State Of Washington, V Edward Jason Crable

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJuly 8, 2014
Docket43262-5
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington, V Edward Jason Crable (State Of Washington, V Edward Jason Crable) 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 Edward Jason Crable, (Wash. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEN. S Dr/ NICH T1

Pt ' 110: 08 2014 JUL - 8 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION II By tiTY STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 43262 -5 -II

Respondent,

v. consolidated with

EDWARD JASON CRABLE,

Appellant.

No. 44316 -3 -II In re Personal Restraint Petition of:

Petitioner. UNPUBLISHED OPINION

MELNICK, J. — Edward Jason Crable appeals his conviction of violating a domestic

violence court order, arguing that the prosecuting attorney committed misconduct during closing

argument that violated his right to a fair trial. In the personal restraint petition consolidated with

his appeal, Crable challenges the trial court' s calculation of his offender score and argues that he

received ineffective assistance of counsel when his attorney failed to challenge that calculation

during sentencing. Because the prosecuting attorney' s comments were not improper, we reject

Crable' s claim that he was deprived of a fair trial and affirm his conviction. And, because the

trial court properly included Crable' s prior misdemeanor offenses for violating a no contact order

in his offender score, we reject his claims of sentencing error and ineffective assistance of

counsel and deny his personal restraint petition. 43262 -5 -II / 44316 -3 -II

FACTS

On October 21, 2011, Crable pleaded guilty in Pierce County Superior Court to two

counts of violating a no contact order. The resulting sentence included an order prohibiting

contact with Bridget Ann Warren.

Crable was released from j ail several hours after his sentencing. Pierce County Deputy

Sheriff Robert Shaw and Lieutenant Todd Karr watched to see where Crable would go and who

he would contact.

Crable walked to a nearby McDonald' s restaurant parking lot. When he got into a car

parked next to Karr' s unmarked patrol vehicle, Karr notified Shaw that he believed Warren was

the driver. As the car drove by, Shaw confirmed that the driver was Warren. After Shaw

stopped the car, the officers arrested Crable.

The State charged Crable with one count of violating a domestic violence court order

with the aggravating factor that he committed the offense shortly after being released from incarceration. The information also alleged that Crable had two previous convictions for

violating such orders, which increased the crime to a felony.

Shaw and Karr testified at Crable' s trial about the investigation, stop, and arrest. Deputy

Prosecutor Kara Sanchez then testified that she prosecuted Crable for his two earlier violations of

a no contact order and explained that there was an order prohibiting contact with Warren as a

condition of his sentence for those violations. Sanchez admitted that Warren did not want the no

contact order and had written to the trial court asking that the order be amended to prohibit

hostile contact rather than all contact.

Sanchez explained that the trial court had declined to enter such an order until Crable

could be evaluated. She then read part of the prior sentencing transcript into the record: 2 43262 -5 -II / 44316 -3 - II

It is very important that you follow the no contact order. I know you don' t want to. I know she doesn' t want to. You have two convictions now for violations of a no contact order. Even if she wants to have contact with you, you can' t have any contact with her. If you are caught with her she doesn' t go to jail, you go to jail. It is very important to do this. That is another thing I look at when somebody comes before me and asks to have the no contact order modified, has the Court' s previous order been followed. Have you had respect for this Court' s order. I don' t want to break up families, I don' t want to break up support systems, but I want to be comfortable in the decision that I make.

Report of Proceedings ( RP) ( Feb. 15, 2012) at 166 -67. Sanchez testified that Crable appeared to

understand and that she served him with a copy of the no contact order. Sanchez added that at

the end of the hearing, the court told Crable to call someone to pick him up but reminded him that he could not have contact with Warren. Sanchez admitted that she never told Warren that

her request for a reduced order had been denied.

Warren testified for the defense that she was aware of the initial no contact order and

knew that Crable was going to plead guilty to violating it. Warren explained that when Sanchez told her about his plea bargain, she told Sanchez that she wanted to have the no contact order

removed or reduced to a " no hostile contact" order. 1 RP ( Feb. 15, 2012) at 177.

Warren added that when she learned that Crable was going to be released from jail, she

drove to the nearby McDonald' s and figured that he would find her there. Warren testified that

when she first saw Crable in the parking lot, he was " standoffish." RP ( Feb. 15, 2012) at 179.

But, when Warren reassured him that she had gotten the no contact order dropped to a no- hostile

contact order, Crable got in the car. Crable testified that Warren told him the no contact order

had been changed to a " no hostile contact" order. RP ( Feb. 16, 2012) at 228.

1 the See Such orders do not prohibit all contact but only, hostile contact with protected party.

State v. Breitung, 173 Wn.2d 393, 403, 267 P. 3d 1012 ( 2011.). 3 43262 -5 - II / 44316 -3 - II

The prosecutor began her closing argument to the jury as follows:

I told you early in opening this isn' t the spiciest of cases. But in Washington, all over America crimes are to be zealously prosecuted when the facts are there supporting the law, that the —the violation of law that has occurred. And the plain, simple fact, I' m not minimizing this case at all. This case is important because when the State of Washington through its superior courts issue orders under which they have jurisdiction to parties, including Mr. Crable, those orders have meanings. We all have rules that we have to abide by every day. It' s part of the social contract we enter living in a society. And whether he likes into it, whether Ms. Warren likes it, the rules were clear as they applied to Mr. Crable. As of October 21st, 2011 he was under no circumstance to have any contact with Ms. Warren. That' s what this case is about. That— this does in fact

mean something. Now, as jurors you' ve been given several rules throughout this case, what time to be here, strict rules about not discussing the case amongst each other, keep — Your Honor, I' m going to object. This has nothing to Defense Counsel]: do with the evidence in this case. Asking the jurors to put themselves in the shoes of the defendant.

RP ( Feb. 16, 2012) at 252 -53. The trial court overruled the objection.

The prosecutor subsequently addressed the special verdict form asking whether Crable' s

offense occurred upon his recent release from incarceration:

Jail is incarceration. And the State submits that' s why this case, while not groundbreaking, earth shattering, it means something. You can' t walk out of a

sentencing and that very same day blatantly violate a court order. It' s a slap in the face to the judicial system. Defense Counsel]: Your Honor, I' m going to object to that statement. Counsel is trying to put her prestige behind its arguments. You' re supposed to just be --

RP ( Feb. 16, 2012) at 260. The trial court sustained the objection. RP 260.

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