State Of Washington, V. John Yellowcalf

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedFebruary 2, 2026
Docket86685-1
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
State Of Washington, V. John Yellowcalf, (Wash. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

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

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 86685-1-I

Appellant,

v. PUBLISHED OPINION

JOHN YELLOWCALF,

Respondent.

BOWMAN, A.C.J. — Sedro-Woolley Police Department Officer Isaiah

VanDam identified John Yellowcalf as the driver of a fleeing car after viewing a

single Department of Licensing (DOL) photograph provided by another officer.

The State charged Yellowcalf with attempting to elude a pursuing police vehicle.

The trial court suppressed the out-of-court identification and dismissed the

eluding charge, concluding the single-photo identification procedure violated

Yellowcalf’s due process rights. The State appeals. Because the trial court

failed to analyze whether the suggestive identification procedure was necessary

under the circumstances, we reverse and remand for further proceedings.1

FACTS

On August 10, 2023, the State charged Yellowcalf with attempting to elude

a pursuing police vehicle. The State moved for an arrest warrant and attached to

1 After oral argument, Yellowcalf notified this court that one of the judges hearing his case “may have represented him on a criminal matter in either Snohomish or Skagit County many years ago.” Because none of the judges on this panel have ever represented Yellowcalf, we take no action on the notice. No. 86685-1-I/2

the motion an affidavit from Officer VanDam, dated May 25, 2023. In the

affidavit, Officer VanDam said that on May 18, 2023, at around 9:04 p.m., he

drove a marked police car eastbound on River Road in Sedro-Woolley. While

driving, he saw a car with license plate number AWZ4533 traveling in the

opposite direction. Officer VanDam “was able to get a good look on [sic] the

driver’s face and could see that the passenger seat was occupied by a white

female with blonde hair.” He described the driver as “a male, either Hispanic or

Tribal,” with “short brown or black hair.”

As Officer VanDam passed the car, it sped off “well over the posted 35

MPH zone.” Officer VanDam turned around and tried to catch up to the speeding

car. He saw the car run a stop sign and turn onto an adjoining street. Officer

VanDam activated his lights and siren but the car continued to speed away,

making several turns. Officer VanDam briefly lost sight of the car but then

spotted it a couple of blocks later. He used his radio to “call out” the direction the

car was headed and its license plate number. He continued to pursue the car but

abandoned the chase after it sped up to 65 MPH in a 25 MPH zone and travelled

north in a southbound lane.

Sedro-Woolley Police Department Officer Deion Whitt heard Officer

VanDam’s “call out” and told him over the “side radio” that “he knew who [the]

eluding suspect may [be].” Officer Whitt sent Officer VanDam a DOL photo of

Yellowcalf. Officer VanDam confirmed from the photo that Yellowcalf was the

driver of the fleeing car.

On January 12, 2024, Yellowcalf moved to suppress Officer VanDam’s

single-photo identification. He argued that the police used an “impermissibly

2 No. 86685-1-I/3

suggestive and unreliable” identification procedure in violation of Yellowcalf’s due

process rights under the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States

Constitution. The State opposed the motion. In support, it attached to its

response a supplemental report from Officer VanDam, dated January 19, 2024.

In the January 19 report, Officer VanDam claimed that he was patrolling

the area of River Road near a boat launch, “entering the license plates” of cars

parked in the area because that section of the roadway “is a common place

where drugs are sold and bought, stolen vehicles are recovered, prostitution has

occurred, and where it just seems that people with warrants seem to sit.” He

then came across a car parked in the area and saw a “Hispanic or Tribal” male in

his “mid 30’s to mid 40’s” standing next to the open driver’s side door, smoking a

cigarette. He said the male “looked directly at me and my patrol car,” then turned

away and threw his cigarette into the river. The man then got into the car and

drove away in the opposite direction, appearing to travel at a “faster speed than

the posted speed limit of 25 MPH.”2 Officer VanDam then “did a U-Turn” and

followed the car westbound on River Road.

On March 5, 2024, the trial court heard Yellowcalf’s motion to suppress.

At the hearing, Officer VanDam testified consistently with his January 19

supplemental report. And he identified Yellowcalf in court as the person driving

the car that sped away from him. On cross-examination, Yellowcalf used

VanDam’s May 25 affidavit to impeach his testimony. He pointed out that in the

May affidavit, Officer VanDam said he first saw the driver of the other car

2 We note that in his May 25, 2023 affidavit, Officer VanDam said the posted speed limit was 35 MPH.

3 No. 86685-1-I/4

“driving” west on River Road in the opposite direction of his patrol car, not

standing outside a “parked” car, smoking a cigarette.

Yellowcalf also called Dr. Geoffrey Loftus as an expert witness. Dr.

Loftus, an experimental psychologist who studies perception and memory,

testified about the dangers of eyewitness misidentification. He explained that

single-photo identifications are “intrinsically unreliable.” And he opined that the

circumstances of Yellowcalf’s arrest did not support a reliable identification.

Further, Dr. Loftus found Office VanDam’s two reports “contradictory.”

And he explained that “if a witness makes two contradictory statements about

some event that they experienced, then the first account is more likely to be

accurate than the second account.” So, he assumed that Officer VanDam’s May

25, 2023 affidavit was accurate and that his January 19, 2024 supplemental

report was not. Looking at the May 25 affidavit, Dr. Loftus noted that Officer

VanDam’s attention was divided among driving, typing the license plate number,

and trying to see the car’s occupants during the few seconds the two drove by

each other. And he concluded that those circumstances coupled with “a showup

procedure that is itself intrinsically unreliable” tainted Officer VanDam’s

identification of Yellowcalf.

The trial court granted Yellowcalf’s motion to suppress the identification.

In its findings of fact and conclusions of law, it concluded that the identification

procedure was “highly suggestive” and that the circumstances surrounding the

identification were “unreliable.”3 In support of its conclusion, it found that Officer

3 The court also found that it was dusk at the time of the incident, “render[ing] the opportunity to view unreliable.”

4 No. 86685-1-I/5

VanDam’s conflicting reports “leave unanswered questions” as to his opportunity

to view the suspect and “raise concerns over the credibility of his testimony about

this specific incident.” But it explained that “what is clear” is that Officer VanDam

was doing other tasks at the same time he saw the car drive by him and that he

had no specific reason to heed the driver’s identity. So, the identification

procedure created a substantial likelihood of irreparable misidentification in

violation of Yellowcalf’s due process rights.

The case proceeded to a bench trial, and Yellowcalf moved in limine to

also exclude any in-court identification of him as the driver. He argued that such

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