State Of Washington v. Darold Stenson

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedFebruary 22, 2017
Docket45665-6
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington v. Darold Stenson (State Of Washington v. Darold Stenson) 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. Darold Stenson, (Wash. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

February 22, 2017

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 45665-6-II

Respondent,

v.

DAROLD R. J. STENSON, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Appellant.

SUTTON, J. — Darold R. J. Stenson appeals his convictions for two counts of premediated

first degree murder with aggravating factors. We hold that the trial court did not err when it (1)

granted the State’s motion to continue the trial, (2) denied Stenson’s CrR 8.3(b) motion to dismiss,

(3) denied Stenson’s motion to dismiss based on a due process violation, and (4) denied Stenson’s

motion to suppress evidence. We also hold (5) that Stenson was not entitled to a spoliation

instruction and (6) that the trial court did not err when it denied Stenson’s motions for mistrial or

(7) when it admitted evidence of a defense witness’s prior drug conviction. We further hold that

(8) the trial court’s reasonable doubt jury instruction was proper, (9) the prosecutor’s rebuttal

argument was not misconduct, and (10) there is no cumulative error to entitle Stenson to a new

trial. Thus, we affirm Stenson’s convictions. 45665-6-II

FACTS

I. BACKGROUND

A. FACTUAL HISTORY

In the early morning hours of March 25, 1993, law enforcement arrived at the Stenson

home in response to a 911 call; Stenson met the responding officers outside the home. Stenson

led the officers to the body of Frank Hoerner, Stenson’s friend and business partner, who was lying

face down on the floor in the main-floor guest bedroom, dead of an apparent gunshot wound to the

head. Officers found a gun on the floor near Hoerner’s1 left hand.

Stenson then led the officers upstairs to the master bedroom where they found his wife,

Denise Stenson,2 lying in bed with a gunshot wound to her head. Denise Stenson was alive, but

died the following day in the hospital. The State charged Stenson with two counts of premediated

first degree murder with aggravating factors.

B. THE FIRST TRIAL

During Stenson’s first trial, the pants that Stenson had worn on the day of the murders

provided forensic evidence that directly connected him to the murders—gunshot residue (GSR)3

1 To avoid confusion with Denise Hoerner, Frank Hoerner’s widow, we refer to Frank Hoerner by his last name only and mean no disrespect. 2 To avoid confusion with Denise Stenson, we refer to Darold Stenson by his last name only and mean no disrespect. 3 Gunshot residue (GSR) is created during discharge of a firearm and consists of small particles, visible only with magnification that float in the air and are easily transmitted from one object to another. Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 4419.

2 45665-6-II

which was found in the pockets of the pants and bloodstains on the front of the pants. In Re the

Personal Restraint of Stenson, 174 Wn.2d 474, 478, 491, 276 P.3d 286 (2012).4 Detective Monty

Martin, one of the responding officers to the scene in 1993, had collected Stenson’s pants, socks,

belt, sweatshirt, and shoes as evidence. Stenson initially told law enforcement that he had

discovered Hoerner’s body and that he had knelt next to it, but Stenson contended that he did not

touch or otherwise contact the body. In Re Stenson, 174 Wn.2d at 478. The bloodstains were

consistent with Hoerner’s blood protein profile. In Re Stenson, 174 Wn.2d at 478.

Michael Grubb, supervising Forensic Scientist of the Washington State Patrol Crime

Laboratory, testified at trial that there were bloodstains on the knee of Stenson’s right pant leg and

left pant leg which were caused by airborne droplets, and additional bloodstains on the left pant

cuff which were caused by medium velocity droplets consistent with a beating by a bloody object.

Grubb testified that the smaller stains on Stenson’s pants appeared to have been “airborne droplets”

of blood that were traveling through the air when they struck the pants leg. Trial Verbatim Report

of Proceedings (VRP) at 2454. Grubb also testified that the larger stains on the right knee were

Hoerner’s blood.

Grubb testified that the blood on the right knee of the pants could not have gotten there by

Stenson touching the body after it was on the floor or by kneeling next to the body, and that the

blood had to have been deposited on the pants before Hoerner’s body came to rest on the bedroom

floor. In Re Stenson, 174 Wn.2d at 478. Grubb concluded that the stains on the right leg of the

pants came to be on the pants while Hoerner was in some position other than his final resting

4 We refer to the Washington Supreme Court’s opinion, In Re Stenson, and adopt their version of the facts where appropriate.

3 45665-6-II

position at the scene, most likely while he was up off the floor. According to Grubb, the stains on

the right knee area of the pants could not have been caused by contact with any of the bloodstained

vertical surfaces in the laundry room area of the crime scene (the door, the wall, the freezer, or the

dryer). This was so because there was no corresponding pattern of bloodstains on the floor of the

laundry room or bedroom where Hoerner’s body was found. This testimony refuted Stenson’s

statement that he discovered Hoerner dead on the bedroom floor. In Re Stenson, 174 Wn.2d at

478.

In 1994, a jury convicted Stenson of premeditated first degree murder with aggravating

factors for the deaths of Denise Stenson and Frank Hoerner. Stenson was sentenced to death on

August 19, 1994. In July 1997, our Supreme Court affirmed Stenson’s convictions and the death

penalty sentence. See State v. Stenson, 132 Wn.2d 668, 940 P.2d 1239 (1997). Our Supreme

Court rejected four subsequent personal restraint petitions (PRP). Stenson, 174 Wn.2d at 478.

C. EVENTS SUBSEQUENT TO THE FIRST CONVICTION AND APPEAL

1. New Evidence

In 2008, the State notified Stenson’s appellate counsel that the State’s expert witness at the

first trial, FBI Special Agent Ernest Peele, who testified about the GSR analysis, had testified

beyond “the scope of what the evidence could properly show.” In Re Stenson, 174 Wn.2d at 479.

Although the GSR evidence was of relatively little significance at the first trial, the information

about Peele’s testimony raised additional questions for Stenson’s appellate counsel, who then

submitted a discovery request asking the State to turn over all the records “relating to bullet lead

4 45665-6-II

analysis, GSR, and blood spatter testing.”5 In Re Stenson, 174 Wn.2d at 479. In its 2009 response,

the State disclosed new evidence including: (1) photographs of Detective Martin wearing

Stenson’s pants with the right pocket turned out and showing Detective Martin’s ungloved hands

and (2) an FBI file containing notes related to the GSR testing revealing that someone else, other

than Peele, had performed the GSR testing. In Re Stenson, 174 Wn.2d at 479.

2. Stenson’s Fifth PRP and First Reference Hearing

In response to the State’s disclosure, Stenson filed his fifth PRP alleging ineffective

assistance of counsel because his counsel had failed to discover this previously undisclosed

evidence. He then filed his sixth PRP alleging that the State had withheld materially exculpatory

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