State Of Washington v. Michael D. Olmsted

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMay 5, 2015
Docket45260-0
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington v. Michael D. Olmsted (State Of Washington v. Michael D. Olmsted) 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. Michael D. Olmsted, (Wash. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

FILED COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION II

2015 .MAY - 5 AM 9: 27

STATE OF WASHINGTON BY P JTY

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 45260 -0 -II

Respondent,

v.

MICHAEL DON OLMSTED, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Appellant.

JOHANSON, C.J. — Michael Don Olmsted appeals his jury trial conviction for second

degree assault ( domestic violence) and his life sentence under the Persistent Offender

Accountability Act (POAA). 1 He argues that ( 1) the prosecutor committed reversible misconduct

in closing argument by trivializing the burden of proof, vouching for the victim' s credibility, and

arguing facts not in evidence, ( 2) the trial court violated his right to public trial by having the

parties exercise their peremptory challenges on paper, ( 3) he was denied his right to a jury

determination by a reasonable doubt of whether he had two prior strike offenses under the POAA,

and ( 4) the sentencing court erred by including a facially invalid 1994 second degree assault

conviction in his criminal history and using this conviction as a strike offense. We hold that ( 1)

Olmsted either waived his prosecutorial misconduct claims or failed to prove that the prosecutor' s

1 RCW 9. 94A. 570. No. 45260 -0 -II

arguments were improper, (2) the trial court did not violate Olmsted' s public trial rights by having

the parties exercise their peremptory challenges on paper, ( 3) Olmsted was not entitled to a jury

determination of his strike offenses, and ( 4) Olmsted fails to establish that his 1994 conviction was

constitutionally invalid on its face. Accordingly, we affirm his conviction and his sentence.

FACTS

I. BACKGROUND

In the early morning hours of February 1, 2013, Olmsted assaulted his girlfriend, Amy

Yeager, in their home. Yeager left on foot to seek medical attention at a nearby urgent care clinic.

Olmsted followed her, yelling at her until she reached the clinic.

While following Yeager, Olmsted walked by a car occupied by Lukas Garrett McNett.

Olmsted approached the car, cupped his hands against the car' s tinted windows, and started yelling

profanities at McNett. McNett, who did not know Olmsted, called 911 after Olmsted walked away.

McNett later testified that he had never seen anyone so angry and characterized Olmsted as

raging." 2 Report of Proceedings ( RP) at 164.

After confronting McNett, Olmsted continued to follow Yeager. Afraid to use her phone

while Olmsted could see her, Yeager did not call 911 until she arrived at the clinic and found a

pay phone that could not be seen from outside the building.

The responding officers first contacted Olmsted. They noticed that he had a " very

pronounced limp," and he told them that his " balls hurt." 2 RP at 173. When the officers asked

Olmsted if he was in pain because he had been in an altercation, he responded that he had not been

and that he just had a bad hip. Olmsted refused medical assistance.

2 No. 45260 -0 -II

When the officers told him he was being detained to allow them to investigate a recently

reported assault, Olmsted became aggressive and started screaming and accusing the officers of

having touched his painful genitals while searching him. The officers did not see any blood or 2 bruising on Olmsted' s hands or any blood on his clothing.

After arresting Olmsted, one of the officers proceeded to the urgent care clinic to contact

Yeager. When the officer arrived at the clinic, Yeager' s nose was bleeding and she was very upset.

Yeager did not appear " intoxicated." 2 RP at 184. Yeager told the officer that she had accidentally

s kicked Olmsted.

The clinic transferred Yeager to, an emergency room for further evaluation. Yeager' s face

was bruised and -swollen on her forehead and under both eyes, and both sides of her jaw were

tender. The doctor concluded that these injuries could not have been caused by a single blow.

The officer later visited Yeager in her apartment and observed blood on the bed, blood on

the dresser in the bedroom, a broken mirror, needle -nose pliers next to the bed, and Yeager' s urine-

soiled pants. The officer also noticed that the television was in the bathroom.

II. PROCEDURE

The State charged Olmsted by amended information with second degree assault ( domestic

violence). 3 The case proceeded to a jury trial; Olmsted argued that he had struck Yeager once in

self defense - after she kicked him in the testicles.

2 About 18 hours after the officers booked him into jail, a nurse and a physician' s assistant examined Olmsted; his scrotum was swollen and bruised. Several days later, a private investigator hired by the defense photographed the injuries and noted that the area was bruised. 3 The State also charged him in the alternative with attempted second degree assault. The trial court later refused to instruct the jury on this alternative charge and it is not at issue on appeal.

3 No. 45260 -0 -II

A. JURY SELECTION AND TRIAL TESTIMONY

During voir dire, the parties exercised their peremptory challenges by "passing a clipboard

back and forth" until each side had exercised its peremptory challenges or was satisfied with the

panel. 5 RP at 715. Neither party objected to this process.

In addition to the facts described above, Yeager testified that Olmsted had struck her

repeatedly in the head and that he struck her so hard that she urinated in her pants. Yeager also

testified that Olmsted broke a mirror, threw a television into the bathroom, and threw a pair of

pliers at her. Yeager further testified that her nose was still bleeding when she arrived at the

hospital about 10 minutes after the assault.

She also testified that at one point after he started to hit her, Olmsted accused her of having

kicked him " in [ the] balls." 3A RP at 268. Yeager could not recall kicking Olmsted and denied

having kicked him intentionally, but she testified that she might have accidentally kicked him

when she kicked off some blankets. Although she admitted she had told the investigating officer

that she had accidentally kicked Olmsted, Yeager asserted that this was only because this was what

Olmsted had told her repeatedly during the assault.

In contrast, Olmsted testified that Yeager had kicked him in the testicles after he discovered

she had been using methamphetamine and told her to leave. He asserted he had reflexively slapped

Yeager once across the face and she then started hitting him. He testified that he had accidentally

pulled the television down and that Yeager threw a mirror at him. He further testified that shortly

after Yeager left, he left the house to purchase some cigarettes at a local convenience store.

Olmsted also explained his contact with McNett. Olmsted testified that after Yeager left,

he had considered going to a hospital, not the nearby urgent care clinic, to address his injury. When

4 No. 45260 -0 -II

he went outside, he noticed someone sitting in a car looking at a cell phone and playing some loud

music, so he shouted over the music asking for a ride to the hospital. The person in the car " looked

at [ Olmsted] like [ he] was stupid" and did not offer him a ride. 3B RP at 403.

Olmsted also explained that he was not being aggressive towards the arresting officers. He

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State Of Washington v. Michael D. Olmsted, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-washington-v-michael-d-olmsted-washctapp-2015.