State of Washington v. Kevin Eugene Kelly

496 P.3d 1222
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedOctober 19, 2021
Docket37172-7
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 496 P.3d 1222 (State of Washington v. Kevin Eugene Kelly) 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. Kevin Eugene Kelly, 496 P.3d 1222 (Wash. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

FILED OCTOBER 19, 2021 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. 37172-7-III Respondent, ) ) v. ) OPINION PUBLISHED IN PART ) KEVIN EUGENE KELLY, ) ) Appellant. )

FEARING, J. — Kevin Kelly (Kelly) appeals from his conviction for violating a no

contact order when directing another person to text his wife, Julie Kelly (Julie). Kelly

assigns error to evidentiary rulings, the failure to deliver a jury unanimity instruction, and

alleged prosecutorial misconduct during jury summation. We find no error and affirm

Kelly’s conviction.

FACTS

We take the facts primarily from trial testimony. On April 16, 2019, during

defendant Kevin Kelly’s appearance for a separate charge, the trial court entered a

domestic violence no contact order prohibiting Kelly from contacting, directly, indirectly, No. 37172-7-III State v. Kelly

or through others, his wife, Julie Kelly. This prosecution arises from the alleged

violation of the order. After the trial court entered the no contact order, the State of

Washington confined Kelly in the Spokane County Jail. Alexander Maravilla stayed in

the same cell as Kelly.

While Kevin Kelly was jailed, Julie Kelly received multiple telephone calls from

the Spokane County Jail. Julie either did not answer the call, or, when she did answer,

the caller disconnected immediately. Although Julie knew other people confined in the

Spokane County Jail, she assumed that Kelly sought to contact her, as she did not expect

anyone else from the jail to call her. Neither party explains why someone initiated the

call when he or she disconnected immediately.

At 8:32 a.m. on May 14, 2019, Julie Webster received a telephone call from her

son, Alexander Maravilla. Their call lasted fifteen minutes. The Spokane County Jail

recorded the telephone conversation between Maravilla and Webster. On the recording,

Maravilla states:

“My cellie wants to know if you’d do him a favor. Text this number and see if his old lady will put ten bucks on his books or whatever and say that he loves her. . . . I don’t know her name, you just say hi pumpkin, love and miss you, can you put ten bucks on my books.”

Report of Proceedings (RP) at 10. During the call, Webster sent a text message to Julie

Kelly, which read, “‘Hi, Pumpkin. I love and miss you. Is there any way you can put

$10 on my books?’” RP at 218. Webster did not recognize Julie Kelly’s phone number,

2 No. 37172-7-III State v. Kelly

nor did she know Kevin or Julie Kelly. Webster, as heard on the jail recording, affirmed

to her son, Maravilla, that she sent the text message to Julie Kelly.

Julie Kelly believed that Kevin Kelly prompted the text message received from the

unknown texter, because “he’s the only one that calls me ‘Punky’ and I don’t know

anybody else in the jail that would say I love you and I miss you.” RP at 172. Julie

Kelly did not respond to Julie Webster’s text message. Julie Kelly understood that the

phrase “‘putting money on the books’” referred to depositing money in an inmate’s

account for the purpose of purchasing goods while incarcerated. RP at 171.

After receiving Julie Webster’s text message on May 14, 2019, Julie Kelly

contacted a victim advocate. On May 16, 2019, Officer Kaitlyn Anderson interviewed

Julie Kelly in her home. Officer Anderson contacted Officer Alisha Nguyen, of the

Spokane Police Department, to investigate the phone calls and text message that Julie

received.

Officer Alisha Nguyen reviewed Spokane County Jail telephone records to

identify the inmates who called Julie Kelly. At trial, Officer Nguyen explained that the

jail assigns each inmate a unique pin number used to make phone calls from jail. Officer

Nguyen discovered that Julie received ten telephone calls from the jail. None of the calls

originated from Kevin Kelly’s pin number. Rather, three inmates’ pin numbers had been

used to contact Julie: Brendan Dalla, Anton Santrone, and Kelly’s cellmate, Alexander

Maravilla. All three of these inmates were on the same cellblock as Kelly.

3 No. 37172-7-III State v. Kelly

PROCEDURE

The State of Washington charged Kevin Kelly with one count of felony violation

of a no contact order. The State alleged that Kelly, with knowledge that an order

prohibited contact, contacted Julie Kelly on May 14, 2019. The State also alleged that

Kelly had been convicted at least twice before of violating no contact orders. Kelly

stipulated that he garnered at least two earlier convictions for violating court orders.

Before trial, the State, pursuant to ER 801(d)(2)(v), sought to introduce statements

uttered by Alexander Maravilla to his mother, Julie Webster, during the May 14, 2019

telephone call. The State argued that Maravilla spoke in a role as a coconspirator in

furtherance of a conspiracy with Kevin Kelly. Alternatively, the State sought to

introduce the directions of Maravilla to his mother for a nonhearsay purpose, its effect on

the listener, Webster. The State never sought to play the recorded telephone conversation

for the jury.

During argument on pretrial motions, the trial court commented that the State

needed to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that Alexander Maravilla knew

that a no contact order prohibited Kevin Kelly from contacting his wife in order to show a

conspiracy between the cellmates. The court found that the State had not satisfied its

burden and, therefore, ruled that the coconspirator exception did not apply.

Immediately after the trial court’s ruling denying admission of the contents of the

May 14 telephone call, the State moved for a trial continuance, so that it could subpoena

4 No. 37172-7-III State v. Kelly

Alexander Maravilla and transport him from custody to testify. Kevin Kelly, through

counsel, objected to a continuance because trial had been postponed before at the request

of the State. Kelly further argued that the State should have planned in advance for the

possibility that the trial court would deny admission of the telephone conversation. The

trial court denied the motion for a trial continuance. The court commented that the State

had made a strategic decision not to earlier subpoena Maravilla and that a continuance

would prejudice Kelly.

During the pretrial motion hearing, the State also informed the trial court that it

intended to ask Julie Webster, during trial testimony, why she sent the text message to

Julie Kelly. The State remarked that Webster would answer that Alexander Maravilla

asked her to send the message. The State argued that such testimony would not be

offered for the truth of the out-of-court statement by Maravilla, but to show the

statement’s effect on Webster. Over Kevin Kelly’s objection, the trial court ruled the

statement of Maravilla to his mother, during the May 14 telephone conversation, was

admissible as nonhearsay.

In his opening statement, Kevin Kelly, through counsel, asserted that Julie Kelly

used her allegation that he violated the no-contact order to improve her position in the

couple’s upcoming divorce proceeding. Kelly highlighted that, shortly after the State

charged him with a crime, his wife Julie filed for divorce.

5 No. 37172-7-III State v. Kelly

At trial, the State called Julie Webster to testify. During direct examination, the

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Bluebook (online)
496 P.3d 1222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-washington-v-kevin-eugene-kelly-washctapp-2021.