

The State charged McGregor with second degree arson based on the fire at the back door

of the garage at 459 Emerson Avenue; the State did not allege that McGregor caused the fire in

the kitchen of the house at 459 Emerson or that he caused the fire at 502 Karr Street.

Before trial, the parties noted their agreement regarding evidence of the fires for which

McGregor was not charged, stating:

[Defense counsel]: . . . [T]here were other—there are four other fires in the area, in the immediate area of this particular property, 459 Emerson, and we have agreed not to have any reference or discussion about all these other fires, except for the—the address, the 502[ Karr Street]. [State]: Right. So, the only discussion of any other fire would be that at the time that they discovered this fire at 459 Emerson, fire fighters [sic] and police were working on another fire across the street at 502 Karr, and one of the officers heard an alarm, and they went over and saw a fire burning in the kitchen area, and then after they got the search warrant, found the origin of the fire that is at issue here. So, the only time I want to discuss any other fire is just to set the scene, they were fighting another fire, and this is what happened. And we are not—there is not going to be any attempt, whatsoever, to try to pin any of these fires on Mr. McGregor, with the exception of the one we are talking about, which is on the west side of the house. .... [Trial court]: All right. Sounds like you are all on the same page on that. [Defense counsel]: Yes.

VRP (Nov. 7, 2017) (Pretrial) at 10-11.

At trial, witnesses testified consistently with the facts stated above. Multiple witnesses

testified about officers and firefighters finding evidence of a fire at the back door of the garage at

459 Emerson Avenue after extinguishing fires in the kitchen of that house and at 502 Karr Street.

The State asked Sergeant Krohn to describe his interview with McGregor and Krohn responded:

We had had four to five different suspicious fires over a six month period. And so I asked [McGregor] just kind of a generic, do you know anything about the fires going on? There was a specific fire that I had seen him outside of, not related to— to why he’s here, and I asked him about that. And he said he just heard the fire engines and sirens and so he came out to look and watch and see what was going on. And then I asked him if he knew about any other fires. And he said he knew

3 No. 51229-7-II

there was [sic] couple down the street, which would be 502 Karr and 459 Emerson, but he denied being there or being on the property of the two.

1 VRP (Nov. 7, 2017) at 32-33. McGregor’s counsel did not object.

Additionally, the following exchange took place during Sergeant Krohn’s testimony

regarding his interview of McGregor:

[State]: And—so after you discussed the cigarette butt, did you discuss any of the other evidence with the defendant that—that was found on the scene? [Krohn]: Yes. I asked if he had any—or why his prints might be at the scene. [State]: And did he have any explanation for that? [Krohn]: Yes. That’s when he told me that he had some tools stolen from his porch. And then I asked him what kind of tools and—or what he had stolen and he said tools. Then I asked if he had any aerosol flammable liquid containers that might have been stolen and he said no. [State]: And at that point the interview is ended; is that correct? [Krohn]: Yes. At that point he asked for an attorney.

1 VRP (Nov. 7, 2017) at 37-38. McGregor’s counsel did not object. After Sergeant Krohn

testified that McGregor had asked for an attorney, the State ended its direct examination; the

State did not mention McGregor’s termination of the police interview or his request for an

attorney throughout the remainder of the trial.

Defense counsel asked Sergeant Krohn about his investigation of all the fires, eliciting

testimony that Krohn had found the fires at 502 Karr Street and in the kitchen of the house at 459

Emerson Avenue to be suspicious. Defense counsel also asked Krohn about his theory as to the

cause of the fire outside the garage at 459 Emerson, and Krohn stated:

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