State Of Washington, V. Jared Parker Takeo Standley

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJuly 22, 2025
Docket59053-1
StatusUnpublished

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State Of Washington, V. Jared Parker Takeo Standley, (Wash. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

July 22, 2025

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 59053-1-II

Respondent,

v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION

JARED STANDLEY,

Appellant.

CHE, J.  Jared Parker Takeo Standley appeals the denial of his partial conditional

release request for staff-escorted community outings (SECO) and unescorted grounds privileges

(UGP).

A trial court found Standley not guilty by reason of insanity on two counts of aggravated

murder and committed him to a state hospital. In 2023, Standley sought conditional release. At

the conditional release hearing, the trial court, among other evidence, admitted eight exhibits

under the business records exception to hearsay. The trial court denied Standley’s petition,

concluding that substantial evidence supported the denial.

Standley argues that (1) prejudicial error occurred by the trial court improperly admitting

eight exhibits under the business records exception to hearsay, (2) prejudicial error occurred by

the trial court allowing one of Standley’s treatment professionals to provide opinion testimony, No. 59053-1-II

(3) insufficient evidence supported various findings of fact, and (4) the findings of fact did not

support the trial court’s conclusions of law or its decision denying Standley’s petition.

We hold (1) the trial court did not err in admitting the eight exhibits and, even if it did err

in relation to Exhibits 1 and 4, Standley was not prejudiced by the trial court’s rulings, (2) the

treatment professional’s testimony was admissible, (3) substantial evidence supports each of the

challenged findings of fact, and (4) the findings of fact support the trial court’s conclusions to

deny Standley’s petition for partial conditional release.

Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s denial of Standley’s petition for partial

conditional release.

FACTS

BACKGROUND

Standley murdered both his parents in 2018. Standley killed his parents, believing that

they were part of a gang that was coming after him. Standley first beat his mother to death with

a baseball bat in their home. When Standley’s father came home, Standley shot him in the head

through the glass of their front door.

The trial court found Standley not guilty by reason of insanity (NGRI) on two counts of

aggravated first degree murder, finding that he committed the murders while under active

symptoms of schizophrenia and that the symptoms caused him to not be able to distinguish right

from wrong. In 2019, the court committed Standley to Western State Hospital (WSH) for a

maximum commitment date of life based upon the index offenses of two counts of aggravated

first degree murder.

2 No. 59053-1-II

Standley’s Diagnoses and Treatment

When Standley murdered his parents, it was his first known act of violence. Prior to his

index offenses, Standley neither received regular mental health treatment nor medication.

Within months of the index offenses, Standley’s symptoms developed from “prodromal

symptoms” to acute psychosis.1 Ex. 11 at 2. Standley was diagnosed with schizophrenia,

substance use disorder, and an unspecified anxiety disorder and, upon admission to WSH, was

prescribed antipsychotic medication.

Standley was diagnosed specifically with paranoid schizophrenia, which meant that one

of his predominant symptoms was “paranoia or a fear that something terrible might happen to

[him], that [his] life or maybe the life of someone [he] love[s] is in danger.” 2 Rep. of Proc.

(2 RP) (Nov. 13, 2023) at 198. According to Dr. Ramsha Rao, Standley’s psychiatrist, between

September 2022 and March 2023 Standley’s paranoid schizophrenia overlapped with anxiety

because paranoia schizophrenia creates a “profound sense of anxiety” as a symptom. 2 RP at

198. Dr. Rao described this overlap as relating to one’s fight or flight response. 2 RP at 198.

Standley’s paranoid schizophrenia presented primarily with delusions, which are thoughts

or beliefs “not based in reality and [that] cannot be changed despite being given evidence to the

contrary that is based in fact.” 2 RP at 196. Patients experiencing delusions are more dangerous

than patients experiencing other symptoms of schizophrenia, such as disorganized thinking,

because delusions are “unflinchingly rigid . . . they cannot be changed.”2 2 RP at 196.

1 “Prodromal” symptoms are symptoms which provide warning or notice of a disease. WEBSTER’S THIRD NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY 1790, 1810 (2002). 2 Disorganized thought is a nonlinear thought process.

3 No. 59053-1-II

Delusions are also dangerous because delusional patients do not always show outward

symptoms: “you would not know [] delusions exist until they start acting on the basis of their

delusions or you’re able to have a conversation with them that elicits those delusions.” 2 RP at

197.

According to Dr. Brian Young, a Washington State Department of Social and Health

Services (DSHS) forensic evaluator based at WSH and who specialized in risk assessment,

Standley’s “persecutory delusional beliefs, believing that people were trying to harm him when it

was not really the case,” were one of Standley’s “most troublesome symptom” and were the type

of symptoms Standley experienced during his index offense.3, 4 1 RP (Nov. 8, 2023) (1 RP) at 17.

Upon admission to WSH, Standley’s treatment team prescribed him medications to

manage his schizophrenia symptoms. Dr. Rao’s treatment plan for Standley also included group

therapy sessions and weekly one-on-one therapy sessions with Christina Baity, Standley’s

primary therapist, as well as others. Dr. Rao explained that schizophrenia was not an illness that

could be cured and was a progressive illness, meaning that there was a likelihood that Standley’s

illness could worsen over time. Due to schizophrenia’s qualities, “one of the big components of

managing schizophrenia is recognizing . . . how the illness functions and being very vigilant to

3 Dr. Michael Stanfill, a licensed psychologist and board-certified forensic psychologist, hired by Standley, described persecutory and paranoid delusions as “thinking things and that people are coming after [a person] that . . . [don’t] have any real basis in reality.” 1 RP at 137, 139. 4 Dr. Young also testified that Standley’s diagnosis symptoms included auditory hallucinations and social skills challenges. Hallucinations occur when someone senses things that might not be based in reality. Dr. Young also stated that Standley tended to distrust people after a half an hour or more of talking to them.

4 No. 59053-1-II

any symptoms that can be present and addressing them immediately as they present.” 2 RP at

200.

Both Drs. Rao and Young had to rely on Standley to report his symptoms. Dr. Rao

believed that, if Standley failed to report symptoms, his level of dangerousness would “increase[]

exponentially . . . because not reporting those symptoms can also speak to a lingering paranoia

and potentially worsening paranoia, and that prevents . . . the treatment team from intervening

early and appropriately.” 2 RP at 200.

In the NGRI system, part of the treatment team’s responsibilities included being

advocates for their patients, which includes advocating for their patients “earning their right to

move forward and progress to [privilege] level[s]” during the partial conditional release process.

1 RP at 117.

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