State Of Washington v. I.h.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedOctober 8, 2018
Docket77514-6
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington v. I.h. (State Of Washington v. I.h.) 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. I.h., (Wash. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

F i,........p DIV I alui-o. OFOF1LS WASHIMGIGH STATE

20111 OCT -8 Ali 11: 27

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

THE STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 77514-6-I

Respondent,

V. UNPUBLISHED OPINION

I.H., B.D. 07/09/02,

Appellant. FILED: October 8, 2018

SCHINDLER, J. — The juvenile court found I.H. guilty of assault in the first degree

in violation of RCW 9A.36.011(1)(a). I.H. contends the waiver of his Mirandal rights

was not valid and the court erred in concluding the statements to the police were

knowing, intelligent, and voluntary. We affirm but remand to correct a clerical error in

the order on disposition.

FACTS

On October 31, 2016, Camille James and her boyfriend Jeffery Bakker took turns

answering the front door for Halloween trick-or-treaters. At approximately 9:00 p.m., the

doorbell rang several times,"very fast and very repetitive." But when James opened the

door, no one was there. After shutting the door, James "saw a figure" through the

1 Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436, 86 S. Ct. 1602, 16 L. Ed. 2d 694(1966). No. 77514-6-1/2

window and opened the door. A young black male, later identified as 14-year-old I.H.,

was standing at the door "wearing dark jeans and a grey and black hoody."

I.H. was "standing in front of[James] with his arms behind his back and his head

down." James said the boy looked up and they "made eye contact!' When James held

out the bowl of candy, I.H. stabbed James on her right side with a knife and ran away.

At first, James thought I.H. punched her, but she "felt a sharper pain and I knew that I

had been stabbed."

Bakker called 911. The medics arrived quickly. James remained at Harborview

Medical Center for approximately three days. Federal Way Police Department

detectives showed James three different photomontages. James did not recognize

anyone in two of the photomontages. James "picked somebody out" in the third

photomontage but she "wasn't positive" if it was the person who stabbed her.

The next day on November 1, I.H. told his friend C.S. that "he stabbed

somebody." C.S. "didn't really believe him" at first. C.S. found an article about a

stabbing and sent it to I.H. on Facebook. Later that afternoon, his guitar teacher talked

about "something on the news about a stabbing on Halloween." C.S. later told his

father that I.H. stabbed someone on Halloween.

C.S.'s father called 911 on November 3 to report the stabbing and the police

interviewed C.S. At approximately midnight on November 3, the police arrested I.H.

I.H. was asleep and wearing pants but no shirt. The police placed I.H. in an

interrogation room and put shackles on his ankles.

Detective Kris Durell read I.H. Miranda2 rights and juvenile warnings. Detective

2 Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436, 86 S. Ct. 1602, 16 L. Ed. 2d 694(1966).

2 No. 77514-6-1/3

Matthew Novak and Detective Durell interviewed I.H. for approximately an hour and a

half. The interview was audio and video recorded.

I.H. told the detectives he went to school at "Sequoia" and took classes in

science, language arts, math, physical education, social studies, and Digitech, a class

for programming and "typing and writing codes."

I.H. told the detectives he was at home on Halloween and "watch[ed] Nefflix" with

his mom and sisters. Detective Durell asked about what I.H. told his friend C.S. at

school. I.H. admitted he "stabbed someone." I.H. described the person he stabbed as

a white woman who "had glasses and... looks like she was in her 40s or.. . 30s." I.H.

said he had the knife "behind my back." I.H. said the woman was handing out "Kit Kats

and Reeses." I.H. said he "stabbed her... because she didn't have the candy I

wanted, and so I got mad, and so I just stabbed her."

I.H. stood up and showed the detectives how he took out his "eight-inch stainless

steel Good Cook butcher knife" and stabbed the woman once "in her stomach." After

she "screamed," he left. I.H. said, "[W]hen you stab someone," they "bleed and it could

be fatal at times."

I.H. told the detectives he "threw [the knife] into. .. this pond." I.H. said he was

wearing a "zip up hoodie" that had "gray. . . around the torso and then the sleeves were

. .. all black." 1.H. said the sweatshirt was "hanging up" in his bedroom.

The detectives submitted an affidavit in support of a warrant to search the

condominium. A judge authorized the search. When the police executed the search

warrant, they found a black and grey sweatshirt and a "large Good Cook knife" in "a

suitcase" near the bed where I.H. slept.

3 No. 77514-6-1/4

The police showed James a photomontage that included I.H. James identified

I.H. as the young man who stabbed her. James was "100 percent" confident.

Washington State Patrol Criminal Laboratory(WSPCL)forensic examiner

Rebecca Neyhart tested the DNA3 on the Good Cook knife. The DNA matched the

DNA profiles of I.H. and James.

The State charged I.H. in juvenile court with assault in the first degree in violation

of RCW 9A.36.011(1)(a) and (c). The State alleged that I.H., "with intent to inflict great

bodily harm, did assault Camille James with a deadly weapon and force and means

likely to produce great bodily harm or death, to wit: a stab wound, and did inflict great

bodily harm upon Camille James." I.H. pleaded not guilty.

I.H. filed a motion to suppress the statements he made to the police. The court

held a CrR 3.5 hearing. Detective Novak, Detective Durell, and I.H. testified at the

hearing. The court admitted into evidence and reviewed the audio and video recording

of the November 4 interview.

Detective Durell testified that I.H. did not "ever appear to be confused about his

rights" and "agree[d] to talk." Detective Durell said I.H. did not "do anything to indicate

that he wished to invoke his rights." Detective Durell testified that I.H. "talked about

liking to read" and said he "read Robert Mills. . . and nonfiction." Detective Durell said

that when I.H. was "telling [him]the details of this incident," I.H. "appeared to just be

replaying the incident kind of detached from it."

I.H. testified that he "was asleep" when the police "woke me up" and "took me to

the police station." I.H. testified he believed he "could tell [the detective] that. ..[he]

didn't understand all of" his rights but he did not say anything because he "just wanted

3 Deoxyribonucleic acid.

4 No. 77514-6-1/5

to. . . get on with it." I.H. did not "remember being cold" in the interview room and said

he "wore shorts and a tee shirt to school that day."

On cross-examination, I.H. testified that he was "honest with" the detectives

when he talked to them. When asked whether he was "honest when you said that you

stabbed . . . James," I.H. testified he was "honest about some of it."

The court ruled I.H. knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily waived his Miranda

rights and his statements were admissible at trial. The court entered written CrR 3.5

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