State Of Washington, V. Nathan Lowell Abbitt

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 27, 2023
Docket56543-9
StatusUnpublished

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Bluebook
State Of Washington, V. Nathan Lowell Abbitt, (Wash. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

June 27, 2023

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 56543-9-II

Respondent,

v.

NATHAN LOWELL ABBITT, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Appellant.

GLASGOW, C.J. — Nathan Lowell Abbitt had his pants off in front of his two young

stepdaughters, and the girls touched his penis until he ejaculated. After one of the girls disclosed

the incident years later, the State charged Abbitt with two counts of first degree child molestation.

Before jury selection began, the trial judge addressed a pool of prospective jurors in the

jury administration room. There, the trial judge read introductory instructions, placed the

prospective jurors under oath, and handed out preliminary questionnaires. The parties later

discussed excusing prospective jurors and conducted voir dire in open court.

In closing arguments at trial, the prosecutor repeatedly asked the jury to hold Abbitt

accountable by convicting him. The jury then convicted Abbitt of both charges. The judgment and

sentence included boilerplate language imposing community custody supervision fees.

Abbitt appeals. He argues that the proceeding in the jury administration room violated his

right to a public trial. He further asserts that the prosecutor committed misconduct and that there No. 56543-9-II

was insufficient evidence to convict him. He also contends, and the State concedes, that the

community custody supervision fees must be stricken from his judgment and sentence.

We affirm Abbitt’s convictions, but we accept the State’s concession and remand for the

trial court to strike the supervision fees.

FACTS

I. BACKGROUND

Abbitt began dating KB in 2010. The couple moved in together in 2011 and married in

2013. KB had two young daughters, EB and MB, who were approximately six years old and three

years old when KB began dating Abbitt. Abbitt and KB had two more children together. The

couple then separated in 2019. While dissolution proceedings were ongoing, EB told KB that

Abbitt sexually abused her and MB years earlier. The State initially charged Abbitt with one count

of first degree child molestation, then later added a second count.

II. PRETRIAL PROCEEDINGS

Before jury selection began, the trial court informed the parties that there were 70

prospective jurors waiting in the jury administration room. The trial court intended to go down to

the jury administration room to read the prospective jurors a preliminary instruction introducing

the parties and explaining the process of a criminal trial. See 11 WASHINGTON PRACTICE:

WASHINGTON PATTERN JURY INSTRUCTIONS: CRIMINAL 1.01 (5th ed. 2021) (WPIC). The trial court

would also inform the prospective jurors of the charges, then place them under oath and have them

complete a questionnaire addressing possible biases or hardships the prospective jurors would face

if selected to serve on the jury. The trial court told the parties that they were “welcome to come

down and watch.” 1 Verbatim Rep. of Proc. (VRP) at 9. The trial court stated that it then expected

2 No. 56543-9-II

to discuss with the parties which prospective jurors they would excuse for hardship. Neither party

objected to the trial court’s suggested procedure. The parties also reviewed the questionnaire and

other preliminary information that the prospective jurors would receive on the record in open court.

When the pool of prospective jurors assembled in the jury administration room, the trial

court again informed the parties of its plan to read preliminary instructions, swear in the

prospective jurors, and distribute questionnaires. The trial court stated, “[Y]ou’re welcome to come

down to [the jury administration room], if you wish, but you’re not required to.” 1 VRP at 43.

Again, neither party objected.

The trial judge then went to the jury administration room. Neither party attended. Along

with other courtroom staff, the judge introduced the court reporter to the prospective juror pool

and explained, “She’s over here diligently taking down everything that is said while court is in

session. And we are currently in session on this case.” 1 VRP at 48. The judge then read

preliminary instructions about the process of a trial and explained the purpose and process of voir

dire. The judge also placed the prospective jurors under oath and distributed a preliminary

questionnaire.

That afternoon, the trial court and counsel reconvened in open court to discuss which

prospective jurors they would excuse without individual questioning. The parties agreed to excuse

15 prospective jurors without further questioning based on their answers to the questionnaire. Only

one prospective juror was excused for cause, and the others were excused for hardship. The juror

excused for cause was excused because she was a victim of sexual assault and reported on the

questionnaire that it would be difficult to “remove [her] experience from the facts” of the case. 1

VRP at 73. The parties agreed to excuse another prospective juror for hardship reasons before

3 No. 56543-9-II

noting that there was an “obvious bias” challenge as well. 1 VRP at 59. The trial court excused

that juror for hardship. And the parties identified several other prospective jurors as having

potential biases, but kept those jurors in the pool for further questioning.

The next day, the parties individually questioned prospective jurors about hardships they

would face if they were to serve on a jury. The day after that, once individual questioning about

hardships concluded, the trial court reread the same set of instructions it had read in the jury room

to the remaining pool of prospective jurors, this time in the courtroom with the parties present. The

trial court again placed the prospective jurors under oath before beginning formal voir dire to ask

prospective jurors questions about their potential biases.

III. TRIAL

A. Evidence Presented

EB, who was in high school at the time of the trial, testified that the charged incident

occurred one night when Abbitt was putting EB and MB to bed. EB believed that she was seven

years old and MB was four years old at the time of the incident.

EB testified that the girls slept in bunk beds in a shared bedroom. That night, EB climbed

onto Abbitt’s shoulders from the top bunk, then down his body. She remembered Abbitt wearing

jeans and a shirt. Abbitt’s pants were down by the time EB reached the floor. EB testified that she

and MB sat on the lower bunk bed and rubbed Abbitt’s erect penis. Afterwards, there was

something wet and sticky on her hands. Abbitt then left the room and never discussed the incident

with the girls. MB had no recollection of the incident.

4 No. 56543-9-II

A forensic child interviewer, who interviewed EB, explained that delayed disclosures are

common in child sex abuse cases. In particular, children frequently disclose abuse after the abuser

has left the household or when there is a custody dispute.

Abbitt testified that on the night in question he put the girls to bed while wearing a towel

wrapped around his waist. He stated that EB was 10 years old and MB was 7 years old at the time

because he remembered that KB was pregnant with the couple’s first child.1 He testified that EB

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