State Of Washington, V. Ryan Mccrady

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 1, 2025
Docket86555-2
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington, V. Ryan Mccrady (State Of Washington, V. Ryan Mccrady) 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 Mccrady, (Wash. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

THE STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 86555-2-I Respondent, DIVISION ONE v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION RYAN MCCRADY,

Appellant.

BIRK, J. — The jury convicted Ryan McCrady of rape of a child in the first

degree, rape of a child in the second degree, and molestation of a child in the first

degree, all committed against his girlfriend’s daughter, K.K. McCrady now asserts

errors concerning the time allowed for jury selection, evidence admitted under ER

403 and ER 404(b), and also alleges his community custody conditions violate his

fundamental parental rights. We remand for resentencing for the court to conduct

an on-the-record analysis concerning McCrady’s fundamental parental rights in

relation to his community custody conditions. Otherwise, we affirm.

I

McCrady first argues the trial court violated his right to a fair and impartial

jury by “cutting off voir dire based on an unreasonable time limit.” The State

responds that McCrady failed to show both an abuse of discretion and any No. 86555-2-I/2

prejudice. We conclude the trial court did not abuse its discretion in limiting time

during voir dire.1

A

The State charged McCrady with rape of a child in the first degree, rape of

a child in the second degree, and child molestation in the first degree, all committed

against K.K.

On January 4, 2024, the trial court held a hearing to discuss the jury

questionnaire, jury selection, and other scheduling issues. On January 8, 2024,

the trial court reviewed responses from the juror questionnaire and struck

individuals for hardship. The court began with 120 potential jurors and, after

hardships, 72 potential jurors remained.

The trial court allowed individual questioning of the remaining jurors, limited

to two to three minutes per juror for individual questioning. The court stated that

for-cause challenges were not excluded from time and explained, “You get your

time. You spend it how you want. If you want to focus on one person to try and

strike for cause, that’s your use of time.”

The parties conducted three panels of voir dire. The first panel began on

January 9, 2024. As the individual questioning began, the trial court stated it would

1 The State also argues McCrady waived his objection because he failed to

use all his peremptory challenges, and thus “create[ed] a presumption that he was satisfied with the jury.” “[I]f a party allows a juror to be seated and does not exhaust their peremptory challenges, then they cannot appeal on the basis that the juror should have been excused for cause.” State v. Talbott, 200 Wn.2d 731, 747-48, 521 P.3d 948 (2022). However, McCrady is not appealing the denial of a for-cause challenge. Instead, he argues that the trial court’s “unreasonable time limit” on voir dire violated his right to a fair and impartial jury. Thus, McCrady did not waive his appeal on this claim.

2 No. 86555-2-I/3

allow each side two minutes. After the individual questioning, the court then

allowed the parties to question the panel as a group. Before the group session,

the trial court stated “we’ll do 30 minutes, 15 minutes apiece for voir dire, start with

the State. And then you can use all 15, you just get the block of time. Or you can

do 10 and then five, however you want to divide it. But you each get 15 minutes a

side.” The court clarified that responses to a challenge for cause would not count

as part of the time. However, after the individual questioning of the second panel

and before the group questioning, the trial court increased the time to 20 minutes

per side.

During the group questioning of the second panel, McCrady asked, “Is there

anyone here who would have difficulty listening to the testimony while remaining

fair and impartial to the both sides?” Jurors 53, 55, 60, 61, 62, 63, 68, 76, 78, and

135 raised their hands. McCrady then asked, “[W]ho among you think that in order

for a case to reach this point, in order for this case to have reached this point, . . .

something probably happened, and that [McCrady] probably did something

wrong?” Jurors 53, 56, 61, 64, 74, and 78 raised their hands. In the remaining

time, defense counsel questioned juror 55, 56, and 60. After questioning juror 60,

and with two remaining minutes, McCrady asked the panel to indicate “who feels

like they are concerned about their ability to be fair to both sides of the case.”

Three jurors—62, 76, and 78—answered affirmatively. McCrady questioned juror

62 and 78 before time ran out. The trial court explained the trial schedule and

asked whether any juror had a concern. Juror 62 and 78 expressed their concerns

regarding the schedule.

3 No. 86555-2-I/4

Outside the presence of the jury, the trial court stated it was inclined to

excuse jurors 62 and 78 for hardship, and the parties agreed. McCrady moved to

excuse juror 55 for cause, and the trial court denied the motion. McCrady also

moved to excuse jurors 56 and 60, which the trial court granted. McCrady moved

to excuse juror 76 and explained,

And the last juror is—I guess we’re left in a position where juror 76 raised her hand to my sort of catch-all question at the at the end, you know, “we’ve talked to you a lot, does anyone feel like they don’t think they can be a fair and impartial juror?” And juror 76 raised her hand, but I did not get a chance to talk with her about that. So I think we are left in a position of her having expressed actual bias, and no follow-up as to what—as to whether or not she could set that aside.

The trial court agreed to bring juror 76 in for individual questioning and stated, “I

want to keep this thing moving along, we’re running up against the clock, and I

don’t want to get in trouble. But I am concerned, as well, because of that last

minute raise of the card.” The trial court gave each side a minute and a half for

questioning.

Before questioning juror 76, the trial court asked McCrady if he had any

other for-cause challenges to make and defense counsel engaged in an off-the-

record colloquy. The judge asked for a response because he was “running up

against a union contract for the Clerk’s Office.” McCrady indicated a request to

speak to several additional jurors,

[Defense Counsel]: Okay. And, so I guess, sort of similarly, there are several jurors who expressed actual bias in response to [defense’s] two questions, having difficult—thought they couldn’t be impartial—impartial, excuse me, while listening to the testimony in this case. That—and we didn’t talk to several of those jurors to follow up. Jurors 53, 61, 62, we will now follow up with 68. We spoke to 60, 55. Sorry.

4 No. 86555-2-I/5

THE COURT: We’re not. I thought we’re bringing 78—or, is it 68 we’re bringing in?

[Defense]: No, I apologize.

THE COURT: 76.

[Defense]: 78.

THE COURT: Seventy—

[Defense]: Excuse me, 76 is correct. So jurors 53, 61, 62, 68, 64, 63, and 56.

[Defense]: I think—

[Defense]: And I apologize, 64 is gone. But those others raised their hands to that question, and we didn’t speak with them.

And then the jurors who raised their hand in answering the question, you know, in order for this case to have reached this point, something probably happened and [McCrady] probably did something wrong. The jurors we didn’t speak with are 61, 74, 53, and 56.

The State argued that it was not objecting to bringing juror 76 in for additional

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