State Of Washington v. Kenneth W. Whiteman, Sr.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 2, 2015
Docket71312-4
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington v. Kenneth W. Whiteman, Sr. (State Of Washington v. Kenneth W. Whiteman, Sr.) 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. Kenneth W. Whiteman, Sr., (Wash. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, Z^CZ- No. 71312-4-1 zs\ .":^'^'-' Respondent, -yrx-' —"• » "•''. '7Q ;rn\ 'T DIVISION ONE ! ~-.-;:S- v. o: >~* "' "CV- «""•!!.•* _..i-- ,":. **&'•* KENNETH W. WHITEMAN, UNPUBLISHED OPINION £72 ^ vD — »*

ro Appellant. FILED: March 2, 2015

Becker, J. — Violation of the conditions of a suspended sentence is

punishable by revocation so long as the State informs the offender of the specific

violations alleged and the facts that the State will rely on to prove the violations.

The offender's right to due process is not violated merely because additional

evidence supporting revocation comes out during testimony at a revocation

hearing.

Appellant Kenneth Whiteman pleaded guilty to one count of child

molestation in the first degree, one count of child molestation in the second

degree, and one count of incest in the second degree. All three offenses were

committed against his daughter over a period of years. On April 3, 2009, the trial

court imposed a 130-month prison term. All but 12 months were suspended as

permitted by the Special Sexual Offender Sentencing Alternative provisions of

Washington's Sentencing Reform Act. No. 71312-4-1/2

Whiteman's sentence imposed community custody conditions that took

effect upon his release from jail. As a condition of community custody, Whiteman

was required to "enter, make reasonable progress in, and successfully complete"

a specialized program for sex offender treatment for five years. The sentence

called for yearly compliance hearings.

Whiteman signed a treatment contract with Bellevue Community Services

in April 2009. Among other things, the contract prohibited Whiteman from using

computers that were not equipped with monitoring software, precluded him from

using the Internet except within "written boundaries" approved by his treatment

provider, and forbade him from using pornography in any form.

For the first four years, Whiteman was found to be in compliance at the

annual hearings. No violations were noted.

Whiteman's wife walked in on him using her computer and masturbating

when she came home from work on August 2, 2013. The computer did not have

monitoring software, and Whiteman was viewing a pornographic web site

featuring father-daughter sex. He quickly deleted the web site. Whiteman and

his wife both reported this incident to community custody officer Margaret Alquist.

Whiteman later admitted that on a daily basis, he had been using his wife's

computer that did not have monitoring software.

Alquist prepared a formal notice alleging these two violations, which

Whiteman admitted, and two others, which he did not admit. The other two

violations were based on Whiteman's wife's statements that Whiteman had been

using his unmonitored computer between August 2012 and May 2013 and that No. 71312-4-1/3

he had visited a family member's place of employment in violation of a protective

order.

The Notice of Violation included, under the heading "Supporting

Evidence," detailed notes of Alquist's communications with Whiteman and his

wife. A report on the results of a polygraph test was attached, along with

progress reports from the treatment provider. The treatment provider was

concerned that Whiteman was getting gratification from the images of father and

daughter sex and was not using what he had learned in treatment about setting

boundaries.

The notice contained Alquist's recommendation that the court schedule a

noncompliance hearing. It stated that a community corrections officer would

testify at the hearing. The notice concluded, "Revocation may be considered due

to the extensive period of time that Mr. Whiteman has been in treatment and his

inability to use the tools to intervene in the deviant behavior cycle that re-enacts

his actual crime." Whiteman was taken into custody.

A compliance review hearing was held on November 4, 2013. At the

hearing, the State elected to go forward only on the two violations that Whiteman

had admitted. The prosecutor expressed distress that "someone who was

afforded such an incredible opportunity, foregoing a presumptive sentence of 130

months, would violate in such a way." The prosecutor indicated reluctance to ask

for revocation of the suspended sentence because, she said, the State had not

been able to obtain a search warrant to do a forensic analysis of Whiteman's

computer. As a sanction, the prosecutor recommended adding more conditions No. 71312-4-1/4

and better supervision. The court ascertained that although the State was not

asking for revocation, the State considered revocation to be a permissible

sanction.

Whiteman's attorney asked the court not to revoke the suspended

sentence and instead to impose the additional conditions recommended by the

State and the treatment provider.

The court expressed concern about whether Whiteman would have

support from his family if he was released back into treatment. Whiteman's wife

was present, and the court solicited her views. She stated that she was in favor

of revocation. She said a divorce was pending and Whiteman was no longer

welcome to live in her home. "I want him to get healthy. But in six years, he's not

getting healthy. He's not making any changes. He's not following through, you

know. ... I don't think he's ever going to be ready."

Alquist then testified that the treatment reports reflected that Whiteman

had made only a minimal level of progress in treatment. She was concerned

about Whiteman's effort to portray his recent viewing of the father-daughter

pornography as an accident. She said she had visited the Whiteman home in the

previous week to look at Mrs. Whiteman's computer and found its history had

been erased. During that visit, Alquist discovered that Whiteman had used a

Microsoft Surface to access "a variety of porn sites" at the end of August. She

was therefore concerned about Whiteman's plan to find new employment by

opening a computer business. She thought that it would be a trigger for him to No. 71312-4-1/5

become reinvolved with pornography and that it would allow him to conceal his

activity by use of his superior computer skills.

Whiteman made a statement to the court. First, he said that when he

went to Alquist's office on August 28 and was arrested, he "signed permission

slips for them giving them my okay to look on the computers anywhere they

wanted to. I mean there was no issue there." He admitted that he had looked at

"fantasy incestuous porn sites," and that he did not use the tools he had learned

in treatment. "That was an error, and it's one that I do not intend to repeat

again." Whiteman said that he had been "ashamed and very scared" when his

wife caught him viewing pornography and that he had intended on his own to

make a timely report of the incident to his treatment provider.

His wife followed up on this topic by informing the court that just a few

days after reporting his viewing of the incest web site, Whiteman was already

viewing pornography again on his Surface. "So even though he knew he was in

big trouble, he's still accessing these sites.... I am fearful that something else is

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Morrissey v. Brewer
408 U.S. 471 (Supreme Court, 1972)
State v. Nelson
697 P.2d 579 (Washington Supreme Court, 1985)
State v. Dahl
990 P.2d 396 (Washington Supreme Court, 1999)
State v. Robinson
85 P.3d 376 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2004)
State v. Dahl
139 Wash. 2d 678 (Washington Supreme Court, 1999)
State v. Robinson
120 Wash. App. 294 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2004)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
State Of Washington v. Kenneth W. Whiteman, Sr., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-washington-v-kenneth-w-whiteman-sr-washctapp-2015.