State Of Washington v. Ezra Danilo Wright

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 9, 2020
Docket81834-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington v. Ezra Danilo Wright (State Of Washington v. Ezra Danilo Wright) 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. Ezra Danilo Wright, (Wash. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 81834-1-I Respondent, DIVISION ONE v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION EZRA DANILO WRIGHT,

Appellant.

SMITH, J. — Ezra Wright appeals his conviction for attempted rape of a

child after he was arrested in a sting operation conducted by the Missing and

Exploited Children’s Task Force (MECTF). He contends that the trial court erred

by declining to instruct the jury on entrapment and that the government engaged

in such outrageous conduct that due process barred his conviction. In a

statement of additional grounds (SAG), he also contends that (1) the trial court

abused its discretion by revoking Wright’s access to social media as part of the

felony judgment and sentence and (2) MECTF’s sting operation used fictional

children to cause the imposition of an unfairly long sentence.

We conclude that Wright did not present sufficient evidence to require an

entrapment instruction and that the State’s conduct did not violate due process.

Furthermore, we conclude that the facts linking Wright’s crime to social media

usage are sufficient to permit the restriction of social media and that the fact that

there are only fictional victims does not require a lighter sentence under the

statutory scheme. Therefore, we affirm.

Citations and pin cites are based on the Westlaw online version of the cited material. No. 81834-1-I/2

FACTS

In September 2016, MECTF posted an advertisement in the Craigslist

casual encounters section entitled “Family Play Time!?!? – w4m.”1 The ad

stated, “Mommy/daughter, Daddy/ daughter, Daddy/son, Mommy/son . . . you get

the drift. If you know what I’m talking about hit me up we’ll chat more about what

I have to offer you.”

Wright, a 20-year-old soldier stationed at Joint Base Lewis-McChord,

responded to the ad, saying he was interested and asking if they could speak

more. Krista Kleinfelder, a member of MECTF posing as “Hannah Jacobs,”

responded. She wrote, “I’m not interested in RP,[2] only someone serious. [I]’m a

single mother of three young kids 13, 11, 6[ ] and looking for someone to teach

my kids. . . . this is taboo and not for everyone.” She included a phone number

that Wright could text her at if he was “serious.”

At 1:19 p.m. on September 9, Wright texted Kleinfelder,3 and the two had

the following exchange:

[Wright:] I’m open to whatever

[Wright:] It depends on what you want out of this

[Kleinfelder:] Did you have experience with younger kids?

[Wright:] How much experience do you need? And what exactly would I do?

[Kleinfelder:] I just want someone you knows how to make it fun for my girls without them experiencing pain

1“[W]4m” is an abbreviation that means women for men. 2The detective explained RP is an abbreviation for role-playing. 3 Wright’s text records indicate that while he was texting with Hannah, he

was also responding to other Craigslist ads to meet up with someone.

2 No. 81834-1-I/3

[Wright:] What do you want me to do with them?

[Kleinfelder:] I’d like to watch someone have sex with them.

[Wright:] Can you send a picture of them?

When Kleinfelder declined to immediately send a picture of her “children,”

Wright responded, “What about of you.” Kleinfelder sent Wright a picture of

herself with two other undercover law enforcement officers posing as her

children. The picture had a Snapchat puppy filter applied to it which obscured

the officers’ faces and made them look younger. Wright replied, “The girl is cute.

Do you wanna meet up sometime?” Kleinfelder expressed doubts that he was

“for real,” and the two had the following exchange:

[Wright:] I’m real

[Wright:] I’m military I’m not supposed to be in this

[Kleinfelder:] not sure what that means

[Kleinfelder:] I have rules the first one is honesty and the next is directness. I don’t feel I’m getting either from you. I’m trying to filter out the fakes and I think y [sic]

[Wright:] This is illegal in a lot of ways

[Wright:] We can meet if that makes you feel better

[Kleinfelder:] me and my family live a discreet life filled with taboo. i don’t think it’s wrong but other do so I have to be careful

[Wright:] I just don’t want to get in trouble with the law

[Wright:] Do you want to meet tonight?

[Kleinfelder:] i understand. then this is not for you

[Kleinfelder:] for what?

3 No. 81834-1-I/4

[Wright:] Can we at least meet first?

[Wright:] Because I wanna make sure you’re not a cop before I agree to this

Kleinfelder asked Wright to send her a picture of him. When he did, she

said, “you[’]r[e] attractive. [B]ut tell me specifically what you want with me kids,”

and Wright responded, “I’ll have sex with the girls . . . [b]ut not the male.”

Kleinfelder asked, “How big are you[? T]he six year old is kind of small. I would

also require condoms,” and Wright responded, “I’m 5’5”. I have condoms. Can

you send me a pic of just the girls?” He subsequently asked, “Do they both

consent to this? They’re not gonna tell anyone else?,” and Kleinfelder

responded, “[T]hey [know] we don’t talk about playtime[. W]e have our little

secrets. They are both very excited.” Wright responded, “When are you

available?”

The two arranged to meet up that night. Wright indicated that he was

interested in “[j]ust the 11[-year-old] for now.” He asked if they could meet in

Puyallup, but Kleinfelder indicated he should come to her home in Tumwater. He

agreed, saying, “Ok. I hope you’re not a cop.” He continued to express caution,

asking if she and her daughter could come outside first when he got to their

home, asking if her home was isolated, and asking if they could meet somewhere

neutral first. Kleinfelder answered his questions and said, “It’s ok if you don’t

want to come here. You can walk away I’d understand.” He asked if tomorrow

worked for her, and she said, “[S]orry [I]’m done with these games.” Wright then

agreed to come to her home that night.

Around 10 p.m. on September 9, Wright arrived at the address that

4 No. 81834-1-I/5

Kleinfelder had told him. After meeting Kleinfelder, he went inside the house and

was promptly arrested by officers inside. He had a single condom in his pocket

and a box of condoms in his car. He was charged with one count of attempted

rape of a child in the first degree.

At trial, after the State presented the above evidence, the court heard

argument about instructing the jury on entrapment. Wright contended that the

fact that Kleinfelder was the one who brought up having sex with the girls, that

Wright took several hours to agree to do so, and that at one point Kleinfelder was

the one to reinitiate texting after a 30-minute break in the conversation all pointed

toward entrapment. The court determined that there was inadequate evidence to

support the entrapment instruction and did not provide it to the jury.

The jury found Wright guilty. Wright appeals.

ANALYSIS

Sufficiency of Evidence for Entrapment Instruction

Wright contends that the trial court erred when it declined to instruct the

jury on entrapment. We disagree.

We review a trial court’s decision regarding jury instructions de novo to the

extent it is based on legal conclusions and for abuse of discretion to the extent it

is based on factual determinations. State v. Condon, 182 Wn.2d 307, 315-16,

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