State of Washington v. John Thomas Edward Clark

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 19, 2024
Docket39710-6
StatusUnpublished

This text of State of Washington v. John Thomas Edward Clark (State of Washington v. John Thomas Edward Clark) 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. John Thomas Edward Clark, (Wash. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

FILED December 19, 2024 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals Division III

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

STATE OF WASHINGTON, ) ) No. 39710-6-III Respondent, ) ) v. ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) JOHN THOMAS EDWARD CLARK, ) ) Appellant. ) ) FEARING, J. — At the request of the State of Washington, we previously remanded

appellant John Clark’s sentence because the superior court considered impermissible

circumstances when granting an exceptional downward sentence. Clark now asks that we

remand again for a second resentencing. We grant Clark’s request because of uncertainty

as to whether the superior court properly exercised its discretion during the first

resentencing.

FACTS

A no-contact order prohibited John Clark from any contact, even through a third

party, with his ex-wife Jane, a pseudonym. Between February and April 2020, Clark

violated the order four times. The superior court simultaneously sentenced Clark for

these four violations on May 19, 2020. No. 39710-6-III State v. Clark

During July and August 2020, John Clark contacted Jane numerous times through

Facebook and through Jane’s mother, H.T. John sent H.T. pictures via Facebook

messenger of handwritten letters addressed to Jane and signed by him. He asked H.T. to

forward the messages to Jane.

On December 8, 2020, the State of Washington charged John Clark with a felony

violation of a no-contact order. The offense rose to the level of a felony due to Clark

having at least two earlier convictions of violating the order.

On January 14, 2022, John Clark pled guilty to the felony charge of violating a

court order. Because Clark’s offender score was 8, the standard range sentence for his

offense began and ended at 60 months. In exchange for Clark pleading guilty, the State

agreed to recommend, at sentencing, a prison-based Drug Offender Sentencing

Alternative (DOSA) consisting of thirty months of incarceration and thirty months of

community custody. The statement of plea of guilty read, in part:

(j) The prosecuting attorney will make the following recommendation to the judge: Agreed recommendation for Prison DOSA.

Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 7.

At John Clark’s sentencing hearing, the State requested imposition of the DOSA

sentence reflected in the plea agreement. In response, defense counsel remarked:

The day I met Mr. Clark probably about eight or nine months ago he told me he wanted to take responsibility for his actions, told me he was ready to plead guilty, but the offer on the table was this; it was prison DOSA where he would have to derail the past two years of his

2 No. 39710-6-III State v. Clark

rehabilitation, his getting sober, getting his life on track to go to prison for 20 months at best with good time. And so for the past nine months I’ve been working with the State in attempt to find a resolution that would allow Mr. Clark to potentially not spend nearly two years in custody followed by DOC [Department of Corrections community custody]. DOC isn’t his concern. He knows he’ll be able to be compliant with that. It’s really going to prison, taking two years off work, child support payments, all of those things and having to kind [of] get back out of custody and start his life over again for however many-th (sic) time. . . . [H]e knows that he violated this no contact order back in November of 2020, but he’s gotten sober, he's gotten clean. Since November of 2020 as far as I’m aware there haven’t been any allegations of violations of a no-contact order. I’m sure the State would have informed me if there were. So he’s been good, and he’s done what he needs to do. It’s unfortunate that the [SRA] is structured the way it is. The law is the law and no-contact orders are such a procedural charge that it’s easy for the State to prove at trial. Mr. Clark didn’t want to put the community through that; he didn’t want to put his family and friends through that, or the victim through that. So he’s taking responsibility and he’s ready to enter his guilty plea. I think the only way and I told Mr. Clark this, the only way I would have been able to help him is to go back in time, never leave the prosecutor’s office, be the assigned DPA [deputy prosecuting attorney] on this case, and have a little empathy for the journey that he’s gone on, and the changes that he’s made in his life. This is a hard one for me, Your Honor, to sit here and have Mr. Clark booked into custody today knowing that for the next two years he’s going to have to sit still, and as an addict he’s going to have to be really, really structured when he gets out of custody and be very focused. He knows he can do it; I know he can do it, but it’s hard to sit here and know that transport is coming to take him away for two years.

CP at 56-57 (some alterations in original).

The sentencing court imposed an exceptional sentence below the standard range,

which sentence consisted of six months of incarceration and twelve months of

community custody. The court also imposed a five-year no-contact order. The

3 No. 39710-6-III State v. Clark

sentencing court found that four factors warranted a departure from the standard range

sentence: (1) John Clark engaged in post-arrest rehabilitation, (2) Clark’s earlier no-

contact order violations were sentenced on the same date with the offenses having been

committed in a narrow period of time, (3) since Clark’s violative communications were in

writing, the State and the court knew all the substance of his improper communications,

and (4) Clark’s communications to his ex-wife and her mother were not threatening,

intimidating, or violent.

The State appealed John Clark’s sentence to this court. The State asked for

resentencing because the law did not approve of any but one of the sentencing court’s

bases for a downward sentence and because defense counsel implicitly breached the plea

agreement at sentencing by undermining the parties’ recommendation for a prison-based

DOSA.

On February 21, 2023, this court issued its opinion that remanded John Clark’s

prosecution for resentencing. In discussing whether Clark’s minimal misconduct

justified an exceptional sentence on its own, this court wrote:

While the legislature has recognized some different degrees of offense conduct in setting the penalties for violations of no-contact orders, the conduct sufficient to qualify as a felony under the statute of conviction, former RCW 26.50.110(5) (felony based on two or more prior convictions), can vary widely. On the aggravating side, a defendant with two or more prior convictions might violate the no-contact order by assaulting the protected party. On the mitigating side, a defendant with two prior convictions might violate the statute by a peaceful interaction that was initiated by the protected party. Our case law recognizes that if the

4 No. 39710-6-III State v. Clark

defendant’s conduct falls on the extreme end of the proscribed behavior, a departure may be warranted. See, e.g., State v. Fisher, 108 Wn.2d 419, 739 P.2d 683 (1987). Mr. Clark’s offense conduct included both aggravating and mitigating circumstances. In aggravation, Mr. Clark had more than two prior no-contact order violations and, according to the factual basis for Mr. Clark’s guilty plea, Mr. Clark contacted his ex-wife on numerous occasions as part of the current offense. The State could have charged Mr.

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Related

State v. Amo
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Roberson v. Perez
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State v. Russell
171 Wash. 2d 118 (Washington Supreme Court, 2011)
State v. Rice
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State v. McEnroe
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State v. Van Buren
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State of Washington v. John Thomas Edward Clark, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-washington-v-john-thomas-edward-clark-washctapp-2024.