State Of Washington, V. Michael Holliday

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedFebruary 15, 2022
Docket54383-4
StatusUnpublished

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

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

February 15, 2022 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 54383-4-II

Respondent,

v.

MICHAEL DAVID HOLLIDAY, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Appellant.

GLASGOW, J.—Michael David Holliday was convicted of second degree murder after a

medical examiner and several doctors determined that abusive head trauma caused the death of an

11-month-old child in Holliday’s care. Holliday appeals his conviction, arguing the trial court

violated his right to present a defense when it excluded evidence of his reputation for peacefulness

and his prior experience caring appropriately for young children. Holliday also argues his trial

counsel was constitutionally ineffective because counsel failed to call a second medical expert

witness.

We hold that the trial court did not violate Holliday’s right to present a defense. The trial

court did not abuse its discretion when it excluded evidence of Holliday’s reputation for

peacefulness and prior childcare experience, and Holliday was able to present evidence to support

his theory of the case. Holliday also fails to show that his trial counsel’s performance was deficient

because the expert witness in question changed his opinion significantly before trial, subjecting

him to impeachment. We affirm. No. 54383-4-II

FACTS

One evening in June 2017, Holliday was babysitting KP. Holliday had been dating KP’s

mother for a few months. Occasionally, Holliday kept KP overnight so that KP’s mother could

study and sleep. On the night prior to this incident, KP was in Holliday’s sole care.

The next morning, medical personnel responded to a 911 call from Holliday reporting that

KP was unresponsive. KP was hospitalized, but he never recovered. He died a few days later.

The Pierce County Medical Examiner performed an autopsy of KP and concluded that

KP’s death was caused by “blunt force injury to the head,” which “may have included shaking,

striking the head against a stationary object, or both,” although he believed shaking was the “more

likely” cause of death. 3 Verbatim Report of Proceedings (VRP) at 588. The medical examiner

explained that KP’s acute subdural hematomas, retinal hemorrhages, and lack of an impact point

on the scalp or skull caused him to be “close to a hundred percent” certain KP’s injuries were the

result of shaking. Id. at 589. He determined that KP’s manner of death was homicide.

The State charged Holliday with second degree murder, alleging that he committed or

attempted to commit first degree assault of a child and, “in the course of and in furtherance of” the

assault, caused KP’s death. Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 184. The State added an aggravating

circumstance that Holliday knew or should have known that the victim was “particularly

vulnerable or incapable of resistance.” CP at 185.

I. THEORIES OF THE CASE

A. The State’s Theory

The State relied on the opinions of numerous medical professionals, including

pediatricians, emergency room physicians, intensivists, and pathologists, who concluded that KP’s

2 No. 54383-4-II

injuries were consistent with abusive head trauma. For example, Dr. Yolanda Duralde, the former

Director of the Child Abuse Intervention Department at Mary Bridge Children’s Hospital, testified

that “the most common injuries that reflect abusive head trauma are subdural hemorrhages; no

other external findings, so no contact injuries; and severe retinal hemorrhages.” 2 VRP at 334.

KP’s injuries included bilateral subdural hemorrhages, meaning bleeding outside of the

blood vessels in his brain on both the right and left sides, as well as severe retinal hemorrhages,

meaning bleeding outside of the blood vessels in the tissue at the back of his eyes. He did not have

any external injuries to his scalp or skull that would have been consistent with bumping or falling

on his head. “[T]his constellation or all of these findings together usually show that the child was

likely shaken.” 3 VRP at 507.

Several of the medical professionals explained that a “sudden acceleration-deceleration of

the brain tissue,” or “shearing forces,” can damage brain tissue and break neuronal connections,

as well as cause bleeding. 2 VRP at 268. Shearing forces can cause small veins within the brain to

break, and the broken veins may cause subdural hemorrhages. The cause of a “subdural

hemorrhage is almost always traumatic,” 3 VRP at 577, so its presence makes the “suspicion for a

traumatic event much higher,” 2 VRP at 279.

Shearing forces may also cause hemorrhaging from the “fragile” vessels in the retina. 3

VRP at 637. “There’s really nothing else that causes widespread, multiple layered retinal

hemorrhages except for the forces that you see in shaking.” 2 VRP at 364; see also 3 VRP 509

(“The more hemorrhages, the more layers involved, the larger area makes it much more likely that

it was from abuse.”). A finding of multiple retinal hemorrhages is considered “very consistent with

traumatic brain injury and shaken baby” and “extremely indicative of inflicted child trauma.” 2

3 No. 54383-4-II

VRP at 276; 3 VRP at 637. An ophthalmologist who testified for the State said that the degree of

damage in KP’s eyes was “probably in the top 5 percent” of cases he had seen and that, in his

opinion, the damage was “almost certainly caused by inflicted trauma, specifically shaken infant.”

3 VRP at 643, 646.

Additionally, “the jelly part of the eye” that is against the retina “can pull on the retina” as

it is shaken back and forth. Id. at 637-38. This movement will “pull up the retina in a circular fold

that envelops the central retina back pole. These are called choroidal folds. They’re highly

suggestive of inflicted trauma.” Id. at 638. KP had choroidal folds in both eyes. KP showed all of

these indicators of having been violently shaken.

B. Holliday’s Theory

Holliday maintained that he did not violently shake KP. He told one of the responding

officers that KP “seemed to have fainted” and that after KP dropped his bottle, Holliday “couldn’t

wake him up.” 1 VRP at 28. Holliday said that “he picked [KP] up and shook him,” and “at one

point he splashed water on the child’s face to try to wake him up, and it didn’t work.” Id. Holliday

consistently described what happened both to another responding officer and later in a formal

interview. See, e.g., id. at 130 (reporting to another responding officer that KP “had just fallen

over”). The only significant departure in Holliday’s formal interview was when he said, “It was

not really a . . . I don’t want to say shake. It wasn’t a shake. It was more like a [‘]are you up[’] kind

of thing.” CP at 147.

To explain KP’s death, Holliday relied on an abnormal autopsy finding that KP had a

superior sagittal sinus thrombosis. A thrombus is a blood clot, and the superior sagittal sinus is a

blood vessel that “sits on top of the brain” and “collects blood to return it to the heart.” 3 VRP at

4 No. 54383-4-II

583. A blood clot in the brain is “uncommon,” but it may develop due to an infection or

dehydration that affects “the composition of the blood.” 4 VRP at 854-55.

Holliday’s expert witness, Dr. Kris Sperry, described a thrombus as “an actual process,”

similar to “bricklayers building a wall . . .

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