State of Washington v. Clay Duane Starbuck

355 P.3d 1167, 189 Wash. App. 740
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 25, 2015
Docket31845-1-III
StatusUnpublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 355 P.3d 1167 (State of Washington v. Clay Duane Starbuck) 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. Clay Duane Starbuck, 355 P.3d 1167, 189 Wash. App. 740 (Wash. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

f 1

Korsmo, J.

Clay Starbuck appeals his convictions for the aggravated first degree murder of his ex-wife and the violation of her remains, primarily arguing that the trial court erred in excluding his “other suspects” evidence. We affirm.

*744 FACTS

¶2 Clay and Chanin Starbuck were married and divorced twice; they had five children. When the second marriage ended in July 2011, the three youngest children— two girls and one boy — were minors. 1 Ms. Starbuck was awarded custody of the three 2 children, while Mr. Starbuck was ordered to pay both child support and maintenance to Ms. Starbuck. The decree of dissolution also included a restraining order against Mr. Starbuck in favor of Ms. Starbuck. He was prohibited from disturbing her peace or going on the grounds of her home or workplace.

¶3 After the dissolution, the couple maintained separate residences in Deer Park that were about one-half mile apart. Despite the restraining order, Mr. Starbuck appeared at Ms. Starbuck’s residence to take the children to school most mornings. By October, Mr. Starbuck was in arrears on his support and maintenance obligations. The superior court entered a judgment on an order of contempt for $9,166 in unpaid obligations plus an additional $500 for attorney fees. The decision to pursue the payment obligations resulted in Mr. Starbuck sending angry text messages to Ms. Starbuck about the financial consequences and also expressing his desire for more time with their children and more say in raising them. Exs. 586-592.

¶4 Clay Starbuck texted his children before 8:00 a.m. on Thursday, December 1, 2011 that his car had died and that their mother would have to take them to school. He then sent a similar text message to Ms. Starbuck that was answered with “K.” Mr. Starbuck’s phone was then turned off. Ms. Starbuck took the children to school.

*745 ¶5 At 9:18 a.m., Ms. Starbuck’s cellular telephone called the Spokane County 911 service. The responder did not hear anything intelligible during the 35 second call. When the call ended, the responder dialed the number back, but the return call immediately went to voice mail; the phone was turned off. Ms. Starbuck did not pick up her children after school. When one of her daughters texted her at 2:45 p.m. asking who was going to pick them up, Ms. Starbuck’s phone responded 20 minutes later with a text: “Dad, I have a headache, stay there.” Her phone sent a text to Mr. Starbuck 12 minutes later that stated: “I just woke up, can you pick up the kids.” Mr. Starbuck’s telephone was turned on again at 3:37 p.m. By that time, an older child had picked up the younger children and taken them to Mr. Starbuck’s home.

¶6 Ms. Starbuck did not attend her son’s basketball game that evening. There was no response when Mr. Starbuck and the children went to her house after the game. The house was locked and dark. Mr. Starbuck called the Spokane County Sheriff’s Office the next day to ask for a welfare check and because the children needed to enter the house to obtain their clothing. Deputies responded that evening and found the lights out, the doors locked, and a package sitting by the front door. Obtaining no response and lacking information to obtain a warrant, they left.

¶7 On December 3, a friend of Ms. Starbuck’s called the sheriff’s department and asked them again to check on her. The responding deputies had her landlord unlock the door. They entered and found her dead on her bed. The body was naked, 3 bruised, and battered. Only a mattress pad was on the bed. The blankets were somewhat folded on the floor, but the bed sheets were not in the room. The body was “posed” with a dildo placed in the vagina, her hands were on a massager placed on her pubic area, and her cell phone was *746 on the nightstand next to the bed. A gun safe near the bed was open, displaying sexual devices on the shelves.

¶8 The coroner determined that Ms. Starbuck had been strangled with something soft, like a towel, or by a choke-hold with an arm. She had chest injuries consistent with the use of a stun gun. The body exhibited multiple bruises— including one on the brain that suggested a blow to the head, eleven broken ribs, and a broken bone in the trachea area. There was indication that her hands may have been bound during the ordeal. The coroner believed the victim died on December 1. She had been facedown when killed and then moved to the bed.

¶9 Clay Starbuck arrived at Chanin’s home during the initial investigation. He volunteered to a detective that Chanin was heavily involved with online dating and was seeing several men at the same time. He was directed to go to the sheriff’s substation in Deer Park. There he repeated his allegations to two other detectives and also provided family history information for them.

¶10 Extensive investigation ensued, with much of the emphasis on DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) analysis and cell phones records. Law enforcement obtained DNA from Mr. Starbuck and his two older sons to establish the “Y-STR DNA” consistent to the male Starbuck lineage. 4 Samples of DNA were also gathered from additional men who recently had contact with Ms. Starbuck. DNA testing of swabs taken from the victim’s neck, face, and fingernails revealed that the male Starbuck lineage matched the Y-STR DNA found in those areas. One additional — and unidentified — male contributed Y-STR DNA to Ms. Starbuck’s neck. Y-STR DNA was also found in the vaginal swab and on Ms. Starbuck’s cell phone, but the male Starbuck lineage (and the other males tested) did not match. A total of three unidentified males contributed DNA found in these locations.

*747 ¶11 Ms. Starbuck’s cell phone records were also extensively reviewed. One person who had exchanged text messages with Ms. Starbuck on December 1 was Tom Walker, a man she had met three weeks earlier. 5 The two had a date for the following Monday, December 5. Mr. Walker testified that he left work at 9:40 a.m. that day to attend a funeral in Spokane Valley and left the funeral at 10:30 a.m. to return to work. He texted Ms. Starbuck about 10:50 a.m. to ask how her day was and tell her he had attended a funeral. She replied at 12:10 p.m., asking if he would like to meet her for lunch at 1:00 p.m. He responded that he could not, as he needed to be at work. At 12:19 she texted back, asking if he was on his way for lunch. He responded at 12:26 that he could not. She did not respond to his texts.

¶12 Ms. Starbuck’s cell phone also showed calls and texts to and from “John Wilson” on December 1, 2011. John “Wilson” was actually John Kenlein, a married Spokane teacher who had met Ms. Starbuck on a dating website in mid-September 2011 and began engaging in sexual relations with her. He testified that he had plans to meet with Ms. Starbuck on December 1, 2011, and had arrived at her house at 10:30 a.m. that day. 6

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Bluebook (online)
355 P.3d 1167, 189 Wash. App. 740, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-washington-v-clay-duane-starbuck-washctapp-2015.