State Of Washington v. Jeffery Smith

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedApril 9, 2013
Docket42348-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington v. Jeffery Smith (State Of Washington v. Jeffery Smith) 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. Jeffery Smith, (Wash. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

FILED COURT OF APP EA1 S L II 201 APR -9 AM 9: 02 IN.THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF W

DIVISION II

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 423

Respondent,

v

JEFFERY BRIAN SMITH, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

JOHANSON, A. . J. C Jeffery Brian Smith pleaded guilty to first degree child molestation —

and witness tampering. We hold that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by including in Smith's sentence a crime -related no- contact provision that advanced public interests and was

reasonably limited in its scope. And because our legislature intended to allow polygraph

examinations to monitor a sex offender's compliance with treatment and other conditions of a

special sex offender sentencing alternative' ( SOSA), affirm Smith's judgment and sentence S we I and the trial court' or__ der revoking s_ Smith's SSOSA.

FACTS

In 2010, Smith pleaded guilty to first degree child molestation— domestic violence, for

having sexual contact with his minor stepdaughter, K. . He also pleaded guilty to witness A. M tampering after he called his wife— M. A.' K. motherfrom jail and directed her to have K. . s — A. M tell authorities that Smith did not touch her.

1 RCW 9. 670. 94A.

2 We use initials to protect the victim's privacy. No. 42348 1 II - -

Before sentencing, the Department of Corrections (DOC)completed Smith's presentence

investigation and report. The presentence report explained that, while he lived with K. . A.' s M

mother and her family, Smith sexually abused K. . Upon his initial arrest in 2009, Smith A. M

denied touching K. .though he later admitted that he twice touched her. The presentence A., M

report showed that K. . A.' mother doubted that Smith had touched K. . s M A. M Smith sought a SSOSA. To determine Smith's amenability to treatment, Dr. Mark

Whitehill psychosexual evaluation Smith. Dr. Whitehill guardedly performed a on

recommended treatment for Smith. He explained, I] light of the defensiveness seen on testing "[ n .

and his lack of awareness of any of the thoughts and feelings which preceded the sexual abuse of

A.]." K. .Clerk's Papers (CP)at 65. Dr. Whitehill recommended that Smith regularly submit M to polygraph examinations to guarantee his adherence to his strictly- regimented SSOSA therapy contract.

Dr. Whitehill reiterated his conclusions at sentencing. He emphasized that rules should A.' .mother. govern any contact between Smith and K. s M Dr. Whitehill did not want Smith

calling K. .mother at her home, for example, because he feared Smith may potentially A.' s M contact K. . The trial court A. M imposed a SSOSA. The judgment and sentence included a

provision that prohibited Smith from having "direct or indirect contact with victim( ) his or s or her family, including by telephone, computer, letter, in person, or via third party." CP at 117.

Appendix H to the judgment and sentence prohibited Smith from contacting K. .in person, A. " M in writing, telephonically, electronically, and or through [a]third party." CP / at 124.. It also

prohibited him from having contact "with K. . immediate family, effective immediately." A.'. Ms CP at 124. The trial court allowed Smith to have telephone contact with K. . A.' mother until s M

2 No:42348 1 II - -

A.' K. .mother could meet with Smith's psychosexual therapist and community corrections s M

officer to establish strategies and boundaries to determine what kind of contact they should have

and where, under what circumstances, and how frequent they may contact one another. The trial

court also followed another of Dr. Whitehill's recommendations, ordering Smith to submit to

polygraphs to "monitor compliance with crime -related prohibitions and law- abiding behavior." CP at 125.

Later, DOC filed a notice of violation with the court, alleging three violations, including

failed polygraph tests and two episodes of in- person contact with K. .mother. The State A.' s M then moved to revoke Smith's SSOSA, and DOC filed a supplemental notice of violation. The

supplemental notice included two more violations, one for contacting K. . A.' mother and the s M other for failing a polygraph.

At the eventual revocation hearing, the trial court found that the State proved all five of

Smith's violations. Consequently, the trial court revoked Smith's SSOSA and left all contact

provisions as they were initially written in the original Appendix H. Smith appeals the original judgment and sentence and the order revoking his SSOSA and modifying his sentence. ANALYSIS

Smith first argues that the trial court revoked his SSOSA based on an improper no-

contact provision that prohibited him from seeing his wife. He argues that the no- contact

provision was not crime related, curbed his free association rights, and deprived him of a

3 The trial court also imposed a separate domestic violence no- contact order pursuant to RCW 10. 9. 9

4 One of these in- person contacts with K. . A.' mother occurred the day Smith was released s M from jail.

3 No. 42348 1 II - -

fundamental liberty interest. Because the no- contact provision was crime -related and

reasonable in scope, we disagree.

We review sentencing conditions for an abuse of discretion. State v. Riley, 121 Wn. d 2

22, 37, 846 P. d 1365 .( 2 1993). Crime -related prohibitions directly relate to the crime's

circumstances. RCW 9.0). typically uphold sentencing conditions if reasonably 030( 4A. We 1 9

crime related. See Riley, 121 Wn. d at 37. 2

Trial courts must sensitively impose conditions that interfere with one's fundamental

rights. Riley, 121 Wn. d at 37. Rights to marriage and to the care, custody, and companionship 2 of one's children are fundamental constitutional rights, and we subject to strict scrutiny any state

interference with those rights. State v. Warren, 165 Wn.2d 17, 34, 195 P. d 940 (2008), 3 cent. denied, 129 S. Ct. 2007 (2009). A sentencing court, for example, may restrict a convicted

defendant's fundamental rights, but only if reasonably necessary to accomplish the essential needs of the state and public order. Riley, 121 Wn. d at 37 38. 2 -

In Warren, our Supreme Court addressed whether sentencing conditions prohibiting a defendant from contact with his wife were reasonably crime -related or a violation of his

fundamental rights, even though the wife was not the direct victim of the crime. Warren was convicted of child molestation his two minor stepdaughters. - 165 Wn. d 2 at 23. The against

Supreme Court held that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in imposing the no- contact provision because the wife's protection directly related to the case's crimes: she was the two

child victims' mother, Warren attempted to induce her not to cooperate in the prosecution of the

5 Smith also makes a passing argument that the provision violated his rights against cruel and unusual Because he does not brief this issue, we decline to address it. RAP punishment. a)( 10. 6). 3(

4 No. 42348 1 II - -

crime, and she testif ed against Warren at trial. Warren, 165 Wn. d.at 34. The court then 2

considered whether the no- contact provision violated Warren's fundamental constitutional right

to marriage and to parent his children. Warren, 165 Wn. d at 34.

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