State Of Washington v. David Schlosser

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedFebruary 8, 2021
Docket79723-9
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington v. David Schlosser (State Of Washington v. David Schlosser) 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. David Schlosser, (Wash. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

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

THE STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 79723-9-I

Respondent,

v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION DAVID PHILLIP SCHLOSSER,

Appellant.

BOWMAN, J. — David Phillip Schlosser appeals his jury conviction for rape

of a child in the first degree. Schlosser argues the trial court erred when it

refused in camera review and inspection of counseling records, violated his right

to confrontation, improperly commented on the evidence, deprived him of his

right to effective assistance of counsel, violated his right to a fair trial by

committing cumulative error, and imposed invalid and unconstitutional conditions

of community custody. We affirm the conviction but remand to clarify a

community custody condition.

FACTS

Stephanie is the mother of A.D., born in October 2003.1 Schlosser and

Stephanie began dating when A.D. was about a year old and married in 2007.

1 We use the initials of the minors named in this opinion and refer to the adult relatives of the victim by first name only to protect the privacy of the minors and the victim, and mean no disrespect by doing so.

Citations and pin cites are based on the Westlaw online version of the cited material. No. 79723-9-I/2

They had two children together, I.S. and L.S. The family dynamic was

tumultuous, marked by instances of physical abuse, domestic violence, and

multiple contacts with Child Protective Services (CPS). Stephanie said that

Schlosser was the “primary disciplinarian” for the children and “very harsh” on

A.D., including “hitting and kicking her.” When Stephanie tried to intervene,

Schlosser told her she “didn’t know what good parenting was.”

A.D. said that for as long as she could remember, Schlosser “didn’t really

like me, and wasn’t very nice to me.” At first, he “just” yelled at her, called her

names like “moron,” or “ma[d]e fun of how” she looked. If she cried, he locked

her in the garage with the lights off. After the age of five, the “discipline

increase[d]” and became “more violent,” including shoving her, pinning her

against the wall, sitting on top of her, slapping her in the face, and punching her

all over her body. Schlosser also used a belt or wet towel to hit A.D. “a few times

a week.” A.D. said that “[i]t felt like everything I did kind of like he would get mad

at me about just the smallest things.”

According to A.D., at some point in 2009 when she was about six years

old, Schlosser began “weird[ly]” rubbing her buttocks with his hands, and then

things “kind of like escalated.” She recalled an instance when Schlosser “got

mad” at her, “pinned [her] against the wall,” then “reached down [her] pants” and

“touched [her] vagina.” A.D. said that “a touch like that” started “just

occasionally,” then it escalated to “once or twice a week.” A.D. never told

Stephanie about Schlosser inappropriately touching her because she was

2 No. 79723-9-I/3

“scared” of what would happen if she did, especially getting “wors[e] punishment

or more punishment.”

A.D. also described a 2011 incident after the family moved from an

apartment to a three-level house in Issaquah. Schlosser walked into the

bathroom while she was bathing and digitally penetrated her vagina. Schlosser

had not touched her like that before. A.D. said Schlosser “told me not to tell my

mom.”

One night in March 2013, A.D. walked upstairs from her first-floor

bedroom as she had done many times before. She was crying and wanted to

sleep on the third floor of the house with “everybody else.” A.D. described

Schlosser “screaming at me to shut up, and go back to my room.” When she did

not immediately leave, Schlosser grabbed A.D.’s arm “hard,” walked her down to

her room, and “told [her] to pull off [her] pants.” A.D. was on the ground on her

hands and knees. A.D. said Schlosser “started whipping me with the belt like he

would do.” And then he raped her for about 10 minutes. When A.D. used the

bathroom later that night, “it hurt” and she noticed she was bleeding from her

vaginal area. Because A.D. “was scared,” she did not tell Stephanie.

The next day, A.D. took a bath and “started bleeding again.” A.D. wanted

her mother to look at the injury and “make sure that [she] was okay,” so A.D. told

Stephanie that “I had fallen down the stairs, and that I hurt myself.” A.D. stated

that she could not tell Stephanie “what actually happened” because Schlosser

“would get in trouble,” and she was “worried about . . . everybody in my

3 No. 79723-9-I/4

house . . . being safe.” Stephanie then took A.D. to see pediatrician Dr. Laurie

Diem. A.D. also told Dr. Diem that she fell down the stairs.

Dr. Diem observed a laceration and bruising in A.D.’s vaginal area,

noticed no other injuries on A.D.’s body, and believed falling down the stairs

conflicted with A.D.’s injuries. She then reviewed A.D.’s “whole medical history”

and “saw several previous emergency room visits for fractures” and “broken

bones.” The number of A.D.’s injuries “was another red flag” in Dr. Diem’s

opinion. Because of suspicions of sexual abuse, Dr. Diem reported the injuries

to CPS.

Days later, A.D. underwent another examination with pediatrician and

child abuse specialist Dr. Rebecca Wiester. Dr. Wiester concluded that the

vaginal laceration injury she observed reflected a “straddle injury.” Dr. Wiester

believed that A.D.’s injuries “can be accidental,” including “an awkward fall,” with

“no other visible signs of injury.” A.D. did not tell either doctor that Schlosser

sexually assaulted her.

Within a month of the rape in A.D.’s bedroom, Schlosser told A.D. to join

him in the master bedroom so they could watch television together, which he had

done before. The two were home alone. After A.D. lay on the bed, Schlosser

raped her. Schlosser told her that “this is what dads and daughters do.”

In the two months that followed, life was “[a]wful” for Stephanie. Schlosser

“was berating [her] everyday” and “treat[ing] [A.D.] horribly” because “[n]othing

was ever good enough.” Schlosser and Stephanie separated in June 2013 and

she moved out of the house. They completed their divorce in February 2016. At

4 No. 79723-9-I/5

first, they shared custody of the three children. But soon, A.D. “wanted nothing

to do with that” and stopped seeing Schlosser entirely.

In October 2016, A.D.’s boyfriend C.F. approached her about having

sexual intercourse. A.D. text messaged C.F. that she did not want to have sex

with him because Schlosser had raped her “more times than [she] could count.”

That same month, A.D. had a text message conversation with her best friend J.B.

about why she broke up with C.F. She eventually told J.B. that she “was raped”

but did not tell J.B. who did it. J.B. guessed “it was Dave,” and A.D. admitted

Schlosser had raped her “multiple times.”

J.B. was “very upset” and told her mother Deb. Deb then called A.D.’s

grandmother Jillian and told her about the rapes. Jillian told her counselor about

Deb’s call, who then made a mandatory report to CPS. The next day, Jillian told

A.D. that she knew Schlosser had sexually abused her,2 and A.D. started to cry.

A.D. admitted that Schlosser sexually assaulted her and later told Stephanie too.

The police and CPS interviewed A.D. and several family members and

friends. At first, A.D.

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