State Of Washington v. Ryan Embry Chandler

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 4, 2019
Docket77224-4
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington v. Ryan Embry Chandler (State Of Washington v. Ryan Embry Chandler) 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. Ryan Embry Chandler, (Wash. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 77224-4-1 Respondent, V. DIVISION ONE

RYAN EMBRY CHANDLER, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Appellant. FILED: March 4, 2019

LEACH, J. — Ryan Chandler challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to

support his conviction for felony harassment. Because sufficient evidence

supports the jury's verdict, we affirm.

BACKGROUND

William Chandler is the father and primary caregiver of Ryan.1 Ryan has a

history of mental illness. At the time of the charged incident in 2016, Ryan lived

in a trailer on his father's property in Redmond, Washington. This property

includes a house and a barn-like building across the property from the trailer

used by William as an office and garage.

1 Because the appellant and his father share the same last name, they are referred to here by their first names. No. 77224-4-1/ 2

Before 2016, Ryan had acted violently toward William a number of times.

William testified that he could recognize a hostile episode because Ryan's "eyes

change[d], he [didn't] talk rationally. .. and [he got] mad at [William] for things"

like refusing to loan him a car. During the episodes, Ryan usually acted

aggressively and sometimes violently.

Ryan is "slim" and "muscular" and "bigger and stronger and [could] run

faster than" William. William's strategy during hostile episodes was to "leave and

let it defuse in itself or defuse it by talking." William never saw Ryan be violent

with others.

William keeps a Mercedes in the barn garage on the first floor. A door at

the rear of the garage leads to an office where William conducts his business.

On the second floor, there is an additional office with his main computers. This

room also has a bed and microwave so William can stay there, particularly when

he needs to be around to support Ryan. The door upstairs has a beam on the

interior that can be dropped into hooks to barricade it. William installed this door

after a violent episode with Ryan.

On October 26, 2016, Ryan texted William that he wanted a gun, a

bicycle, and $1,000 or, he said, "[T]hings were going to happen." William texted

back to gauge Ryan's level of anger and determine whether he could calm him

down. William testified that Ryan seemed "very angry" and did not appear to be

calming down. William headed home on "high alert." On the way, he met with a

-2- No. 77224-4-1 /3

sheriffs officer at an Albertson's store, reported his concerns, and told the officer

that he had had this sort of experience before.

When William arrived home, he discovered that the door to his office

upstairs in the barn "had been bashed in [and] split." Someone had rifled through

a storage area where he previously kept guns. His computer and hard drives

were removed. A key to his Mercedes, which only Ryan knew about, and the

Mercedes were gone. William texted and called Ryan. But Ryan did not

respond. William went by Ryan's trailer. There, he saw the Mercedes parked.

He thought that perhaps a "night['s] sleep[ ]" would solve the problem and

decided to wait until noon the next day to talk to him. William reported the

incident to the police and met with them at a church nearby.

Around noon on October 27, 2016, William walked from the barn to the

Mercedes, which was still parked next to the trailer. Ryan came out and started

threatening William. His threats included profanity and statements like, "You're

going to die now; You've been messing with me too long; You're going to die now

and I'm going to do it." Ryan repeated the threat "numerous times in a number of

different ways," including saying, "I'm going to kill you." William described them

as the "most hostile threats [he'd] ever had from [Ryan].

Standing about 10 feet from Ryan, William consciously kept the car

between them. He continued to talk to Ryan, trying to calm the situation. He got

to the point where he was closest to the barn and Ryan was blocked by the

Mercedes and he ran "quite a ways away and [Ryan] ran" after him. He looked

-3- No. 77224-4-1/4

back, and Ryan had stopped. He tried to calm Ryan by talking to him. He then

ran to the barn and up the stairs. He was able to close the damaged door and

secure it by dropping the beam into the hooks. When Ryan arrived at the now-

secured door, he started pounding on it, continuing to utter threats.

William called 911. He told the operator that his mentally ill son was

threatening him. He said he was "locked upstairs in [his] office, and he's banging

on the doors and screaming he's going to kill me." William explained he was in

the barn in his office and was "barricaded in." He told the operator that Ryan

"won't be able to" break in. He said that he was "prepared for this," that he had

"beams across the door," and that he was "safe for the moment." He also told

the operator that he needed to "get the hell out" of there. He said that Ryan did

not have guns but that he had a hunting knife and a machete where he stays.

He did not think Ryan had them with him. But he wasn't sure.

Ryan stopped banging. When William felt safe, he looked out the window

and saw Ryan walk away and then return without anything in his hands. Ryan

entered the barn and started breaking things downstairs. He climbed the stairs

and started banging hard enough on the door for the 911 operator on the phone

to hear. William thought he "had something, a beam or something" or "a pry bar

and [was] trying to pry [the door open]." He told the operator, "My god. I hope

they get here soon, I'm jumping out the back door." He clarified that he would

jump only if Ryan got the door open. Near the end of the call, he said, "1 don't

-4- No. 77224-4-1/ 5

know what he's got. He's screaming he's going to—Oh, gosh, somebody else is

here. God help me."

Then the banging stopped again, and William saw Ryan walk back down

to his trailer. The 911 operator told William that the police were arriving and they

might be who he was hearing. William saw Ryan walk "a couple hundred feet

away" into the woods. When William felt safe, he opened the door and saw the

sheriff's officers. They initially pointed their assault rifles at him, but he told them

he was the father and that they were not in danger. He told them Ryan did not

have guns and described that morning's incident. He said he was afraid Ryan

would carry out his threat to kill him and told them about Ryan's history of hostile

behavior. The officers searched for Ryan and detained him.

About 10-15 minutes elapsed between the moment Ryan was at the trailer

yelling to the point he walked away from the barn and William opened the door.

According to William, during this time he "was afraid for [his] life." He said that if

anyone else had done what Ryan did to him, he would "hit him with a pipe or

shoot him or whatever [he] could do." But he could not do that to Ryan because

he was his son, and he would not "hurt [his] son."

A jury found Ryan guilty of felony harassment.2 He appeals.

2 RCW 9A.46.020(1), (2)(b). The jury also issued a special verdict of domestic violence.

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