State Of Washington v. Devenee Kelter

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJanuary 20, 2015
Docket70623-3
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington v. Devenee Kelter (State Of Washington v. Devenee Kelter) 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. Devenee Kelter, (Wash. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

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2015 JAN 20 AH 9*34

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

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 70623-3-1

Respondent,

v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION

DEVENEE JEAN KELTNER,

Appellant. FILED: January 20, 2015

Schindler, J. — Within a few hours of a residential burglary, Devenee Jean

Keltner and an acquaintance purchased items at nearby businesses with credit cards,

identification, and checks stolen in the burglary. Keltner appeals her convictions for

residential burglary, identity theft, and possession of stolen property, arguing that her

burglary conviction is not supported by sufficient evidence and that she received

ineffective assistance of counsel. We reverse the residential burglary conviction. On

remand, the court shall dismiss that conviction with prejudice. We affirm the convictions

for second degree identity theft and first degree possession of stolen property.

FACTS

Based on surveillance videos and other evidence linking Devenee Jean Keltner

to the possession and use of property stolen in a residential burglary, the State charged No. 70623-3-1/2

her with one count of residential burglary, four counts of second degree identity theft,

and one count of first degree possession of stolen property.

The State's evidence at trial established that around 2:00 p.m. on September 6,

2011, Erin and Dan Cox discovered their Burlington residence had been burglarized.

The burglar or burglars entered by breaking a laundry room window. A locked door to

an upstairs room was open and a gun vault was pried open. The burglar or burglars

took a camera, two camera lenses, a camera bag, a Hewlett Packard laptop, a

backpack, a pistol, a change jar, luggage, and a purse containing Erin Cox's credit

cards, identification, checks, and keys. A package delivered by United Parcel Service

at 11:44 a.m. that morning was missing from the doorstep.

At 2:56 p.m., a man and woman in a dark-colored Ford Mustang entered the

drive-through window of a U.S. Bank branch in Mount Vernon. The Mustang had luggage in the back. Aperson claiming to be Erin Cox cashed a $900 check using

Cox's identification.

At 3:13 p.m., Erin Cox's credit cards were used to make three purchases,

including two for gas, at a Valero gas station notfar from the U.S. Bank. At 3:42 p.m., a man and woman using Erin Cox's Best Buy card spent $1,716.01 on a laptop, stereo, and other accessories at a nearby Best Buy. At 4:15 p.m., a man and woman used Erin Cox's Costco Wholesale membership card to purchase computers, televisions, and rings at a nearby Costco store. They repeatedly told a Costco employee that their purchases were replacing items taken in a burglary of their home. They paid with a check stolen in the burglary and drawn on the No. 70623-3-1/3

Coxes' U.S. Bank account in the amount of $1,955.11. A Costco cashier identified

Keltner at trial as the person who wrote the check.

A half hour later, a woman bought food, beer, a gift card, and cigarettes at a

Shell gas station using Erin Cox's credit card.

Police reviewed surveillance videos from the businesses where these

transactions occurred. The videos showed a red Mustang and a white Mustang at both

gas stations. The police were able to trace a partial license plate number on the red

Mustang. The Mustang was registered to Devenee Keltner.

On September 13, 2011, Keltner transferred title to her red Mustang, claiming

she had traded it for another vehicle in a "no cash" deal.

That same day, Skagit County Detective Ben Hagglund interviewed Keltner at

her stepfather's residence. Keltner wore a ring purchased at Costco with Erin Cox's

check and membership card. Detective Hagglund found camera equipment, a laptop, a

backpack, and other items belonging to the Coxes in Keltner's bedroom. Detective

Hagglund later recovered a television from Keltner's mother that was also purchased at

Costco.

After the State rested, Keltner's attorney moved to dismiss the residential

burglary charge due to insufficient evidence. The prosecutor opposed the motion,

arguing that jurors could infer that the persons using the stolen property shortly after the

burglary were the burglars. The court denied the motion to dismiss, noting that acting

as a lookout would be sufficient participation to support a burglary conviction. No. 70623-3-1/4

Keltner testified and denied taking part in the burglary. Keltner claimed she met

an acquaintance, Jerold Weller, at a gas station on the afternoon of the burglary

because she needed gas. She was driving a red Mustang. Weller was driving a white

Mustang. Weller used a credit card to put gas in both cars. Weller gave Keltner a credit

card bearing Erin Cox's name so she could purchase cigarettes and Gatorade inside

the station. Weller led Keltner to believe he had permission to use Cox's card.

Keltner then followed Weller to Best Buy where he bought a stereo and urged her

to pick out a laptop for herself. According to Keltner, they separated until they met at

another gas station at 6:00 p.m. Keltner said Weller needed gas again and his white

Mustang was "full of stuff," including luggage, a printer from Costco, and a television.

They then drove to Keltner's stepfather's residence where they moved all of their things,

including the items in Welter's car, into a bedroom they were going to share. Keltner

testified that Weller was present when Detective Hagglund came by the house a week

later, but Weller escaped out of a back window before Detective Hagglund came inside.

Keltner admitted signing Erin Cox's name on the credit card receipts at Best Buy

and the two gas stations, but denied signing the checks at U.S. Bank and Costco. She admitted having 15 convictions for crimes of dishonesty, including convictions for

burglary, identity theft, forgery, and possession of stolen property.

In closing argument, defense counsel argued that the burglary must have been

committed by someone who was stronger than Keltner:

This gun vault safe was the door that was pried open. .. . That's something that would take a fair amount of strength. And if you look at Ms. Keltner, just again using our common sense this is not the type of person that's going to be able to do something like that. If you look at the No. 70623-3-1/5

sequence of events getting into the house through this window, that's fairly high. Getting through the window that had glass on it..., getting into this gun room, getting this door open, getting this safe open, I think the obvious answer to this is that it's not going to be Keltner. This would have to be an adult male who did this type of a thing.

The State did not request and the court did not give a jury instruction on

accomplice liability. The jury convicted Keltner as charged. Keltner appeals.

ANALYSIS

Keltner contends her conviction for residential burglary is not supported by

sufficient evidence. Evidence is sufficient if, when viewed in the light most favorable to

the State, it permits any rational trier of fact to find the essential elements of the offense

beyond a reasonable doubt. State v. Salinas. 119Wn.2d 192, 201, 829 P.2d 1068

(1992). A challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence admits the truth of the State's

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