State of Washington v. Matthew Sean McCarthy

429 P.3d 1086
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 15, 2018
Docket34859-8
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 429 P.3d 1086 (State of Washington v. Matthew Sean McCarthy) 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. Matthew Sean McCarthy, 429 P.3d 1086 (Wash. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

FILED NOVEMBER 15, 2018 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. 34859-8-III (consolidated Respondent, ) with No. 34863-6-III) ) v. ) ) MATTHEW SEAN MCCARTHY, ) ) Appellant. ) __________________________________ IN THE MATTER OF PERSONAL ) PUBLISHED OPINION RESTRAINT OF ) ) MCCARTHY ) Resondent,

FEARING, J. — This appeal raises the question of under what circumstances, if

any, the trial court should order another competency evaluation of an accused after a jury

finds the accused competent to stand trial but the accused’s mental health noticeably

deteriorates during later proceedings. We follow the prevailing view, if not the

Washington rule, that the court must continue to monitor the mental health of the accused

and must order another mental health evaluation if a substantial change in circumstances No. 34859-8-III cons. w/34863-6-III State v. McCarthy; Personal Restraint of McCarthy

raises reasonable doubt as to the accused’s competency. Because of the trial court’s

failure to abide by this principle, we reverse Matthew McCarthy’s conviction for first

degree burglary.

Appellant Matthew McCarthy aggressively denies any incompetency to stand trial.

Nevertheless, his counsel on appeal, as did an earlier trial counsel, properly argues to the

contrary. Although McCarthy promotes his competency, we still attribute his counsel’s

argument to him in this opinion.

FACTS

The conduct of Matthew McCarthy relevant to this appeal concerns more his

behavior during the pendency of the prosecution rather than the conduct that led to the

prosecution. But the alleged criminal behavior provides a setting for McCarthy’s later

conduct.

We start with facts transpiring before the filing of charges beginning with the

medical background of Matthew McCarthy. McCarthy was born in January 1979. He

ceased attending school in the tenth grade. He falsely claims that he holds a college

degree. Treatment providers first diagnosed McCarthy with bipolar disorder when he

was sixteen years old. Providers later diagnosed McCarthy as being bipolar with

paranoid features, having an antisocial personality disorder, and as suffering from a

substance use disorder. Although medication assuages his disorders, it does not alleviate

2 No. 34859-8-III cons. w/34863-6-III State v. McCarthy; Personal Restraint of McCarthy

all symptoms. Before this prosecution, McCarthy amassed a lengthy criminal history that

included two convictions for serious offenses.

The events directly giving rise to this prosecution began on September 21, 2014,

and concern Matthew McCarthy’s trespass into the home of Kayla Gonzales. On that

autumn day, McCarthy had been free from his latest incarceration for only two and one

half weeks.

On the morning of September 21, 2014, Matthew McCarthy drove on Mount

Vernon Street in Spokane on his way to a friend’s house. While driving, McCarthy

noticed two cars he believed had been parked outside his home on Thor Street and found

it odd that the same two cars formerly parked on his street were now parked on Mount

Vernon Street. So, McCarthy stopped and knocked on the door nearest the parked

vehicles. Kayla Gonzales answered the door. According to McCarthy, Gonzales looked

at him as if she recognized him. McCarthy then asked for someone named Ellie.

Gonzales responded that no one by that name lived at the house and began to close the

door.

Matthew McCarthy grew curious about how Kayla Gonzales recognized him.

According to McCarthy, he surmised that Gonzales must recognize him because she saw

his face from pictures in his ex-wife, Laura’s, home. McCarthy, convinced that Gonzales

and Laura McCarthy were friends and that Laura was inside Gonzales’ house with

another man, blocked, with his arm, the front door from closing. According to

3 No. 34859-8-III cons. w/34863-6-III State v. McCarthy; Personal Restraint of McCarthy

McCarthy, his strength overpowered Gonzales as he was able to force his way into the

home. Gonzales then exclaimed: “let me get my child and leave.” Report of Proceedings

(RP) (Sept. 20, 2016) at 160.

According to Kayla Gonzales, when McCarthy pushed the door forward, Gonzales

released her hold from the inside of the door, which release propelled McCarthy inside

the home. McCarthy lost his balance and, as he flew forward inside the home, his arm

struck Gonzales’ shoulder which pushed her into a wall. Gonzales, who held her cell

phone in her hand when she opened the door, later testified she could not remember

whether McCarthy knocked the cell phone from her hand or whether the phone flew from

her hand when the door swung open.

Matthew McCarthy, realizing he was inside the home, made eye contact with

Kayla Gonzales and walked into the living room. Gonzales ran the opposite direction

and climbed the staircase toward the bedroom where her two-year-old daughter slept.

From upstairs in the bedroom with her daughter, Gonzales heard noises from downstairs

as if McCarthy rummaged through the kitchen. When the noise stopped, Gonzales

emerged from the bedroom. McCarthy was no longer inside the home, but he later

peered through a window from the outside.

According to Kayla Gonzales, after Matthew McCarthy left the residence, she, not

knowing the location of her cell phone, called police from her land line. By the arrival of

law enforcement, McCarthy had left the neighborhood.

4 No. 34859-8-III cons. w/34863-6-III State v. McCarthy; Personal Restraint of McCarthy

Matthew McCarthy returned to Kayla Gonzales’ home the following evening,

September 22, in search of his former wife, Laura. When McCarthy knocked on the front

door, Gonzales’ boyfriend, Cory Hierholzer, and his brother answered. McCarthy asked

the boyfriend for Laura. The boyfriend responded that Laura was not present, and

McCarthy returned to his car and left the vicinity. Gonzales inquired as to the visitor.

When Hierholzer described the man, Gonzales immediately called the police.

Minutes later, Matthew McCarthy returned to Kayla Gonzales’ house a third time

and a second time that evening. The boyfriend stood outside. McCarthy stopped his car,

rolled down his window, and asked the brother if anyone had found McCarthy’s

cellphone. Apparently, McCarthy had misplaced his phone. The brother fidgeted like he

would attack McCarthy so McCarthy sped away. Cory Hierholzer, his brother, and a few

of their friends chased McCarthy in two cars. The group pursued McCarthy to a gas

station and cornered him until police arrived. Gonzales drove to the gas station and

identified McCarthy as the man who entered her house the previous morning. Police

arrested him.

Upon his arrest, Matthew McCarthy commented to law enforcement officers that

he had not taken his medications. He refused to go to a mental health professional and

instead insisted on going to jail after being informed of the charges. During interaction

with law enforcement, McCarthy believed he saw people hiding behind cars, and he

spoke to people not present.

5 No. 34859-8-III cons. w/34863-6-III State v. McCarthy; Personal Restraint of McCarthy

According to jail records, Matthew McCarthy had imbibed methamphetamine,

cocaine, and cannabis shortly before his arrest. Jail medical practitioners placed

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

Related

State Of Washington, V. Sean Alan Kane
Court of Appeals of Washington, 2026
State of Washington v. Matthew Sean McCarthy
Court of Appeals of Washington, 2020
State v. McCarthy (In Re McCarthy)
446 P.3d 167 (Washington Supreme Court, 2019)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
429 P.3d 1086, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-washington-v-matthew-sean-mccarthy-washctapp-2018.