State Of Washington, V. Michael Frazer

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedOctober 11, 2022
Docket55928-5
StatusUnpublished

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Bluebook
State Of Washington, V. Michael Frazer, (Wash. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

October 11, 2022

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 55928-5-II

Respondent,

v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION

MICHAEL PATRICK FRAZER, AKA JUSTIN EUGENE FRAZER MICHAEL FRAZER, MICHAEL P. FRAZER,

Appellant.

MAXA, J. – Michael Frazer appeals his convictions of second degree assault, felony

harassment, and nine counts of a no-contact order violation. The convictions arose from an

incident in which Frazer’s girlfriend, Keri Conrady, jumped out of a vehicle that Frazer was

driving and ran to a stranger’s vehicle. Conrady made statements to various people that Frazer

had held a knife to her throat and had threatened to kill her. At trial, Conrady recanted her

previous statements. The trial court allowed two law enforcement officers and a victim advocate

to testify about out-of-court statements Conrady made to them.

At arraignment, the trial court had issued a no-contact order preventing Frazer from

contacting Conrady. Frazer made multiple telephone calls to Conrady from jail.

We hold that (1) Frazer cannot establish ineffective assistance of counsel based on

defense counsel’s failure to object to the testimony of the two officers and the victim advocate No. 55928-5-II

regarding Conrady’s out-of-court statements or to the prosecutor’s aggressive examination of

Conrady; (2) there was sufficient evidence to prove that Frazer had knowledge of the no-contact

order and therefore that he willfully violated the no-contact order; and (3) Frazer’s challenges to

his convictions and his sentence in his statement of additional grounds (SAG) cannot be

considered because they rely on allegations outside the record, were addressed in appellate

counsel’s brief, or have no merit.

Accordingly, we affirm Frazer’s convictions of second degree assault, felony harassment,

and nine counts of a no-contact order violation and his sentence.

FACTS

Background

Frazer was Conrady’s boyfriend. At approximately 4:00 AM on September 28, 2020,

Frazer was driving and Conrady was in the passenger seat of her car. They were southbound on

State Route 7 in Elbe. Douglas Anderson was approaching from the opposite direction when the

car Frazer was driving swerved into Anderson’s lane of travel and hit the curb. Conrady jumped

out of the car, screaming and hysterical, and ran to Anderson’s vehicle. Conrady told Anderson

that her boyfriend was taking her to the hills to kill her and that he had a knife. Conrady was

visibly upset, crying and shaking.

While Anderson was trying to call 911, he let Conrady into his vehicle as Frazer drove

away. Conrady became hysterical again when she saw Frazer driving back toward them.

Anderson drove away at a high rate of speed and Frazer chased them down the highway. After a

mile or two, Anderson hit the brakes on his car and Frazer drove past him. Conrady was

hysterical and crying during the chase.

2 No. 55928-5-II

During this time, Anderson had ongoing discussions with the 911 operator and Conrady

spoke to the operator as well. Anderson and Conrady drove to a nearby fire station to wait for

the police and an ambulance to arrive. Conrady remained extremely nervous as they waited and

tensed up every time she saw a car approaching.

Pierce County Sheriff’s Deputy Alexander Brandt received a call regarding the incident

at approximately 4:17 AM and drove to the fire station. Brandt spoke with Conrady, who was

very upset and was sobbing, shaking, and fearful. After Brandt finished speaking with Conrady,

she was taken to Good Samaritan Hospital.

Deputy Emily Holznagel arrived at Good Samaritan Hospital around 6:00 AM. She talked

to Conrady in the emergency room about the events that had occurred earlier that morning.

Conrady was upset and withdrawn, and broke down crying twice when telling her story.

Conrady’s face was swollen and bruised and Holznagel photographed Conrady’s injuries.

Frazer was arrested later that day. The State charged him with first degree kidnapping,

second degree assault, felony harassment, and theft of a motor vehicle.

No-Contact Order

At arraignment, the trial court issued a domestic violence no-contact order under chapter

10.99 RCW that prohibited Frazer from having any contact with Conrady, including by phone,

for five years beginning on September 29, 2020. The order included the typed sentence, “Done

in Open Court in the presence of the Defendant: September 29, 2020.” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 8.

The trial court electronically signed the order, and Frazer’s signature line included the following:

“Defendant unable to sign: covid19.” CP at 8. The no-contact order was filed in open court.

While Frazer was in jail pending the start of trial, he called Conrady several times, once

through his own inmate pin number and the rest through other inmates’ pin numbers. In one

3 No. 55928-5-II

phone call, Conrady and Frazer discussed whether Conrady could put money into Frazer’s

account at jail. The following exchange occurred:

Frazer: Yeah, why could – why wouldn’t you? Conrady: Okay – I don’t know, ‘cause there’s a no-contact order? Frazer: No. Conrady: I probably shouldn’t have said that.

Ex. 2 (Jan. 24, 2021 recording at 3:45). Conrady also said in another phone call that she had

jumped out of a moving vehicle as a result of what Frazer had done to her and confronted him

about what had occurred.

In February 2021, the State filed an amended information to include nine counts of

violation of a no-contact order and one count of tampering with a witness.

Bench Trial

Several witnesses testified at the bench trial, including Conrady, Anderson, Brandt and

Katie Daugherty, a victim advocate with the prosecutor’s office. Frazer did not testify. The trial

court admitted as exhibits two 911 phone calls from September 28, 13 jail phone calls Frazer

made to Conrady, and the no-contact order.

Conrady’s Testimony

Conrady failed to appear for trial and the trial court issued a material witness warrant.

The following day, Holznagel located Conrady and brought her to court.

Two hours before her in-court testimony, Conrady spoke with the prosecutor and defense

counsel outside of the courtroom about the events that occurred on September 28. Victim

advocate Daugherty was present during the interview. Conrady said that she remembered the

incident very clearly and proceeded to describe what had happened to her.

On direct-examination, Conrady generally testified that she had been in the car with

Frazer off and on the evening before the incident and into the early morning hours, that she

4 No. 55928-5-II

jumped out of the car Frazer was driving and into Anderson’s vehicle, and that she ended up at

Good Samaritan Hospital. However, she denied or claimed she did not remember Frazer holding

her at knifepoint and threatening to take her to the woods to kill her. Conrady also stated that she

did not remember if Frazer said that he would slice her from her vagina to her face, even though

she acknowledged that she might have told counsel that a few hours earlier. Because of

Conrady’s refusal to answer several questions, the trial court gave some latitude to the State to

treat her as a hostile witness.

During Conrady’s testimony, the State played recordings of the two 911 calls. In the first

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