State Of Washington v. Kevin S. Thomas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 1, 2021
Docket80042-6
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington v. Kevin S. Thomas (State Of Washington v. Kevin S. Thomas) 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 S. Thomas, (Wash. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

No. 80042-6-I STATE OF WASHINGTON, DIVISION ONE Respondent, UNPUBLISHED OPINION v.

KEVIN SCOTT THOMAS,

Appellant.

MANN, C.J. — Based on evidence that he sexually assaulted his biological

daughter, a jury convicted Kevin Thomas of rape of a child and incest. Thomas

challenges several evidentiary rulings and the supervision fee imposed as a condition of

community custody. We affirm Thomas’s convictions but remand for the court to strike

the provision requiring him to pay supervision fees.

FACTS

Kevin Thomas and Jasmine Bolzell are the parents of three children, including a

daughter, M.T. During Thomas and Bolzell’s 13-year marriage, the family moved

frequently—at least 10 times after M.T. was born. When the couple separated in

Citations and pin cites are based on the Westlaw online version of the cited material. No. 80042-6-I/2

August 2013, they were living in a house on Section Street in Mt. Vernon that the family

referred to as the “Section Street” house, or because they owned chickens when they

lived there, the “chicken house.”

In the two years that followed the parents’ separation, the family had numerous

different living arrangements. The children initially lived with Bolzell, but later lived

primarily with Thomas at several locations, including a trailer parked on a friend’s Oak

Harbor property, the rural home of a girlfriend, a homeless shelter, and housing in

Everett provided by the Veteran’s Administration. By November 2015, Bolzell had

remarried and the children returned to live with her full-time in Marysville.

Approximately a year-and-a-half later, after someone spoke to her class at

school about sexual abuse, M.T. told her older brother that Thomas had raped her.

M.T. was “in tears” and trembling, and appeared to be frightened and upset. Bolzell

learned about M.T.’s allegations that same day and called the police. A Mt. Vernon

police officer arranged for a professional interviewer at the Skagit County Child

Advocacy Center to interview M.T. and attended the interview. A pediatric nurse

practitioner also conducted a non-acute medical examination of M.T. that included a

genital examination.

Based on M.T.’s disclosures, the State charged Thomas with two counts of first

degree rape of child and two counts of incest and designated all counts as domestic

violence offenses.

At trial, M.T. described two sexual assaults that occurred during the summer that

her parents separated when she was approximately eight years old and the family lived

at the Section Street house. She said that on one occasion, Thomas told her mother he

2 No. 80042-6-I/3

wanted to cuddle with her, and after her mother left to go shopping, she went into

Thomas’s room. After they cuddled for a few minutes, Thomas grabbed her hands.

M.T. said that Thomas pulled off her pants and put his penis inside her vagina, while

restraining her arms and legs. She told him to stop. Afterwards, M.T. went to another

room to play with dolls to “distract herself.”

M.T. described another assault that happened during the same summer. M.T.

testified that she was watching television in the living room and Thomas took her by the

hand and led her to his bedroom. M.T. said that Thomas faced her toward the bed and

held her wrists behind her back. She said that Thomas pulled her pants down and put

his penis in her vagina. M.T. testified that she felt afraid and experienced pain in her

wrists and vagina. After Thomas stopped, M.T. said she again went to play with dolls.

When cross-examined about some of her prior statements, M.T. said that

Thomas sexually abused her from the time she was around four years old, until she was

eight or nine years old. She recalled that the abuse happened in many locations,

including the Section Street house, “the house next to my mom’s house, the Everett

house, Amanda’s home, the homeless shelter, basically everywhere.” M.T. said that

Thomas told her that if she told anyone, people would not believe her and would stop

loving her. She explained that she did not realize that what was happening was wrong

when she was younger because it had been happening for so long and she “just

thought it was a normal thing.”

In addition to M.T.’s testimony, the State presented the testimony of Bolzell,

M.T.’s older brother, the child forensic interviewer, the nurse practitioner, the

3 No. 80042-6-I/4

investigating police officer, and the therapist that M.T. began to see after she disclosed

abuse.

The State also presented the testimony of two individuals who came into contact

with Thomas in jail. Ryan Keith testified that when he shared a cell with Thomas, he

heard Thomas rate his daughter’s level of sexual attractiveness as a “7 or 8” and

describe her relative breast size. Keith was able to describe M.T.’s physical

appearance, although he had never met her. Matthew Shope testified that Thomas told

him that he assaulted his daughter. Shope said that Thomas explained that he ensured

M.T.’s silence by buying her makeup and he was convinced that he would be acquitted

because the investigation was limited to vaginal intercourse and did not encompass

anal intercourse. The State reduced Shope’s charges in exchange for his cooperation

in Thomas’s case.

The primary themes of Thomas’s defense were that M.T. was unable to

distinguish between dreams and reality and that her allegations arose from an

“overriding theme of abandonment.” The defense also claimed that there was a lack of

corroborating evidence and that M.T.’s outward behavior toward Thomas was

incongruous, in view of her allegations.

The jury convicted Thomas as charged. Thomas appeals.

ANALYSIS

Extrinsic Impeachment Evidence

M.T. told Courtney Long, the child forensic interviewer, that she could only

remember two incidents of abuse, both of which occurred at the Section Street house in

Mt. Vernon. M.T. provided minimal details to Long, explaining that she tried to “block”

4 No. 80042-6-I/5

the memories. In two pretrial interviews with defense counsel, M.T. mentioned

previously undisclosed acts of abuse, including one that happened when she was four

or five years old and another that took place in Everett. M.T. also reported a sexual

assault that happened in her bedroom and said that a conversation with her mother

about sex triggered her memory of that incident. M.T. was not clear about the exact

timing or location of the incident, but said she was older than five. M.T. also said her

mother entered her bedroom while the abuse was happening, found Thomas in her bed,

and Thomas explained to her mother that they were playing a game.

Prior to M.T.’s testimony, counsel argued that the defense should be allowed to

(1) ask M.T. about the uncharged acts of abuse she described in the interviews and (2)

impeach M.T.’s testimony about those incidents by eliciting testimony from Bolzell. By

means of an offer of proof, the defense established that Bolzell would deny having a

conversation about sex like the one M.T. described and did not recall ever discovering

Thomas in M.T.’s bed, claiming to be playing a game. The court ruled that the defense

could question M.T. about her recollections and any prior statements, but would not be

permitted to impeach her testimony with extrinsic evidence.

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