State Of Washington, V. Kevin Laurence Lewis

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 10, 2025
Docket86953-1
StatusUnpublished

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Bluebook
State Of Washington, V. Kevin Laurence Lewis, (Wash. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 86953-1-I Respondent, v. DIVISION ONE

KEVIN LAURENCE LEWIS, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Appellant.

DÍAZ, J. — Kevin Lewis challenges the trial court’s entry of postconviction

no-contact orders prohibiting all contact with his three children for life. Although

the trial court did not abuse its discretion in determining that some limitation on

contact is appropriate, it failed to conduct or complete the analysis required by

case law. Accordingly, we remand this matter to the trial court so that it may on

the record consider how, if at all, to narrowly tailor the orders, both in terms of (1)

its duration, including by recognizing that the State’s interest to protect his children

may change over time, and (2) its scope, including why less restrictive alternatives

than complete termination of the parent child relationship are not appropriate.

I. BACKROUND

This is Lewis’s second appeal. See State v. Lewis, No. 83594-7-I (Wash.

Ct. App. Dec. 26, 2023) (unpublished),

https://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions/pdf/835947.pdf. Because we detailed the

substantive facts in our opinion in Lewis’s first appeal, we do not fully restate them

here. Briefly, Lewis hired his cousin, Jerradon Phelps, to kill Lewis’s estranged No. 86953-1-I/2

wife, Amanda Canales, while dissolution proceedings were pending. See id., slip

op. at 1, 3. But Canales was out of town on the evening that Phelps carried out

Lewis’s plan, and Phelps mistakenly shot and killed Canales’s sister, who was at

Canales’s home with Canales and Lewis’s three children. Id. at 3, 9. A jury

convicted Lewis of aggravated first degree murder, id. at 1, and the trial court

sentenced him to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole. In its judgment

and sentence, the trial court ordered that Lewis not have contact with Canales or

any of his three children, for life. Additionally, it separately entered lifetime

domestic violence no-contact orders protecting Canales and each of the children.

Lewis appealed. He challenged his conviction on various grounds, and he

argued that “the imposition of a lifetime no-contact order barring contact with his

children should be remanded because the trial court did not sufficiently weigh his

fundamental right to parent.” Id., slip op. at 61. We affirmed Lewis’s conviction

but remanded “for the trial court to consider the impact of the no-contact order[s]

on Lewis’s fundamental right to parent.” Id. at 2. In doing so, we observed that

“[t]o the extent of our record, the trial court did not acknowledge Lewis’s

fundamental right to parent or address whether the no-contact order[s were]

reasonably necessary to prevent harm to the children.” Id. at 62.

On remand, the State argued that the lifetime no-contact orders should

remain in place. Meanwhile, Lewis requested that the trial court allow video visits

and letters, and that each no-contact order terminate when the child turned 18

years old. The trial court ultimately left the lifetime no-contact orders intact with

no changes, and it made the following pertinent “findings of fact”:

2 No. 86953-1-I/3

1. . . . This Court is familiar with the relevant case law regarding a defendant’s constitutional right to parent, which articulates that there needs to be a tie between the crime committed and the children protected. The Court also acknowledges that there is a compelling state interest in the prevention of harm to children. 2. The Court now considers the duration of the lifetime no contact orders, which was the issue remanded for consideration by the Court of Appeals. 3. In considering the defendant’s fundamental right to parent in light of the facts of this case, the Court must consider that the Defendant set in motion a plan to kill the mother of his children. In doing so, he sought to take away her ability to parent and essentially award custody of these three children to himself through a criminal enterprise. 4. The fundamental right to be involved in the parenting of your children contains several obligations: being there, providing for them, not causing harm to the children. . . . 5. Clearly, had [Canales] been murdered as intended that night, these children would have to see their dead mother if they were to ever get out of the house. 6. The Court finds there was an impact—a foreseeable impact—that would occur from the plan the defendant enacted, and that these children would witness something that no one, especially children, should ever see or be involved in. All of this was caused by the defendant. 7. The Court finds that these children are victims, and they are directly related to the crime the defendant was convicted of, including the aggravating factors the jury found true. . . . 8. The Court finds that there is no reasonable alternative than the issuance of lifetime no contact orders protecting these three children from the defendant. There is no other alternative available to this Court when considering the record before it. 9. The Court finds that lifetime no contact orders protecting these children are appropriate.

The court also made the following conclusions of law:

The Court, having considered the defendant’s fundamental right to parent, finds that the lifetime no contact orders protecting [the children] are necessary and appropriate. There is no other alternative or less restrictive means to protect the defendant’s biological children in light of the facts presented to this Court at trial. The duration of these no contact orders for life are appropriate, reasonably necessary to protect these children, and have been narrowly tailored to the facts of this case. . . .

3 No. 86953-1-I/4

Should [any child] choose to have contact with the defendant at some point in the future, a motion would need to be set in front of this department to determine to what extent that contact would occur. It is up to [the children] to determine whether they want that contact and wish to modify these no contact orders in the future.

Lewis appeals, again challenging the lifetime no-contact orders prohibiting all

contact with his children for life.

II. ANALYSIS

A trial court may impose crime-related prohibitions as sentencing

conditions. RCW 9.94A.505(9); State v. Torres, 198 Wn. App. 685, 689, 393 P.3d

894 (2017). But “[c]onditions interfering with fundamental rights, such as the right

to a parent-child relationship, must be ‘sensitively imposed’ so they are ‘reasonably

necessary to accomplish the essential needs of the State and public order.’”

Torres, 198 Wn. App. at 689 (quoting In re Pers. Restraint of Rainey, 168 Wn.2d

367, 374, 229 P.3d 686 (2010)). “We review the imposition of crime-related

prohibitions under the abuse of discretion standard.” State v. DeLeon, 11 Wn.

App. 2d 837, 840, 456 P.3d 405 (2020). “However, ‘[m]ore careful review of

sentencing conditions is required where those conditions interfere with a

fundamental constitutional right.’” Id. (alteration in original) (quoting State v.

Warren, 165 Wn.2d 17, 32, 195 P.3d 940 (2008)).

“While the trial court certainly can impose a no-contact order to advance the

State’s fundamental interests in protecting children, it must do so in a nuanced

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Related

State v. Ancira
27 P.3d 1246 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2001)
In Re Rainey
229 P.3d 686 (Washington Supreme Court, 2010)
State v. Warren
195 P.3d 940 (Washington Supreme Court, 2008)
State of Washington v. Mario Torres
198 Wash. App. 685 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2017)
State v. Warren
165 Wash. 2d 17 (Washington Supreme Court, 2008)
In re the Personal Restraint of Rainey
168 Wash. 2d 367 (Washington Supreme Court, 2010)
State v. Solis-Diaz
387 P.3d 703 (Washington Supreme Court, 2017)
State v. Ancira
107 Wash. App. 650 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2001)
State v. Aguilar
308 P.3d 778 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2013)
State v. Howard
328 P.3d 969 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2014)
State v. A.M.
260 P.3d 229 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2011)

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