State of Washington v. Daniel Obadiah Batsell

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMay 2, 2017
Docket33340-0
StatusUnpublished

This text of State of Washington v. Daniel Obadiah Batsell (State of Washington v. Daniel Obadiah Batsell) 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. Daniel Obadiah Batsell, (Wash. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

li FILED MAY 2, 2017 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals, Division Ill

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

STATE OF WASHINGTON, ) ) No. 33340-0-111 Appellant, ) ) V. ) ) DANIEL OBADIAHBATSELL, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) Respondent. )

SIDDOWAY, J. - After dismissing a charge of possession of methamphetamine

against Daniel Batsell for an asserted Brady 1 violation, the trial court had second thoughts

but doubted its authority to entertain a motion for reconsideration under CR 59. We need

not determine whether CR 59 applies in order to entertain the State's appeal of the trial

court's dismissal order. We reverse it; the appropriate remedy for the late discovery of

information in this case was a trial continuance.

1 Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83, 83 S. Ct. 1194, 10 L. Ed. 2d 215 (1963). No. 33340-0-111 State v. Batsell

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

On September 15, 2014, Daniel Batsell was placed under arrest on outstanding

warrants after he was encountered leaving a residence at 1107 West Yakima Street, to

which Pasco police officers had traveled in response to a suspicious circumstances call.

When Mr. Batsell was searched incident to the arrest by Officer Jeffrey Cobb, the officer

found a broken glass pipe containing traces of methamphetamine in the pocket of his

pants and a metal canister of methamphetamine in a small bag attached to a key chain he

had been carrying. A set of car keys was on the key chain. Mr. Batsell was charged with

possession of methamphetamine a couple of days later.

Mr. Batsell told his criminal defense lawyer that neither the car keys nor the

associated car were his, so in the months before trial, Mr. Batsell's lawyer tried to

identify the owner of cars at the residence at the time of his client's arrest. Mr. Batsell's

lawyer shared information about what he was looking for with the prosecutor in October.

In January 2015, Mr. Batsell's lawyer told the prosecutor he had hired an

investigator to try to find the owner of the car, who he believed was Mr. Batsell's friend

and could testify that the car keys found in Mr. Batsell's possession did not belong to

him. Mr. Batsell's lawyer asked the prosecutor for help locating the car's owner, but the

prosecutor responded that he was unable to conduct a records search with the limited

information provided and possessed no reports containing information about any

vehicles. In February, Mr. Batsell informed the prosecutor that the pants in which the

2 No. 33340-0-III State v. Batsell

glass pipe was found belonged to the same friend. The prosecutor again responded that

he did not have any information in his file to help locate the friend.

On March 17, the day before trial, Mr. Batsell's lawyer e-mailed the prosecutor at

2:30 p.m., advising him that Mr. Batsell thought there should be police reports related to

his case other than Officer Cobb's, which had been provided. The prosecutor received

the e-mail upon returning to the office at 4:00 p.m. He immediately searched the law

enforcement database for reports in which Mr. Batsell was named as an "involved other"

and found one that had been prepared by Officer Richard Leininger and described the

suspicious circumstances call that took police to the Yakima Street residence in the first

place. Clerk's Papers (CP) at 19. It revealed that after Officer Cobb arrested Mr. Batsell,

Officer Leininger contacted an individual named Joshua Ferris in the residence to which

officers responded and arrested him. Because the report stated that Mr. Ferris identified

Mr. Batsell as someone he knew and referred to the license plate number of a vehicle

located at the residence, the prosecutor provided the report to Mr. Batsell's lawyer

"within minutes." CP at 20.

The report disclosed that Mr. Ferris was at the Yakima Street residence and was

the individual who had called police to report suspicious circumstances. He told the

police dispatcher that a man named "Daniel Bates" was at the house earlier but had been

asked to leave, and was acting funny. CP at 38. Mr. Ferris told the dispatcher he had

armed himself with a shotgun while awaiting police.

3 No. 33340-0-111 State v. Batsell

Officer Leininger prepared the police report and was evidently the first to arrive at

the Yakima Street residence, where he saw Mr. Batsell standing near a red car-

identified in the report by license number-attempting to get into it. Officer Leininger

ordered Mr. Batsell to get down; Mr. Batsell complied, and the report refers to the fact

that Mr. Batsell had outstanding warrants. Officer Leininger turned Mr. Batsell over to

Officer Cobb and Mr. Batsell's arrest was the subject matter of the separate police report

prepared by Officer Cobb.

Officer Leininger's report went on to discuss what he did after turning Mr. Batsell

over to Officer Cobb:

I knocked on the door and contacted Ferris. Ferris opened the door and I noticed a shotgun that was disassembled and leaning near an old gun cabinet. Ferris was extremely paranoid and told me he thought someone was downstairs or in the room near the kitchen. The residence was littered with shotgun shells and used hypodermic needles. Ferris was detained for several warrants and the residence was cleared. Michelle Myer is apparently the homeowner, however she left the house before we arrived. While clearing the residence, a large gun safe was found downstairs in the house that contained several guns but was locked. There are several hundred rounds of ammunition in the residence and obvious signs of drug use including a broken meth pipe on the fridge. Ferris told me he thought that Daniel was trying to set him up because he is supposedly sleeping with another man's wife who lives in Finley. Ferris was sure people were out to get him, and the alarming thing is his attempts to load and assemble a shotgun while obviously high on Meth. Ferris was transported to FCCC for his warrants and Daniel was booked on possession of Meth.

CP at 39-40.

4 No. 33340-0-III State v. Batsell

The morning after receiving Officer Leininger's report, Mr. Batsell's lawyer told

the prosecutor that the defense theory was that Mr. Ferris had been high and paranoid and

tried to set Mr. Batsell up. He asked the prosecutor to run the car's license plate to

determine ownership, which was done, revealing the car was not Mr. Ferris's, but was

instead owned by a Benjamin Freeman.

The same morning, at the outset of what was scheduled to be trial proceedings,

Mr. Batsell's lawyer moved for dismissal of the charge or to continue the trial based on

what he characterized as a Brady violation, telling the court the defense had been

searching for Mr. Ferris since the beginning of the case. He explained that the defense

theory was that Mr. Batsell borrowed Mr. Ferris's pants while helping Mr. Ferris move to

a rehab facility, and had been carrying Mr. Ferris's keys to load some of Mr. Ferris's

belongings into the red car. He argued that the fact that Mr. Ferris was under the

influence of methamphetamine when contacted by Officer Leininger supported the theory

that the methamphetamine belonged to Mr. Ferris. The lawyer explained that it was

because Mr. Batsell only knew Mr.

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