State Of Washington v. Carla Anna Ford

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 9, 2015
Docket70936-4
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington v. Carla Anna Ford (State Of Washington v. Carla Anna Ford) 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. Carla Anna Ford, (Wash. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, DIVISION ONE Respondent, No. 70936-4-1 v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION CARLA ANNA FORD,

Appellant. FILED: March 9, 2015

Dwyer, J. — Following a jury trial, Carla Ford was convicted of one count

of residential burglary. On appeal, Ford contends (1) that her right to due

process was violated by the prosecutor twice improperly commenting on her

custodial silence, and (2) that the trial court erred by failing to consider

sentencing alternatives before sentencing her to nine months of total

confinement. Because evidence of Ford's reaction to police questioning was not

improperly admitted and the sentencing issue is moot, we affirm.

On December 10, 2012, Scott Nance left his Lake Stevens home to run an

errand. When he returned, Nance noticed an unoccupied green Chevrolet

pickup truck parked on a gravel road across from his driveway. Nance also noticed that the screen door to his front door was open and a light was on in his No. 70936-4-1/2

bedroom. Nance did not typically use his front door, and he had turned the light

off before he left.

Nance had loaded weapons in his home and was concerned that

someone had gotten to them. He pulled out his pistol and went to his front door.

He noticed that the lock fell out of the door when he pushed it open. The lock

had not previously been broken. When Nance walked in, he saw Shauntel

Raymur coming out of his bedroom. Nance pointed his gun at Raymur and

asked her what she was doing. Raymur responded, "I'm with her." Nance then

heard someone come out of his bathroom and go out the back door. Nance

looked out his window and saw Ford running out of his carport. While Nance

was distracted, Raymur followed Ford out the back door. The two women ran to

a pickup truck parked across the street. Nance telephoned 911. As he did, Ford

and Raymur started the truck and drove toward Nance, swerving to avoid him as

they drove off.

Nance went back into his house and found that it had been ransacked.

Drawers in his bedroom had been dumped out. A box from the spare bedroom

had been emptied and Nance's computer, knives, bullets, prescription

medication, and other property had been placed in that box. Police arrived on

scene about five minutes later.

Three days later, police showed Nance two photo line ups. Nance picked

out Raymur and Ford as the two women who had broken into his home without

his permission. No. 70936-4-1/3

A week previously, on December 6, 2012, Francis Schatz had gone

outside his home upon hearing his dog bark. Schatz's next door neighbor,

Elizabeth Ries, had earlier left for work. However, her son, Nathan Ries, was

home studying. Schatz saw a woman get out of a blue Chevrolet pickup truck

and walk up to the Ries's front door. Schatz had never before seen that truck in

the neighborhood. Ries heard the doorbell ring, but ignored it because he was

studying. The woman then walked away from the door, looked toward the

backyard, and reentered the passenger side of the pickup truck. The driver was

a dark haired woman.

Schatz saw the pickup drive off. Schatz got dressed and left his home,

intending to look for the truck. He observed it parked around the corner,

unoccupied. Schatz wrote down the license plate number, which he later

provided to the police. When Schatz returned home he noticed that Ries's gate

and her back door were open. The gate and the door had been closed when

Ries left for work. Schatz then called Ries at work to inform her of what he saw.

Schatz then drove to get coffee. When he returned, he saw the two women he

had previously seen at the Ries's residence walking near that residence. One of

the women was carrying a backpack.

When Ries heard from Schatz, she called her son. Ries's son had been

listening to music, so he had not heard anyone come into the house. When he

went downstairs he noticed that his boots were not where he had left them.

Additionally, his binder had been removed from his backpack, and his backpack

was gone. No. 70936-4-1/4

Detective Margaret Ludwig investigated both the Nance and Ries

burglaries. She showed Nance and Schatz photomontages. Raymur was picked

out by both Nance and Schatz. Nance picked out Ford as one of the women at

his house.

Thereafter, Ludwig located Raymur and Ford together at a trailer park.

Ford was standing by the truck that had been identified in both burglaries. The

truck was impounded and later searched pursuant to a search warrant. Inside

the truck, police found backpacks, a crowbar, a police scanner, walkie talkies, a

pair of gloves, and some tools. Ludwig testified that, in her experience, burglars

use walkie talkies to communicate with one another and use tools like those

found in the truck to pry open doors.

The State originally charged Ford with one count of residential burglary,

concerning the Nance incident of December 10. The State later amended the

information to include an additional count of residential burglary involving the

Ries dwelling on December 6. Ford and Raymur were tried together.

During direct examination, the prosecutor asked Ludwig whether she had

questioned Ford about a gun having been pulled in the course of the Nance

burglary. Ludwig answered that Ford responded to the question by closing her

eyes and hanging her head.

Ford presented an alibi defense on both counts, consisting of witnesses

testifying that she was someplace else when the burglaries occurred.

A jury found Ford guilty of the Nance burglary but acquitted her of the Ries burglary. The jury returned a special verdict that the victim was present at the

-4- No. 70936-4-1/5

time of the Nance burglary, which qualifies as an aggravating circumstance,

RCW 9.94A.535(3)(u), authorizing an exceptional sentence.

The State recommended an exceptional sentence of 12 months

confinement. The court imposed a sentence of nine months confinement, the top

of the standard range. The court also stated, "I understand this is your first

offense, but I believe this is an appropriate sentence and this will be the sentence

of the court." This appeal follows.

II

Ford first contends that her right to due process was violated by the State

improperly commenting on her exercise of her right to remain silent. This is so,

Ford asserts, because the State presented evidence that she closed her eyes

and lowered her head in response to a police detective's postarrest, post-

Miranda1 question. We disagree.

Although the defendant did not object to the admission of the evidence

she now challenges, we may consider the issue if it is a manifest error affecting a

constitutional right. RAP 2.5(a)(3). An asserted issue meets this criteria if the

claim of error suggests a constitutional issue, and if the appellant has made a

plausible showing that the error had a practical and identifiable consequence in

the trial of the case. State v. Lynn, 67 Wn. App. 339, 345, 835 P.2d 251 (1992).

Here, because a comment on a defendant's exercise of her right to remain silent

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