State Of Washington, V. Ronald Lindahl

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 2, 2021
Docket80807-9
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington, V. Ronald Lindahl (State Of Washington, V. Ronald Lindahl) 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.

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State Of Washington, V. Ronald Lindahl, (Wash. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, ) No. 80807-9-I ) Respondent, ) ) DIVISION ONE v. ) ) RONALD JAMES LINDAHL, ) ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION Appellant. ) )

MANN, C.J. — Ronald Lindahl appeals his conviction for domestic violence

assault in the second degree with aggravating circumstances. He contends that the

court denied him of his right to an unbiased jury, that the court should not have

enhanced his sentence, and that the court violated his right to present a defense when

excluding evidence. We affirm.

FACTS

Lindahl was charged by amended information with assault in the first degree—

domestic violence and assault in the second degree—domestic violence against his

Citations and pin cites are based on the Westlaw online version of the cited material. No. 80807-9-I/2

wife, Cynthia Lindahl. 1 The second degree assault charge included the aggravating

circumstances of injuries substantially exceeding the level of bodily harm necessary to

satisfy the elements of the crime. Testimony at trial established the following.

Lindahl and Cynthia married in 2002. Both Lindahl and Cynthia suffered from

alcohol addiction. Lindahl had a history of being physically violent to Cynthia when

drunk. In 2013, Cynthia called the police after Lindahl hit her in the face. Lindahl was

convicted of assault in the fourth degree and the court ordered him to undergo alcohol

treatment and anger management.

In 2012, Cynthia attempted to commit suicide and stabbed herself in the stomach

with a butcher knife. Lindahl sought help from their neighbor, a former nurse named

Virginia Thorsvig. “Ashamed,” Cynthia initially told Thorsvig that Lindahl stabbed her.

However, Cynthia later told police her wound was self-inflicted and Lindahl was not

arrested.

On January 6, 2018, Cynthia called Thorsvig, and left her a message, stating that

she had a head injury, and requested Thorsvig call 911, which she did. Police

conducted a welfare check on the Lindahl residence, and noticed that Cynthia had

redness and bruising under her left eye, and bruising on her left arm. When questioned

by police, Lindahl told officers that Cynthia was always falling and had fallen in the

bedroom the previous week. Cynthia declined medical attention and the officers left.

On January 9, 2018, Cynthia came to Thorsvig’s door and asked her to call her

daughter. Cynthia was bruised and barefoot. Police arrived at the Lindahl residence,

1Because the parties share the same surname, this opinion refers to Cynthia by her first name. No disrespect is intended.

-2- No. 80807-9-I/3

finding the house in disarray. Cynthia had a bruised, swollen face, and additional

bruising on her body. Cynthia had significantly more injuries than she had on January

6. Medics treated Cynthia and she told them she was too scared to say something to

the medics on January 6.

Cynthia then went to the hospital and told hospital staff that her husband

assaulted her. Cynthia said Lindahl kicked the back of her head and punched her in the

face. Doctors determined that Cynthia had two black eyes and bruising across her

nose. After a computed tomography (CT) scan, doctors determined that she had a

subdural hematoma, bleeding under the skull, which can be life threatening. The

bleeding had moved her brain 8 millimeters, which can result in brain damage or death.

Cynthia also had a dislocated, fractured shoulder, and bruising on her arms and legs.

After suffering a seizure, Cynthia was transferred to Harborview Medical Center

(Harborview) where she underwent a craniotomy, and doctors discovered two subdural

hematomas, caused from a combination of acute and chronic bleeding. At Harborview,

Cynthia also underwent facial surgery to repair her nose which had been crushed in five

places.

While Cynthia initially told police that she fell and hurt herself, she later reported

and testified at trial that over the course of several days, Lindahl brutally assaulted her.

Lindahl began assaulting Cynthia after she jokingly told Lindahl she was having an affair

with a celebrity. He slammed her head into the kitchen cupboards about 10 times,

pushing her head into the drawer handle. Lindahl then kicked her into the door, and

then kicked her down two stairs onto a cement floor. Cynthia said she did trip and fall in

the bedroom during the course of the assault. After Cynthia fell, Lindahl proceeded to

-3- No. 80807-9-I/4

pound her head into the dresser until she fell onto the floor. Lindahl tried to drag

Cynthia up, giving her a bad carpet burn. Frustrated that Cynthia was unable to get up,

Lindahl stomped and kicked her as she lay on the floor for days. She was unable to

move and soiled herself. Finally, Cynthia mustered the strength to run to Thorsvig’s

house for help.

Police arrested Lindahl on January 9, 2018. After being read his Miranda 2 rights,

Lindahl provided police with a written statement saying that after Cynthia told him she

cheated on him, they were drinking, and she fell four times onto the kitchen stove and

table. During the course of the interview with the officer, Lindahl said both “I didn’t do

anything,” and “I’m guilty.” He said he did not seek medical help for Cynthia because he

was afraid of being arrested. Police photographed bruising and scrapes on Lindahl’s

chest, bruising on his elbow, and a scrape on his nose.

On January 10, 2018, Detective John Free interviewed Lindahl. Lindahl said that

both he and Cynthia were drinking, she said she had an affair, and it “just got ugly.”

Lindahl alternated between denying hitting Cynthia and saying she fell and hit her head,

to admitting he “must have done something.” He did admit he hit Cynthia, but he

characterized it as “shoving and pushing.” Lindahl wrote a letter to Cynthia at Detective

Free’s suggestion, where he said: “So sorry for what happened. I should have never

hit or kicked you. I love you so much. Please forgive me. I do love you and you do

deserve much better.”

2 Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436, 444, 86 S. Ct. 1602, 1612, 16 L. Ed. 2d 694 (1966).

-4- No. 80807-9-I/5

From late February to early March, Lindahl left repeated voicemails on Cynthia’s

phone, which she gave to police. Lindahl alternated between professing his love for

Cynthia, begging her to call him, and threatening her and cursing at her.

Pretrial, the defense moved to introduce three instances of Cynthia’s self-harm:

two instances of Cynthia shooting herself in 1984 and 1996 before she met Lindahl, and

the 2012 stabbing incident. After a lengthy ER 404(b) analysis on the record, the court

allowed the defense to introduce evidence of the 2012 stabbing, but tentatively

excluded evidence of the shooting incidents, based on the remoteness in time and

minimal probative value. 3

At trial, Cynthia testified about the assault in detail and the lasting brain damage

she suffered as a result. Lindahl denied hitting Cynthia, instead claiming she fell

repeatedly and ran into items while drunk, and she kicked him. A defense hired

pathologist testified that subdural hematomas are more common in elderly people and

alcoholics, and concluded that Cynthia’s injuries could have been caused either by

someone accidentally falling and striking their head, or having their head intentionally

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