State Of Washington v. Ronald Benjamin White

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJanuary 28, 2020
Docket51776-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington v. Ronald Benjamin White (State Of Washington v. Ronald Benjamin White) 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. Ronald Benjamin White, (Wash. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

January 28, 2020 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 51776-1-II

Respondent, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

v.

RONALD BENJAMIN WHITE a/k/a KURT COBAIN, a/k/a RONALD BENJAMIN COPELAND, a/k/a AIREAS WEDGE,

Appellant.

GLASGOW, J. — In June 2017, Ronald White’s mother awoke in the middle of the night

and saw that the front porch of her house was on fire. She called 911 and safely got out of the

house. Damage from the June fire left her house temporarily uninhabitable. While the house was

still being repaired in October 2017, firefighters responded to a second fire at her home. The

October fire burned most of the house down to its foundation, resulting in a complete loss. A

neighbor’s security camera recorded a person coming and going near the time of each fire.

The police identified White as the person appearing in the security videos and the State

charged him with two counts of first degree arson. White had mental health diagnoses and was

homeless at the time. Following a bench trial, the trial court found White guilty of both counts of

first degree arson, each with a domestic violence designation, and imposed an exceptional upward

sentence of 180 months of incarceration.

White appeals from his convictions and resulting sentence, contending that the State

violated due process by presenting witness testimony identifying him as the person in the June

video absent proper foundation and that the trial court allowed improper opinion testimony from No. 51776-1-II

the victim that the suspect in the security videos appeared to have the same unusual gait as her son.

White argues that the State failed to present sufficient evidence to support his convictions. White

also asserts that based on his mental health issues, his defense counsel was ineffective for failing

to pursue a diminished capacity defense and for failing to request an exceptional downward

sentence.

White further challenges the imposition of a criminal filing fee and DNA collection fee.

White has also filed a statement of additional grounds for review, in which he argues that he should

have been given a mental health evaluation and that he was not able to understand the trial

proceedings against him because the jail where he was being held during trial did not provide him

with needed medications.

We affirm White’s convictions but remand to the trial court to strike the criminal filing fee

and to reconsider whether to impose the DNA collection fee.

FACTS

In 2017, Ronald White’s mother lived in a house in Aberdeen. White was homeless at the

time and would frequently visit his mother’s house. White’s mother would sometimes invite White

into the house for short periods of time; she regularly washed White’s clothes and left the clothes

for White in accessible areas outside of the house. She sometimes provided him with hot meals.

As a result, he visited her home several times a week. At times, White’s mother would leave a

note near her doorbell telling White not to ring her doorbell, knock on the door, or linger on the

porch.

One night in June, White’s mother woke up to unusual noises and saw smoke entering her

house through the top of her front door. She called 911 and safely got out through the back door.

2 No. 51776-1-II

Aberdeen Assistant Chief Fire Marshall Richard Malizia investigated the cause of the June

fire. Based on burn patterns, Malizia determined that the fire originated on or under the porch of

the house near the front door and then extended up to the attic. Malizia ruled out an electrical

problem as the cause of the fire but could not identify an ignition source. Malizia’s report said

that the cause of the fire was undetermined.

The June fire damaged the roof, leaving the house temporarily uninhabitable. White’s

mother lived elsewhere while her house was being repaired.

Thomas Nostrant lived across the street from the house and had a security camera on his

property that captured a portion of the victim’s home. Nostrant provided police with footage that

was taken from his security camera on the night of the June fire. The June video showed a person

wearing a hooded sweatshirt approaching the victim’s house from a public access stairway. The

person hurried back down the stairway a few minutes later. Soon after, a fire erupted near White’s

mother’s porch. The person who approached the house had their hood up and their face is not

visible on the video. The video showed that the person had an unusual gait.

White’s mother was still living in a rental unit in October 2017, when firefighters

responded to a second fire at her house. When firefighters arrived, they found the house

completely engulfed in flames. Firefighters eventually extinguished the fire, but it had burned

most of the house to its foundation, resulting in a complete loss of the home. Malizia investigated

the cause of the October fire, ruled out an electrical source, and could not locate a specific ignition

source. After viewing security video footage taken from a Nostrant’s security camera that showed

a portion of the fire, Malizia determined that the October fire was intentionally set by someone

using an accelerant.

3 No. 51776-1-II

The October security video again showed that a person in a coat and hooded sweatshirt

approached White’s mother’s house from the public access stairway. The person was carrying

something under their right arm. A few minutes later the same person left and walked back down

the stairway, no longer carrying anything.

Two days after the October fire, police located White in downtown Aberdeen wearing

clothing similar to the person in the October security video. White was later arrested and charged

with two counts of first degree arson. The matter proceeded to a bench trial.

In addition to testimony consistent with the facts described above, the security videos of

the June and October fires were admitted and played at trial. White’s mother testified that she was

familiar with the way her son walks and that the person on the security videos strongly resembled

White, based on his gait.

Nostrant testified that while he had never been introduced to White, he knew who White

was and he recognized White. Nostrant also testified that he had viewed security footage taken

from earlier on the day of the June fire, which he said showed White’s face. In that video from

earlier in the day, White approached and left the victim’s house. Defense counsel objected on the

basis of inadequate foundation. The State asked Nostrant why he believed it was White in the

earlier video footage, and Nostrant replied that the person on the video was not wearing a hood

and that he could see White’s face as he left. The trial court overruled defense counsel’s objection.

Nostrant then added that the earlier footage showed White wearing the same clothing as

the person wearing the hood up in the later footage. The earlier footage had been recorded over

and was not available to view at trial.

4 No. 51776-1-II

The trial court found White guilty of both counts of first degree arson and entered findings

of fact and conclusions of law. The trial court also found that the crimes involved domestic

violence. At sentencing, the State sought an exceptional upward sentence of 180 months of

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