State of Washington v. Rachel G. Newell

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedFebruary 10, 2022
Docket37762-8
StatusUnpublished

This text of State of Washington v. Rachel G. Newell (State of Washington v. Rachel G. Newell) 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. Rachel G. Newell, (Wash. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

FILED FEBRUARY 10, 2022 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals, Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

STATE OF WASHINGTON, ) ) No. 37762-8-III Respondent, ) ) v. ) ) RACHEL G. NEWELL, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) Appellant. )

SIDDOWAY, A.C.J. — Rachel Newell is the girlfriend of Bryan Wing, or was, in

October 2019, when Mr. Wing became the immediate suspect of a residential burglary.

A debit card in Mr. Wing’s name was found near where a newly-purchased miter saw had

been taken from a residential construction site. Sheriff’s deputies secured warrants to

search Mr. Wing’s car and the home where he and Ms. Newell were then living. Ms.

Newell was a passenger in Mr. Wing’s car when it was seen not far from the home,

during execution of the residential search warrant. When detained and questioned, she

confessed to participating in the burglary and theft of the saw.

After being charged with crimes for that incident, and later, for a further crime

identified in the course of law enforcement investigation, Ms. Newell filed motions to

suppress, challenging the legality of her detention and the admissibility of its evidentiary No. 37762-8-III State v. Newell

fruits. With only limited exceptions, her motions were denied. She was later found

guilty in stipulated fact trials.

The fact that findings and conclusions were not entered following the bench trial

could have delayed resolution of the appeal, and we remind both parties of the guidance

offered in State v. Yallup, 3 Wn. App. 2d 546, 556-57, 416 P.3d 1250 (2018), of their

duty to address a trial court’s failure to enter findings and conclusions following a bench

trial prior to briefing. See discussion at 16-18, infra.

We reject Ms. Newell’s challenge to the trial court’s suppression decision but

agree with her that the stipulated facts were insufficient to establish her knowing

possession of stolen property. We reverse her conviction for possession of stolen

property, otherwise affirm, and remand for resentencing.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The discovery that someone kicked in the door of a home being constructed for

Mindy Halme and stole a miter saw, and why Bryan Wing was an immediate suspect, is

detailed in this court’s opinion in State v. Wing, No. 37311-8-III (Wash. Ct. App. July 13,

2021 (unpublished).1 Those facts are not disputed in this appeal. Also not disputed is the

validity of warrants obtained by Lincoln County Sheriff’s Deputy Jared McLagan to

arrest Mr. Wing and search his car, the home he shared with Ms. Newell, and several

outbuildings on the property.

1 Available at https://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions/pdf/373118_ord.pdf.

2 No. 37762-8-III State v. Newell

As the search warrant for the property was being executed that evening, Mr.

Wing’s vehicle was seen nearby and was stopped. Mr. Wing and Ms. Newell were

inside. Police detained not only Mr. Wing, but also Ms. Newell.

In searching Mr. Wing’s car, deputies discovered sawdust on its back seat and

later found the stolen saw in the car’s trunk. After the saw was found, Ms. Newell was

read her Miranda2 rights and agreed to speak with Deputy McLagan. She admitted to the

deputy that she and Mr. Wing broke into the home being constructed for Ms. Halme in

order to commit a theft and stole the miter saw while inside.

In the course of searching the Wing/Newell residence, deputies took pictures of

items that might prove to be stolen. Deputy McLagan’s application for the warrant had

explained law enforcement’s reasons for suspecting Mr. Wing and Ms. Newell of other

thefts:

While Bryan and Rachel were living [in Davenport,] they had items for sale on Facebook Market place. These items were high dollar items. Most of the items they were selling were brand new and still in the box and had never been used. Both Bryan and Rachel were for the most part unemployed. Also they were seen coming and going late at night and would travel the back roads as to avoid deputies when returning home.

The Sheriff’s Office had many tips that Bryan[’s] and Rachel’s home was full of stolen items. We were advised that they go to Spokane to both sell and steal property almost nightly. Bryan and Rachel both have a long history of arrests and convictions of burglary and theft.

Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 28.

2 Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436, 86 S. Ct. 1602, 16 L. Ed. 2d 694 (1966).

3 No. 37762-8-III State v. Newell

Deputies also saw evidence during the search of the home suggesting that Ms.

Newell and Mr. Wing were renting a storage unit in Spokane. A warrant was obtained to

search the unit. After serving the warrant, Deputy McLagan was told by storage

company staff that a unit rented by Tom Burns had recently been burglarized. Deputies

showed Mr. Burns pictures of items photographed during the search of the Wing/Newell

residence, and Mr. Burns identified photography lighting equipment and antique cameras

as items stolen from his unit.

Ms. Newell was initially charged with second degree burglary, second degree

malicious mischief, and third degree theft for the crimes allegedly committed at the

Halme residence. She was charged in a second prosecution with second degree

possession of stolen property—the lighting equipment and cameras belonging to Mr.

Burns. She filed three motions to suppress: two in the prosecution for the crimes

involving Ms. Halme’s property, and one in the prosecution for possessing property

stolen from Mr. Burns. Among other challenges to law enforcement’s actions, she

contended that deputies lacked any basis to detain her at the time they stopped Mr.

Wing’s car.

4 No. 37762-8-III State v. Newell

A total of three hearings were held on the motions, at which Deputy McLagan and

Sergeant Kody Becker testified. The trial court ultimately denied her motions to suppress

with limited exceptions not relevant here.3

On the basis of the findings, the court concluded that deputies legally stopped Mr.

Wing’s vehicle, Deputy McLagan had probable cause when he conducted a custodial

interrogation of Ms. Newell, and her statements before the custodial interrogation were

voluntary.

Ms. Newell objected to the amended findings and moved the court to reconsider.

The court denied the motion. In denying the motion, however, it made the following

clarifying statement about Ms. Newell’s initial detention and subsequent arrest:

There should be no question the defendant was initially seized by the officers when she was placed into the patrol car after the car she was a passenger in was stopped. As this court previously held, she was not under arrest at that time and the temporary seizure was justified following the stop as the deputies had reasonable suspicion of criminal activity and were investigating the break in and burglary and conducting an interview of Mr. Wing following the separation of the parties. However, she was not interrogated until after the miter saw was discovered in the trunk and the sawdust was observed in the back seat as well as the other factors this court had found. A significant amount of evidence then existed to link her as a passenger in the car to criminal activity.

CP at 105 (emphasis added).

3 The court’s amended findings and conclusions disavow a prior finding that had caused it, initially, to suppress Ms.

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State of Washington v. Rachel G. Newell, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-washington-v-rachel-g-newell-washctapp-2022.