State Of Washington v. Michael William Mcconnell

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 30, 2013
Docket68852-9
StatusPublished

This text of State Of Washington v. Michael William Mcconnell (State Of Washington v. Michael William Mcconnell) 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 William Mcconnell, (Wash. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

2013 DEC 30 AH 10= 32

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 68852-9-

Respondent, DIVISION ONE

v. PUBLISHED OPINION MICHAEL WILLIAM MCCONNELL,

Appellant. FILED: December 30, 2013

Schindler, J. — The 10-year statute of limitations for rape in the first degree

begins on the date of commission of the crime or one year from the date "on which the

identity of the suspect is conclusively established by deoxyribonucleic acid [(DNA)]

testing . . . , whichever is later."1 Michael William McConnell appeals his conviction for rape in the first degree arguing the State did not charge him within the 10-year statute of

limitations. In the alternative, McConnell claims the delay in filing the charges violated

due process. Because DNA testing did not conclusively establish the identity of

McConnell until 2011 and the delay in filing the charges did not violate his due process

rights, we affirm.

1 RCW9A.04.080(1)(b)(iii)(A), (3). No. 68852-9/2

FACTS

At around 8:30 a.m. on June 24, 1998, E.C. went to her portable classroom at

Discovery Elementary School to prepare for the upcoming summer school session. Of

the five portable classrooms located at the north end of the school campus, E.C.'s

portable classroom was the farthest away to the east. E.C. locked the door to the

portable but opened the southeast window. Over the course of the morning, E.C. left

the classroom several times. Each time E.C. left, she locked the door but left the

window open.

E.C. locked the door after returning to the classroom after lunch. While she was

sitting at her desk, a male voice said," 'Okay, here we go. Get down on the floor.'"

E.C. turned around and saw a man dressed in black. The man was wearing a black knit

cap with his face partially covered and only his eyes and nose visible, a black long-

sleeved shirt, black pants, black gloves, and black lace-up boots. The man pointed a

large-caliber revolver at E.C. and told her to lay face-down on the floor and demanded

money. E.C. told the man where to find her purse and heard him going through the

purse.

The man told E.C. not to move, scream, or look at him or he would " 'blow [her]

fucking head off.'" The man then knelt down beside her and put his hand between her

legs. The man told E.C. to remove her pants and underwear. The man held the gun to

her neck with one hand while he digitally raped her with his other hand. The man then

moved behind E.C and raped her anally. When E.C. screamed in pain, the man put the

gun to "her head and cocked it, reminding her of the consequences." After anally raping

E.C, the man ordered her to roll onto her back and vaginally raped her. The man then No. 68852-9/3

got dressed and asked E.C. where the telephone was located. The man tore the

telephone cord and wires from the wall and told E.C. "that he would shoot her if he saw

her outside before he was gone." Approximately five minutes after the man left, E.C.

ran to an adjacent portable classroom and called 911.

Snohomish County and Everett Police Department officers responded to the 911

call. E.C." 'was crying and her whole body was trembling. . . . [S]he collapsed on the

floor sobbing and trembling.'" E.C. gave the police officers a brief summary of what

happened before going to the hospital. Officers searched the classroom and

surrounding area. The officers observed scuff marks on the exterior wall below the

southeast window and found a black sweater south of the school. A K-9 dog tracked a

scent from the portable classroom to a grassy area nearby where the K-9 officer

observed bicycle tracks. The officers took plaster casts of the bicycle tracks. A latent

fingerprint analysis of the telephone found no fingerprints of value.

The hospital performed a sexual assault examination of E.C. Before meeting

with E.C. the next day, officers collected E.C.'s clothing and the sexual assault evidence

from the hospital.

E.C. told the officers that she locked the door to the classroom but left the

southeast window open. E.C. said that after returning from lunch, she was sitting at her

desk looking out the north window and did not hear the man climb inside. E.C.

described the man who raped her as a white male, between 18 and 24 years old, and

possibly blond. E.C. believed the man was between 5 feet 10 inches and 6 feet tall and

weighed 170 pounds. The Snohomish County Sheriff's Office issued a news release

with a description of the suspect and a composite drawing based on E.C.'s description. No. 68852-9/4

On September 10, 1998, Washington State Patrol Crime Laboratory (WSPCL)

forensic scientist Brian Smelser obtained semen samples from the swabs and

underwear taken from E.C.2 Using restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) testing, WSPCL forensic scientist Jodi Sass identified the DNA of two male contributors.

One contributor was identified as E.C.'s spouse. The other contributor was an unknown

male. The DNA profile of the unknown male did not match any DNA profile in the

WSPCL convicted felon database.

In 1998, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) started maintaining a national

DNA index system, the "Combined DNA Index System" (CODIS). The FBI uses short

tandem repeat (STR) DNA testing for the CODIS database. In 2000, the WSPCL

transitioned from using RFLP to STR DNA testing. When the WSPCL transitioned from

RFLP to STR testing, 957 unknown DNA profiles in the WSPCL database were

"classified as closed work requests."

On October 12, 2000, the court sentenced Michael William McConnell for the

crime of residential burglary. On December 5, 2000, the court sentenced McConnell for

committing the crime of residential burglary with a deadly weapon. As a result of the

felony convictions, McConnell was ordered to submit to DNA testing.

In 2003, the lead detective in the 1998 rape investigation, Snohomish County

Detective George Wilkins, authorized the release and destruction of the evidence from

the unsolved 1998 rape case. According to Detective Wilkins, "[T]here was a big push

at the Sheriff's office to help the property room clear out evidence" and he mistakenly

believed the statute of limitations for the 1998 rape had expired. Detective Wilkins said

2DNA extraction involves both removing cells from the objects to which they are attached (clothing, blood samples, etc.) and removing the DNA from inside the cell. State v. Cauthron, 120 Wn.2d 879, 893, 846 P.2d 502 (1993). No. 68852-9/5

he did not contact the prosecutor's office to confirm whether the statute of limitations

had expired before authorizing destruction of the evidence retained at the Snohomish

County Sheriff's Office. The destroyed evidence included the black sweater found near

the school, photographs of the classroom, photographs of the abrasions on E.C.'s neck,

photographs of the area surrounding the school, the plaster casts of the bicycle tracks,

the telephone the suspect had pulled out of the wall, and E.C.'s clothing.

In June 2010, Snohomish County Detective James Scharf was assigned to the

cold case unit and was investigating a 1995 homicide. The 1995 homicide occurred in

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